I loved my week there as a Stereophile correspondent and member of a scraggly scrum of audio journalists whisked to DALI headquarters on a promotional junket.
Aside from its universal attractiveness, what struck me during my stay in the southernmost and smallest of the Scandinavian countries was how by North American standards the more densely populated cities I visited, Copenhagen and Aarhus, seemed orderly and clean. Cars, pedestrians, and cyclists kept tightly to their lanes. I saw no cigarette butts on the sidewalk and only sparse pockets of graffiti. There seemed to be a natural, sequential flow to everything-an evenness and balance that was close to idyllic.
Outside its bigger cities, Denmark looks pastoral, with long stretches of grassy fields sporadically interrupted by broad bodies of water, and bucolic towns that seem to have sprouted in the middle of nowhere. It's in these towns that a lot of Danish hi-fi is made: DALI in Nørager (population 1143); Dynaudio in Skanderborg (population 20,000). Skanderborg contains evidence of human settlements belonging to the earliest Nordic Stone Age, starting some 100,000 years ago.
Dynaudio doesn't go back quite that far; the company was founded in 1977. Shortly thereafter, the company began manufacturing the drivers used in its speakers; later, it sold its drivers as OEM parts to speaker manufacturers worldwide. That stopped in the early 2000s; then, in 2014, the company sold 83% of its shares to China-based GoerTek, an 80,000-employee electronics manufacturer that supplies parts to Samsung, Apple, and Sony, among other large companies. Dynaudio is GoerTek's first and only high-end audio company acquisition, which made me wonder what would prompt a massive, mainstream company such as GoerTek to get involved with a single Danish high-end speaker company.
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