- Avery Fisher
Avery Robert Fisher (
March 4 1906 –February 26 ,1994 ) was an audio specialist who made numerous contributions to the field ofsound reproduction .Early life
Avery Fisher was born in
Brooklyn ,New York . He attendedDeWitt Clinton High School and graduated fromNew York University in 1929 and subsequently worked two years in the publishing industry. During this time, Fisher, an amateurviolin ist, began experimenting with audio design andacoustics . By 1937, he established his first company,Philharmonic Radio . In 1945, Fisher sold the company and began his second audio company, called Fisher Radio, which marketed products of extraordinary quality and performance under the nameThe Fisher .Later accomplishments
In the 1950s, Fisher invented the
transistorized amplifier and the first stereoradio -phonograph . These breakthroughs brought Fisher both fame and fortune. From 1959 to 1961, his company also made important improvements in AM-FM stereo tuner design. In 1969, Fisher sold his company to theEmerson Electric Company for US $31 million, which in turn sold the company toSanyo of Japan. Fisher was aconsultant for both Emerson and Sanyo.Fisher was a noted
philanthropist during his life, sitting on the boards of theNew York Philharmonic andThe Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center .Fisher died at age 87 in
New York City on February 26, 1994 from complications of a stroke.Today, Avery Fisher is best known for the auditorium in the
Lincoln Center cultural complex in upperManhattan that bears his name.Avery Fisher Hall houses theNew York Philharmonic , among various other cultural performances and musical ensembles. The hall was named for Fisher in 1973 after he made a US $10.5 million donation to the Philharmonic.External links
* [http://www.ieee-virtual-museum.org/collection/people.php?taid=&id=1234696&lid=1 Biography]
* [http://www.lincolncenter.org Lincoln Center]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B03E2DA173AF934A15751C0A962958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all Obituary]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.