Walton Stinson

Walton Stinson (born July 2, 1948) is an American sound engineer, business executive, and entrepreneur. He is co-founder and CEO of ListenUp, a privately held Colorado-based company that in 2019 was the 10th largest consumer electronics specialty dealer in the US.[1] Stinson was inducted into the Consumer Electronics Hall of Fame in 2009,[2][3] along with Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, Irwin M. Jacobs, former Chairman of Qualcomm, and Richard E. Wiley, former chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

In 1982, Stinson helped introduce digital audio to the United States. He served as a delegate to the Compact Disc Group. Along with his partner, Steven Weiner, he traveled to Japan in October 1982[4] to obtain the first batch of compact discs and convinced Sony and Nippon Columbia (Denon) to provide him with the first available players. At a promotional event for CDs in Denver on March 13, 1983, at Rainbow Music Hall,[5] he fooled an audience of 1,000 into believing they were listening to a live band, Grub Stake, when he segued the live performance into a digital recording of the band mid-performance to demonstrate the “live quality” of digital reproduction.

In 2010, Home Entertainment Source (HES) merged with ProGroup[6] to form ProSource, the largest consumer electronics buying group in North America, with over $5.5 Billion in sales.[7] In 2021, Stinson was elected chairman of ProSource.[8]

References

  1. "Top 100 CE Retailers". Twice Magazine.
  2. "2009 CE Hall Of Famers Inducted". Twice Magazine.
  3. "CD Pioneer Knew Sound of the Real Thing". The Denver Post.
  4. "Three Amateurs Inducted into Consumer Electronics Hall of Fame". The National Association for Amateur Radio.
  5. "1,000 Hear CD at Demo in Denver". Google Books. Billboard Magazine.
  6. "PRO Group Joins Forces With BrandSource". Twice Magazine.
  7. "ProSource Powers Up For 2019". Twice Magazine.
  8. "ProSource Announces Changes in Leadership to the Board of Directors". ProSource.
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