Mercenary Audio
Microtech Gefell UM 92.1S <br>MultiPattern Microphone
Microtech Gefell M 300 Miniature Cardioid <br>'Pencil' Condenser Mic
Microtech Gefell UM 92.1S
MultiPattern Microphone


Shipping Weight: 10lbs.
GEFU921 $3,641.70
Mercenary $3,575.00
Microtech Gefell M 300 Miniature Cardioid
'Pencil' Condenser Mic


Shipping Weight: 8lbs.
GEF300 $966.88
Mercenary $950.00
Microtech Gefell M300 Set with<br>TD93S ORTF Stereo Bar
Microtech Gefell KEM 970 <br>Line Array Microphone
Microtech Gefell M300 Set with
TD93S ORTF Stereo Bar


Shipping Weight 7lbs.
GEF300M $2,251.36
Mercenary $2,210.00
Microtech Gefell KEM 970
Line Array Microphone


Shipping Weight 15lbs.
GEFM97 $10,833.34
Mercenary $10,615.00
Microtech Gefell M 295 <br>Cardioid Condenser Mic
Microtech Gefell UMT 800 <br>MultiPattern Condenser
Microtech Gefell M 295
Cardioid Condenser Mic


Shipping Weight: 8lbs.
GEF295 $1,623.24
Mercenary $1,590.00
Microtech Gefell UMT 800
MultiPattern Condenser


Shipping Weight: 10lbs.
GEF800 $3,041.80
Mercenary $2,980.00
Microtech Gefell UM 900 <BR>"The Phantom"
Microtech Gefell M 930 <br>Large Diaphram Cardioid Condenser
Microtech Gefell UM 900
"The Phantom"


Shipping Weight: 10lbs.
GEFU900A $5,123.78
Mercenary $5,020.00
Microtech Gefell M 930
Large Diaphram Cardioid Condenser


Shipping Weight: 10lbs.
GEF930 $1,319.76
Mercenary $1,295.00
Microtech Gefell M 930 <br>Matched Pair w/ "ORTF" Stereo Bar
Microtech Gefell UMT 70S <br>MutliPattern Studio Condenser
Microtech Gefell M 930
Matched Pair w/ "ORTF" Stereo Bar


Shipping Weight: 10lbs.
GEF930M $2,815.96
Mercenary $2,760.00
Microtech Gefell UMT 70S
MutliPattern Studio Condenser


Shipping Weight: 8lbs.
GEF70S $1,877.37
Mercenary $1,845.00
Microtech Gefell MT71 S <br>Studio Cardioid Condenser
Microtech Gefell Accessories
Microtech Gefell MT71 S
Studio Cardioid Condenser


Shipping Weight: 8lbs.
GEF71S $1,404.45
Mercenary $1,380.00
Microtech Gefell Accessories

Shock mounts, stands mounts, windscreens and stereo bars for Gefell Microphones.


There once was a guy by the name of Georg Neumann who started building condenser microphones in Germany in 1928. While not the first condenser microphones [the first was built by an American named E.C. Wente in 1916], they were the first to gain world wide popularity and notoriety. Sometime during the late 1930's or early 1940's Georg and his buddy [Neumann's chief engineer Mr. Kühnast], decided that they might enjoy a slightly better quality of life if they moved their company to a sleepy little village a couple of hours outside of Berlin [like where nobody was dropping bombs and other war related activities] called Gefell. Unbeknownst to Georg and Mr. Kühnast, at the conclusion of World War II, the town of Gefell would become part of the "eastern block", pretty much, if it wasn't for bad luck, seemed they have no luck at all.

After World War II, Georg was invited by the French government to set up a lab in Paris where he went on to invent the gas-tight nickel cadmium accumlator, while Mr. Kühnast continued his work in Gefell. Some members of the original Neumann staff returned to their home city of Berlin and started a branch company which acted as a repair center for Neumann brand products in West Berlin. This "off shoot company" became the roots of a company which began in 1948, and was coincidentally known as "Neumann", (now a wholly owned subsidiary of the Sennheiser corporation).

During the early years, Neumann "Berlin" and Neumann "Gefell" worked closely together until 1961 when this wall was erected in Berlin that separated the West from the East. While key engineering staff worked at both facilities, and Georg Neumann also made regular visits to Gefell until his passing in 1976, the Gefell version of Neumann was not as well known as the Berlin version of Neumann.

The first metal diaphragm microphones for precision recording were invented by the original company, Neumann Gefell, and today Neumann Gefell is the world's only manufacturer of metal diaphragm microphones (the M-294, M-295 and M-296). Some of the more famous Neumann Berlin metal diaphragm microphone models have included the KM-54, KM-56 and SM-2 (and SM-23) stereo microphones, but the diaphragms for these microphones were not made in the Berlin factory. During the next 40 years Gefell accelerated the development of tube technology which as everyone knows, continued in eastern Europe while the west developed transistors. Part of this tube development led directly to the world's only phantom powered tube microphone, the phenomenal sounding UM-900.

In 1989, with the collapse of the Eastern Block and the subsequent fall of the Berlin Wall, Georg Neumann`s family saw the opportunity to regain their company in Gefell. By this time, the Berlin factory was in trouble. The company had expanded into other areas, which included disc cutting (vinyl) and custom console manufacturing, neither of which were sustainable businesses. In 1990, the Berliner Bank shut down the Georg Neumann GmbH Berlin factory, and arranged to sell the company to Sennheiser, who immediately moved what was left of the "diamond logo'ed Neumann" you know today to the Sennheiser assembly line.

In 1993 'Georg Neumann & Company Gefell, GmbH' was given back to its original owners, the Neumann family. Ownership of the company today is retained by the directors of Microtech Gefell with the official name being 'Georg Neumann KG' (no relation to the Sennheiser Corporation's 'Neumann' brand name, a name which Sennheiser purchased in 1991 with the other assets of the bankrupt Neumann).

Today, Microtech Gefell condenser microphones are manufactured using the original techniques and exclusive processes developed by Georg Neumann. The products they manufacture include the world's most accurate measurement microphone capsules, the world's only metal diaphragm microphones, and the venerable "M-7" capsule which saw it's rise to fame in Neumann Berlin manufactured models like the U-47, U-48 and M-49. The M-7 is the only microphone capsule to use PVC based diaphragms which sound much sweeter and more musical than the subsequent Mylar based KK-47 capsule found in later model U-47, U-48 and M-49 microphones.

Over the past five years, the Neumann-Gefell team quietly started to redefine microphone technology and adapt it to the growing demands of digital recording. Microtech Gefell has since set a new bar by lowering self-noise and increasing sound pressure handling capability beyond all others. Other innovations include the worlds only phantom powered tube microphone, a 'line array' microphone for precise signal steering, and some of the smallest and most accurate test and measurement microphones in the world.

Just as they were 75 years ago, Microtech Gefell microphones are still hand built, individually tested and measured to ensure a quality level that is unsurpassed. The passion and care is evident from the moment you open a jewel box and plug in one of the world's finest microphones.



Back to the page you were just viewing


Home | New Gear | Vintage Gear | Swag | Blotter | Gallery | Links



Search for gear by name or application