Some loudspeaker designs age like milk. The Graham Audio LS5/9 ages like a well-kept studio reference, which is exactly what it was born to be. Originally released by the BBC back in 1983 as a compact monitor for outside-broadcast vans and cramped control rooms, the LS5/9 has been resurrected and kept in active production by Devon-based Graham Audio — and the latest reviews suggest it still has plenty to say.
The recipe hasn’t changed much, and that’s rather the point. This is a two-way monitor standing 46cm tall, built around a cabinet that holds a maximum internal volume of 28 liters. The enclosure itself is a study in BBC orthodoxy: 9mm birch plywood with deliberately thin walls and careful damping, a philosophy that runs counter to the modern obsession with inert, brick-like boxes. The idea is to control resonances rather than brute-force them into silence, and decades later it remains a divisive but effective approach.
Driving the air are two carefully chosen units. A 200mm polypropylene bass/midrange driver, developed in partnership with Volt Loudspeakers, handles the heavy lifting, while a 34mm Audax soft-dome tweeter takes care of the top end. The result is a frequency response quoted at 50Hz to 16kHz ±3dB, with a sensitivity of 87dB/2.83V/m and a nominal 8 ohm impedance.
None of those numbers will set a spec-sheet warrior’s pulse racing, and they aren’t meant to. The LS5/9 was engineered for accuracy and long-listening tolerance, not for chest-thumping bass extension or showroom dazzle. It will hit 100dB at 1m when pushed, which is more than enough for the near-field and mid-field listening it was conceived for.
What’s remarkable is how relevant the design still feels. In an era where loudspeakers are crammed with metal cones, beryllium domes and computer-optimised cabinets, a thin-wall plywood box with a poly mid/bass driver sounds almost heretical. Yet reviewers keep coming back to the same conclusion: there’s a tonal honesty and midrange clarity here that newer designs chase but don’t always catch. A fresh What Hi-Fi review, published on June 29, 2026, reaffirmed that the speaker remains a genuine contender rather than a nostalgia piece.
That longevity comes at a price. The LS5/9 sells for US$5,999 in standard finishes — not pocket change, but in line with serious high-end standmount territory. For that money you’re buying a properly licensed, faithfully executed version of a studio classic, hand-built in the UK rather than a mass-market reissue trading on a famous name.
The LS5/9 is, in short, a reminder that good engineering doesn’t have an expiry date. A 1983 design has no business sounding this current — and yet here it is, still on sale, still being reviewed, and still earning its keep.