vienna acoustics` radical new speaker + vienna
Transcription
vienna acoustics` radical new speaker + vienna
2009 Editors’ Choice AWARDS DISPLAY UNTIL SEPTEMBER 15TH 2009 www.theabsolutesound.com SEPTEMBER 2009 $6.99 us / $6.99 can / £4.50 uk S T E R E O • M U LT I C H ANN E L AU D I O • M U S I C Vienna Acoustics’ Radical New Speaker + Head-to-Head: Amps at $1k & $40k Tube Power from Vincent Munich High-End Show Report Contents 124 Vienna Acoustics “The Music” Loudspeaker “The Music” rewrites the rules of loudspeaker design with a dual-pivoting top enclosure and an innovative new concentric midrange/ tweeter. Jim Hannon reports enthusiastically on the highly musical results. 21 This is the Big One! Forty-two pages of the best gear in every category at every price. 2 September 2009 The Absolute Sound The Absolute Sound September 2009 3 Contents Equipment Reports 8 Letters 10 From the Editor 12 Future TAS New products on the horizon. 15 Industry News We report from the Munich High-End Show. 132 HP’s Workshop HP hands out his own Editors’ Choice Awards for 2009. 108 Spendor SA1 Loudspeaker Steven Stone on why you must hear Spendor’s latest effort in small loudspeakers. MUSIC 138 Feature Blues for the 21st Century: Will a New Queen Arise? David McGee on three vocalists who redefine the way we think about the ladies who sing the blues. 140 Rock New releases from Wilco, Jesse Winchester, and Rhonda Vincent, a four-disc retrospective of songmeister Richard Thompson, and Jennifer Warnes’ The Hunter on Cisco vinyl. 144 Classical Mozart, Grieg, Wagner, and Bruckner on newly recorded SACDs, Prokofiev reissued on CD, and Esoteric’s ultrahigh-end and very pricey remasters of three classics on SACD and vinyl. 148 Jazz 114 Vincent V-60 Integrated Amplifier Neil Gader falls in love with tubes all over again, courtesy of this Germandesigned and Chinese-built integrated. 118 Odyssey Khartago Power Amplifier Jonathan Valin reviews a sub-$1k power amplifier? And loves it? You heard right. 4 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Recent offerings from Allen Toussaint, Five Peace Band, and Grant Geissman, plus reissues of Freddie Hubbard on CD and Thelonious Monk on LP. 151 Top Ten Wayne Garcia’s choices for the best rock concerts on DVD. 152 Back Page Charlie Randall of McIntosh Labs talks with Neil Gader. www.theabsolutesound.com founder; chairman, editorial advisory board editor-in-chief executive editor acquisitions manager and associate editor music editor and proofreader Harry Pearson Robert Harley Jonathan Valin Neil Gader Mark Lehman creative director Torquil Dewar art director Shelley Lai senior writers Anthony H. Cordesman, Wayne Garcia, Robert E. Greene, Chris Martens, Tom Martin, Dick Olsher, Andrew Quint, Paul Seydor, Alan Taffel reviewers and contributing writers Duck Baker, Soren Baker, Greg Cahill, Dan Davis, Andy Downing, Jim Hannon, Jacob Heilbrunn, Sue Kraft, Ted Libbey, David McGee, Bill Milkowski, Derk Richardson, Don Saltzman, Steven Stone the absolute sound.com executive editor Jim Hannon NextScreen, LLC, Inc. chairman and ceo Thomas B. Martin, Jr. vice president/publisher Mark Fisher advertising reps Cheryl Smith (512) 891-7775 Marvin Lewis MTM Sales (718) 225-8803 Jennifer Martin, Wrights Reprints (877) 652-5295,: (281) 419-5725, jmartin@wrightsreprints.com Subscriptions, renewals, changes of address: (888)732-1625 (U.S.), or (386)246-0144 (outside U.S.), or write The Absolute Sound, Subscription Services, PO Box 629, Mt. Morris, IL 61054. Ten issues : in the U.S., $29.90;Canada $45.90 GST included); outside North America, $64.90. Payments must be by credit card (VISA, MasterCard, American Express) or U.S. funds drawn on a U.S. bank, with checks payable to NextScreen, LLC. address letters to the editor, The Absolute Sound, 4544 S. Lamar, G-300, Austin, TX 78745 or e-mail rharley@nextscreen.com classified advertising: please use form in back of issue. newsstand distribution and local dealers: Contact IPD, 27500 Riverview Center Blvd., Suite 400, Bonita Springs, Florida 34134, (239) 949-4450 publishing matters: contact Jim Hannon at the address below or e-mail jhannon@nextscreen.com Publications Mail Agreement 40600599 Return Undeliverable Canadian Addresses to Station A / P.O. Box 54 / Windsor, ON N9A 6J5 info@theabsolutesound.com NextScreen, LLC. 4544 S. Lamar, Bldg. G-300 Austin, Texas 78745 (512) 892-8682 fax: (512) 891-0375 tas@nextscreen.com ©2009 NextScreen, LLC., Issue 195 September 2009. The Absolute Sound (ISSN #0097-1138) is published 10 times per year in the months of Jan, Feb, Mar, combined issues in Apr/May & Jun/Jul, Aug, Sept, Oct, Nov, and Dec, $29.90 per year for U.S. residents, NextScreen, LLC., 4544 S. Lamar, Bldg G300, Austin, Texas 78745. Periodical Postage paid at Austin, Texas, and additional mailing offices. Canadian publication mail account #1551566 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Absolute Sound, Subscription Services, P.O. Box 629, Mt. Morris, IL 61054. Printed in the USA. The Absolute Sound September 2009 5 6 September 2009 The Absolute Sound The Absolute Sound September 2009 7 Letters e-mail us: rharley@nextscreen.com or write us a letter: The Absolute Sound, 4544 S. Lamar, G-300, Austin, TX 78745 Budget Pavarotti? Build Your Own Music Server Did you ever hear Pavarotti sing a high C up to a certain price level? Did you ever see Dame Sutherland perform the best Lucia you’ve heard for the money? Or a Desdemona by Tebaldi up to a certain price category? Maybe Jascha Heifetz limiting his standards so that people could purchase tickets for his performances? TAS has consistently raised the bar in reporting standards by separating descriptions of equipment performance from qualifications through price. That is the way it should be. Description and assessment of performance is just that, and only that. Establishing value is entirely different from describing performance. It is so refreshing to read through most of TAS free from the cliché “It is so good at this price level . . ..” Yet, the crutch pops up once in a while. See Anthony Cordesman’s Golden Ear Award for the Thiel 3.7 speaker: “It makes advances... that I have not heard at anything like its price.” Please, liberate us from this reporting crutch. Just describe the performance! If you must judge value, do so independently of your performance description. Just describe what it does. Don’t lean on the price crutch! . Steven Stone’s article on the Sound Science Music Vault [Issue 193] was interesting and well written. I am one of the people who “cobbled together” my home music server and wanted to share that experience. First off, I am very computer savvy. Though not a computer technician I am very comfortable with computers and work for a software company. There was a lot of troubleshooting and one particularly stressful seven-hour day on the phone with four different support technicians located in the Philippines (not fun). But at the end I do have a very reliable, high-quality music server with 2.5TB (2500 gigabytes) of storage for under $1000. I started with an HP Home Server that came loaded with Microsoft Home Server on a 500-gigabyte hard disk that cost approximately $500. I then purchased two 1-terabyte hard disks from Amazon. com for $200 (each drive from a major brand was $100 and the price has dropped since). I added the Logitech Duet ($300) and installed its software on the Home Server. Logitech says it doesn’t support the Duet on the Microsoft Home Server, but tech support still helped me. Now I have 1500 CDs ripped in Lossless WMA on my server (backed up on a duplicate drive and still plenty of space to grow) and have the Duet sending the digital stream to my own DAC. The Logitech remote control with its LCD display has been just fabulous! Having my entire music collection at full fidelity with all the sorting capacities of any iPod is truly wonderful. It’s like I’ve rediscovered my music collection all over again! I would not recommend this solution to everyone—you have to have some computer savvy and initially a lot of patience. But if you’re on a tight budget Carlos E. Bauza Credit Where Credit Is Due Greg Cahill captured the essence of Dan Hicks pretty much spot-on in his review [Issue 193] with one important element left out—no mention of the girls. The sound of the Lickettes is a big part of Dan’s signature sound. Of course, just because my wife is one of them doesn’t mean that I am in any way biased. Joe Cohen The Lotus Group 8 September 2009 The Absolute Sound this system delivers the benefits of a music server without the high price. Once it’s up and running, there’s no further maintenance unless you upgrade the hardware or software. After experiencing a digital music server I would never go back to those little shiny discs ever again. Arleigh Taylor Biased Against Tube Biasing As a dedicated lover of tube playback electronics, it was interesting to see that Teac has introduced a new tube amplifier. However, $19K for a 45 watt per channel amp that can’t have the bias set at home without voiding your 3 year warranty? You have got to be kidding me. I just got rid of an Audio Research VT-100 Mk. II amp because I considered the mechanical/ electrical design fatally flawed because of the tube-biasing scheme. Just to test/ set the bias on the output tubes requires removing 27 screws from the top plate. Need to change the driver tubes? Now we get to warm the amp up for 30 minutes, take off both side plates in addition to the 27 screws on the top plate, and then fiddle with balancing out the bias circuit. Now Teac has done that bias scheme one better by requiring its user to return the amp to a dealer which may or may not involve shipping costs each time as well as the very real chance of incurring damage every time you ship it. The bottom line is that biasing output tubes is a normal part of owning a tube amp and manufacturers should not expect or demand that their customers return their amps to a dealer each time bias needs to be checked or reset. Based on Teac’s pricing model, I am surprised my Jadis Defy 7 doesn’t cost $100k when measured by build-quality, looks, and sound quality. Mark Pearson FROM THE Editor The 2009 TAS Editors’ Choice Awards How We Choose In this issue you’ll find our 2009 Editors’ Choice Awards, the comprehensive feature in which we list every product in every category that we recommend. At forty-two pages, the Editors’ Choice Awards is by far the largest single feature we publish. 10 September 2009 The Absolute Sound In some cases, however, one product is so clearly superior to another of the same (or higher) price that we simply cannot recommend the competitor. We can’t imagine any listener preferring what we regard as the lesser product and so we remove it from the list. This happens most often in digital sources, where a new design outperforms older units. We then ask the reviewers of the newly added products to write the capsule descriptions. Those capsules are integrated into the master document, and then the whole thing is edited and prepared for layout. It’s quite a process, but in the end we have a single feature that represents the condensed wisdom (we hope) of the entire TAS editorial staff and freelance writers who collectively have more than 240 years of experience reviewing high-end audio gear. Looking over the finished document, it struck me that the TAS staff has listened to, and formed opinions about, the roughly 500 products selected as winners of a 2009 TAS Editors’ Choice Award. We hope that you find our selections a useful guide in assembling or upgrading your music system. TAS founder Harry Pearson’s selections can be found in this issue’s HP’s Workshop. If you haven’t been to www.avguide.com for awhile, you’re missing a wealth of high-end audio news, stories, factory tours, product previews, commentary, and other great reading. For example, you can read about my experience with “The Best Stereo System I Ever Heard” and Jonathan Valin’s visit with some of Japan’s foremost audio artisans. Other topics include a listen to Magico’s new Ultimate horn loudspeaker, an illustrated tour of cable manufacturer Transparent Audio’s factory, a loudspeaker 20 years in the making that uses 32 full-range 3" drivers, and “One of the Best Preamps You’ve Never Heard,” to name a few. The Absolute Sound’s Web site isn’t a one-way street; you are welcome to comment on anything we say, or respond to other readers. It’s an exciting and vibrant forum for TAS writers and readers that I hope you’ll join—and it’s free. Robert Harley TELL ROBERT WHAT YOU THINK HERE... avguide.com/BLOG But how do we determine which products make the cut—and which don’t? We start by taking last year’s Editors’ Choice Awards document and methodically fact-checking every listing to see if the product is still current and available for purchase, if there’s been a price change, and whether the product is still handled by the same distributor. Discontinued products or those that no longer have North American distribution are automatically dropped. We next provisionally add to the list every product that’s been reviewed in the intervening twelve months. Now that we have the raw material, the next step is a series of marathon conference calls among Neil Gader, Jonathan Valin, and me (the entire full-time editorial staff) to determine which products from the previous years should remain, which should be deleted, and which of the recently reviewed products deserve to be added. We consult the reviews to see how enthusiastic (or not) the writer was about the product, and if there’s a question, I ask the reviewer if he or she thinks the product is worthy of an Editors’ Choice Award. But what makes a product worthy of a TAS Editors’ Choice Award? There’s one simple criterion: Would one of us buy the product with our own money or recommend that product to a close friend or relative? If the answer is “yes,” the product stays. If not, it’s gone. It’s that simple. What’s not so simple is when we encounter similarly priced products that have different musical attributes or form factors. For example, the category “Loudspeakers from $1500 to $2000” has nine entries, including such widely divergent products as the PSB Synchrony Two, Tannoy Autograph Mini, Magnepan MG 1.6, and the Reference 3A Dulcet. In this case, we can envision a system, environment, and listener that these loudspeakers will best suit. There’s no clear answer to the question: “What’s the best $1500 to $2000 speaker?” All we can do is give you a short list of speakers we’ve found to have merit, and provide our view of each product’s strengths and shortcomings. From there, it’s up to you to do your own listening and find the best match for your musical priorities. 2008 Interconnect & Speaker Cable of the Year. Robert Harley writes: “...putting Oracle MA into the system rendered a jaw-dropping increase in bottom-end weight, spatial resolution, and sheer naturalness. This cable must be heard to be believed.” 2008 Interconnect & Speaker Cable “...Magnum MA...delivers many of the same sonic qualities for considerably less money. of the Year Had I not heard Oracle MA, Magnum MA would be my reference. Music Interface Technologies More than Just Cable! TM ® 4130 Citrus Avenue, Suite 9, Rocklin, CA USA 95677 Ph: 916/625-0129 www.mitcables.com ©2009 CVTL, Inc. All rights reserved The Absolute Sound September 2009 11 FutureTAS Neil Gader A Twin-Cartridge Solution The Esoteric E-03 phonostage preamp boasts a signal path so direct and quiet that it eliminates the need for the balanced circuits commonly used to achieve lower noise. This means zero microprocessors and switching circuits in this no-holds-barred design. Highly configurable, it features two analog phono inputs and fully adjustable input-signal settings with up to seven impedance positions to accommodate two moving-coil cartridges. The E-03 also allows selection of three different capacitance values for moving-magnet cartridges—0pF, 100pF, and 330pF. It is also equipped with a demagnetization circuit for path and cartridge. A three-pointsupport, dual-split chassis provides the rigidity and isolation that Esoteric is known for. Price: $5500. esoteric.teac.com Redefining Definition Tannoy’s latest Definition range represents the evolution of its proven 8" and 10" Dual Concentric drivers—reinforced by auxiliary bass drivers in the floorstanding models. The wideband tweeter is an ultra-rigid titanium dome driven by a neodymium magnet assembly rigidly coupled to the rear of the acoustic cavity. The bass-reflex cabinets are constructed from top-grade birch plywood; the trapezoid shape is engineered to minimize resonances and internal reflections. Each driver is coupled to the cabinet with a unique bracing mechanism for extreme rigidity. The all-new crossover benefits from Tannoy’s Deep Cryogenic Treatment (DCT). High-purity silver-plated OFC wiring is used throughout. Price: DC8, $1800; DC8t, $2800; DC10t, $3800. tannoy.com 12 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Silence of the LAMMs Two new preamplifiers join the LAMM family. The LL2.1 preamplifier replaces the LL2 and includes upgrades like builtin remote on/off for LAMM amplifiers, gain attenuation, new internal parts, and some key schematic changes. It is available in two versions—standard and deluxe, with the latter sporting a more robust power supply and top-drawer polystyrene capacitors. The LAMM LL1 Signature is a monaural, pure Class A, single-stage, line-level, vacuumtube preamplifier with a separate power supply featuring a full-wave vacuum rectifier. Specially selected high-transconductance dual triodes are used in the signal path with TKD stepped potentiometers for volume control. The preamp has three inputs, one tape/HT processor loop, single-ended and pseudo-balanced outputs, and attenuation for 12dB gain reduction. Price: LL2.1 deluxe version, $5990; standard, $5690. LL1 Signature, $42,690. lammindustries.com 14 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Industry NEWS ALAN SIRCOM september 2009 The 2009 Munich High-End Show M unich…best known for beer, BMWs, and now big, big audio. Over the last few years, the Munich High-End show has eclipsed many other formerly significant audio expos to become one of the most important events in the world audiophile calendar. Running across four days in May (a trade event Thursday and public admission Friday through Sunday), the show is held across two upper and two lower halls in Munich’s MOC expo center. A surprising number of big names from America were at the expo. Krell and Audio Research (as well as Vienna Acoustics, vdH, and Sonus Faber) were exhibiting in the Audio Reference stand. Inside the booth, Audio Research was making one of the first public demonstrations of its extremely adjustable Reference 2 phonostage, played through a pair of Vienna Acoustics Klimpt “Kiss” loudspeakers and using an EAT Forte turntable. Among the American products on demonstration, the YG Acoustics Anat Reference II and Kipod and the Magico M5 were universally praised for making good sound, while perhaps the most ambitious switcheroo demo of the show was run by the importers of the likes of Ayre, Bryston, Mark Levinson, JBL, and Revel; the company swapped between JBL Everest horns and Revel Salon2, both playing through the new Mark Levinson SACD player, preamp, and No 53 power amplifier towers. Set away from the show, Wilson Audio took a room in a nearby hotel to introduce the newest addition to the family—Sasha, the most radical change to the WATT/Puppy loudspeaker design since its inception nearly Wilson’s new Sasha replaces 20 years ago. With a W/P 8 standing sidethe WATT/ by-side with the new speaker, the changes Puppy 8 in the two designs were clearly evident and the remodelled production/engineering process has meant the newcomer is some $3000 cheaper than its predecessor, and yet promises to sound better than ever. The Absolute Sound September 2009 15 Industry NEWS september 2009 Naturally, a German specialty audio show has a lot of German specialty audio on show. To many outside the country that means Burmester. The company gave an excellent demonstration of its chrome-fronted Top Line product range (CD, preamp, power amp, mains conditioner, and loudspeakers), also highlighting the Reference Line system above this, and the two beneath the Top Line products. The company was also Transrotor’s justifiably proud of its new automotive new ’table feawing, as it had secured the exclusive tures magnetic bearings audio system rights for the new Porsche Panamera. “It says my name six times inside the car,” giggled Dieter Burmester. “It only says Porsche on the steering wheel!” Shiny chrome is a common thread among German high-end, as are turntables. Put the two together and you have Transrotor. The sci-fi Artus and the 1970schic-meets-21st-century-engineering Argos decks share completely decoupled magnetic bearings, damped pendulum anti-vibration tables, and more chrome than all the surviving Edsels on the planet. They also share a price tag in excess of $150,000. Elsewhere, there were the new four-tonearm Tafelrunde deck from D Klimo, a more down-to-earth $1400 Concept turntable package from Clearaudio, the violin-bow arm on the piano-shaped Horo turntable (dedicated to Bill Evans, apparently), and the first Thorens turntable not to look like it was designed in the 1960s—the colourful TD309. Called the Tri-Balance, this new $1400 deck is designed to be set up using just one Allen wrench; it includes a DC motor driven by a switch-mode power supply and a feedback-based speed-control system. New electronics were relatively thin on the ground. Budget superstars Cambridge Audio announced its new Azur 650C $550 CD player and 650A $600 integrated amplifier, with a soon-to-follow tuner in the wings. Creek Audio followed with its new $1000-per-product Evolution 2 range of lower-priced electronics. Meanwhile, Arcam and Pioneer announced new Blu-ray devices. As did Goldmund (its $140,000 player set tongues wagging). By way of contrast, Gryphon’s Scorpio CD player and Antila integrated amp suddenly sounded like bargain basement products at a mere $10,900 apiece. And then there’s Finite Elemente. The German stand Bow Technologies Wizard CD player Chord electronics and Kharma loudspeakers The Absolute Sound September 2009 17 18 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Industry NEWS september 2009 designed to work in free space, its big claim to fame is the first use of a fully isolated Balanced Mode Radiator drive unit for midrange and treble. BMR designs act like a conventional pistonic drive unit at lower frequencies, but more like a NXT panel or an electrostatic panel in the treble. Naim speakers have ARC’s Terry struggled to find favor with non-Naim Dorn demo’s the Reference users in the past, but this might be the 2 phonostage exception. The High End show remains one of the most exciting events on the Four tonearms, anyone? company has been working audiophile calendar. Numbers overall A spangling Klimo turntable. with the Fraunhofer Institute were down from last year, although to develop an active equipment not as substantially as many expected support. The unnamed, unpriced and—despite the home soccer team prototype used piezo-electric devices on the shelves that deliver having a vital end-of-season playoff on Saturday—the halls resonance-cancelling signals on the fly. Finite Elemente had a and rooms were busy across the whole weekend. And that’s cool demonstration using a tuning fork; this worked normally worth celebrating—bring on the weißbier! TAS and then went completely dead when the piezo devices were turned on. In another “concept car” design, KEF Audio showed its Blade loudspeaker. Unlike the Finite Elemente stand, this is unlikely to make it to market, but Blade shows what happens when designers are given free rein to develop a product without boundaries. Forcecancelling, side-firing drivers, a custom-made Uni-Q speaker, and a unique-looking woven-carbon-fiberover-balsawood cabinet all made for a stunning sound. Pity it’ll never make it to the shops. The Brits have always been well known for loudspeakers, and they didn’t disappoint at Munich. Studiomeets-the-home expert PMC announced its new Fact range of speakers, starting with the $7500 Fact 8 floorstander. This transmissionline speaker features drivers made specifically by the company for the Fact range. A stand-mount speaker is expected very soon…and that’s a Fact! Last, but by no means least, Naim Audio announced its new $10,000 Ovator S-600 floorstanding speakers. One of the first Naim speakers The Absolute Sound September 2009 19 20 September 2009 The Absolute Sound TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS Welcome to the 2009 edition of The Absolute Sound’s Editors’ Choice Awards, our annual Recommended Products list. On the following pages we present the gear that our editors and writers have selected as most worthy of your consideration. These are the components we ourselves would buy—or recommend to friends and family. Each product category is divided into price ranges, with components listed in order of ascending cost (though a few items, like cables and accessories, are listed alphabetically for clarity’s sake). Each recommendation is also accompanied by a capsule review, the original reviewer’s name or initials, and the issue the review appeared in. Note that in a few cases a product may have been reviewed in one of our sister publications, Playback or AVguide.com, or the review may be pending publication, or the product may not have been formally reviewed but earns a recommendation based on one or more writer’s extensive experience with it. Given that this is the high end, where components generally have long lifespans, some of our recommendations look back several years. At the same time, in an effort to be as selective as possible, we have dropped some components that appeared on last year’s list, usually because they have been discontinued but sometimes because fresh competition has caused us to reconsider. TAS founder Harry Pearson’s selections can be found in this issue’s HP’s Workshop. The Absolute Sound September 2009 21 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS Loudspeakers Under $500 PSB Alpha B1 $279 psbspeakers.com GE 07 Yet another “how does he do it?” loudspeaker from the prolific mind of Paul Barton. The new, more curvaceous Alpha combines mind-bending dynamics and rich mids in a speaker barely a foot tall. Even the midbass has a power and pitch definition rarely experienced in this modest price range. Only the nebulous soundstaging is less than excellent. Reviewed by Neil Gader, Issue 170 KRK Rokit 6 $398 krksys.com An entry-level active mini with warmth, presence, and a lavish soundstage. The Rokit 6 has a distinct dynamic comfort zone that should limit it to smaller rooms. True to its pro-monitor roots there’s plenty of versatile input connectivity. A fine, dualpurpose, portable speaker that proves that even a pro-monitor can cater to the new breed of multitasking, downloading audiophiles. Reviewed by NG, Issue 191 Paradigm Mini Monitor V.6 $478 paradigm.com The newest version of Paradigm’s second-leastexpensive speaker provides more than a taste of what music sounds like played through speakers made by people who care about the sound of live music. The Minis offer a surprising level of sonic quality for a ridiculously low price. They aren’t elegant looking, but if you close your eyes you won’t care. Reviewed by Steven Stone, Issue 190 Usher S520 $479 usheraudiousa.com Four things distinguish Usher’s P-3ES2s, the Triangle speakers display similar upper bass and lower midrange. Once broken in the Titus EX makes beautiful Gallic-flavored music. Reviewed by SS, Issue 186 S520 from run-of-the-mill, sub$400 mini-monitors: a crisp and revealing treble, an unusually open and dynamic midrange, taut and surprisingly extended bass (no midbass hump here), and eye-popping build-quality. One caveat: The S520 needs lots of break-in, so be patient. Reviewed by Chris Martens in AVgM, Issue 10 AV123 X-Static $999 av123.com Focal 705V/706V $495/$650 focal.tm.fr Although nominally a bookshelf speaker, the Focal 706V delivers an oversized presentation, with the bass power, weight, and extension of many small floorstanding units. Highly dynamic and visceral, it has a forward perspective that puts vocals right up front. Shines on rock, blues, and orchestral music. Highish sensitivity makes it an easy load for an amplifier. If you can get by with a little less bass extension and output consider the 705V for $150 less. Reviewed by Robert Harley, Issue 173; 705V reviewed by SS, Issue 183 $500–$1000 Magnepan MMG $599 magnepan.com GE 08 PoY 07 At just under $600, it is hard to imagine a better speaker than this mini-Maggie, provided you have the space and a powerful-enough amplifier. Like all Maggie dipoles, the thing sounds open, airy, coherent, and unusually lifelike. Not the last word in resolution, low bass, or top treble, the MMG’ll still give you a larger taste of high-end sound than virtually anything at or near its price. Reviewed by Jonathan Valin, Issue 177 B&W 685 $650 bwspeakers.com GE 08 PoY 07 B&W’s 685 has fine balance, tremendous rhythmic authority, an open soundstage, impressive bass response, and a singing treble; it plays loudly without 22 September 2009 The Absolute Sound strain, and, thanks to a forwardfiring port, it can be mounted on a wall, shelf, or stand. A slight, lingering edginess in the very upper treble makes it both exciting to listen to as well as slightly sharp with female voices. Reviewed by Wayne Garcia, Issue 176 PSB T45/55 $799/$949 psbspeakers.com As successors to the popular Image Series, the T45 and T55 had big shoes to fill. These small and mid-sized floorstanders do not disappoint. Both are well balanced tonally, with superior driver integration, excellent output capability, and a fair amount of extension. Soundstaging is merely adequate, and the treble is coolish, but macrodynamics are gutsy and fine details delicately reproduced. T45 reviewed by Jim Hannon, AVgM, Issue 11; T55 reviewed by NG, Issue 152 Triangle Titus EX $995 vmax-services.com Within its SPL limits the Titus delivers surprisingly good sound. Its exponential horn tweeter is physically time-aligned behind the midrange/woofer, and this phase coherence produces very accurate imaging and soundstage reproduction. Compared with the classic “British sound” of the comparably sized Harbeth Although its price has gone up since our review appeared, AV123’s X-Static remains a stunning value. Designed in Colorado and built in Colombia, this medium-sized, open-baffle, D’Appolito-configured tower is very musical, developing a remarkably large, threedimensional, almost spooky-real soundstage. The only quibble is a slight grainy texture in the midrange. Internet-direct sales only. Reviewed by WG, Issue 189 $1000–$1500 B&W CM1 $1000 bwspeakers.com Like many small speakers, this tiny, jewel-like mini-monitor trades bass extension and wide dynamics for midrange purity. Through the mids, the CM1 is magical, with a timbral realism, freedom from grain, palpability, and lack of coloration that many five-figure loudspeakers don’t deliver. Stunning on vocals and small-scale acoustic music. Reviewed by RH, Issue 173 PSB Imagine B $1000 psbspeakers.com Think Imagine T minus a midbass driver and a floorstanding enclosure. There’s the same voice in the expressive midrange and treble and, with only minor exceptions, the same superb balance. The B can’t quite chew on bass lines and kick drums and organ riffs as if they were rice cakes like the T can, but as if to compensate the B seems a bit lighter and fleeter of foot in the upper mids and lower treble. Reviewed by NG, Issue 189 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS PoY 05 Magnepan MG12/QR $1195 magnepan.com Revel Concerta F12 $1498 revelspeakers.com This affordable two-way quasiribbon takes you remarkably close to the best performance Magnepans are capable of. When it is properly placed— around three feet from walls— its clarity is addictive, with a wide deep soundstage and terrific transient response. The MG12 performs satisfyingly down to about 50Hz, and because of its larger panel has a slightly bigger soundfield than the amazing bargain-basement MMGs. Reviewed by JV, Issue 177 The Concerta F12’s greatest strengths are extended bass response, a neutral tonal balance, midrange nuance, and wonderfully consistent voicing from top to bottom. Though it may not offer the last word in transparency or the nth degree of bass articulation, this speaker is easy to drive with real-world amps, and always produces an inviting, well-balanced sound. Reviewed by Arnie Williams, Issue 157 Spendor S3/5R $1395 bluebirdmusic.com Now in its third iteration, designated by the “R” suffix, the S3/5R boasts greater neutrality, for a tonal balance of strong appeal to those who value musical naturalness above all else. Deep bass is wholly lacking, midbass is modest, and loudness levels are extremely limited, meaning that small‑room applications and moderate playback levels are mandated. But within these restrictions, a very accurate and musical subcompact monitor. Reviewed by Paul Seydor, Issue 182 $1500–$2000 PSB Synchrony Two B $1500 psbspeakers.com Another brilliant two-way compact from the wand of Paul Barton and crew. The “MiniMe” to the larger Synchrony Two, the Two B is more of a classic “voice” speaker and a windfall for choral-music listeners and singer/songwriter aficionados. Capable of solid 60Hz extension, the Two B only shows a bit of port push and wobbly pitch as it approaches its bottom-end bump-stops. A decathlete with a well-honed balance that few competitors will be able to match. Reviewed by NG, Issue 177 Vienna Acoustics Haydn Grand $1495 sumikoaudio.net Sheer transparency and musicality make this Viennese mini as sweet as a Sacher torte. Factor in the exquisite construction and finish, the richly detailed midbass, and stunning soundstaging, and the result is nothing less than one of the high end’s great little values. Only a bit of spotlighting in the treble suggests a less than neutral tonal balance but it’s a minor glitch in an overall glowing effort. Reviewed by NG, Issue 176 Reference 3A Dulcet $1790 reference3A.com True to its name, this Canadian bonbon produces smooth and melodious sound, and as a bonus is reasonably well balanced through the bass range. Its sonic demeanor is 24 September 2009 The Absolute Sound such that it should happily partner with even-less-thansterling digital front ends.Reviewed by Dick Olsher, Issue 171 Tannoy Autograph Mini $1799 tannoy.com “Easily the best desktop monitor I’ve heard,” says TM. These speakers aren’t going to fill a large room, but from 2 or 3 feet away they sound phenomenal. They may be expensive for their size and application, but how many other sub-$2000 audio products give you a solid glimpse of the state-of-the-art? Reviewed by Tom Martin, Issue 169 Magnepan MG 1.6QR $1895 magenpan.com Now a recognized classic, the Magnepan’s MG 1.6 is simply one of the greatest high-end speaker values. Its bass is well defined and tuneful down to a respectable 40Hz; its highs are sweet albeit a bit soft; its mids are magical. A music lover’s delight, it needs space and power to sound its best. The speaker JV himself would buy, were he shopping in this sector. Reviewed by JV, Issue 124 Quad 22L.2 $1900 quad-hifi.uk.co According to JH, the 22L “comes closer to my beloved electrostats than any other fullrange speakers with dynamic drivers I’ve heard under $2k.” Strengths include excellent lateral imaging, vivid and threedimensional soundstaging, very low distortion and coloration, and high timbral accuracy. For even more dynamic oomph and deep-bass extension, add Quad’s L-series subwoofer. Reviewed by JH, Issue 156 Harbeth HL-P3ES2 $1995–$2495 fidelisav.com This latest version of Alan Shaw’s subcompact monitor is so cannily designed it almost transcends the limitations of its genre. Neutrality and natural tonal balance reign supreme, but the Harbeth can also play loud and descend to depths in the bass that leave both the original LS3/5a and its other British derivatives at the post. Exceptional driver integration, coherence, and openness also characterize the design. PS’s favorite mini-monitor. Reviewed by PS, Issue 193 Epos M16i $1999 musichallaudio.com An English-designed, Chinesebuilt speaker possessing truly special performance qualities, the Epos M16 can whisper yet still be clearly heard; it can play loudly without getting aggressive; it is tonally quite neutral, has excellent rhythmic drive, and, with the best recordings, can do quite the disappearing act. Reviewed by WG, Issue 179 DALI Ikon 6 $2000 dali-usa.com PoY 06 If power, substance, and clarity are important qualities to you, the DALI Ikon 6 should be on your very short list. This speaker is easy to drive, effortlessly delivers the goods dynamically, and has a smooth overall balance. The midrange and treble are a touch forward, so match electronics with care. Reviewed by Robert E. Greene, Issue 164 KEF XQ20 $2000 kef.com Based on KEF’s signature Uni-Q driver array and equipped with a dispersion-controlling “tangerine” waveguide, the XQ20 offers a remarkably open and focused sound, with stunning 3-D imaging that remains convincing even when you sit off-axis. Though not the last word in dynamic clout or deep bass, it delivers sonic TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS refinement out of proportion to its price. Reviewed by CM, Playback Issue 20 PSB Imagine T PoY 08 $2000 psbspeakers.com Tonally neutral and dynamically turbocharged this short, two-anda-half-way tower offers a balance of audio virtues that is classic PSB. From the vivid midrange to the powerful and extended midbass, nothing seems out of joint. And that goes for the T’s seamless, curvilinear enclosure, the lack of exposed hardware, and the luxe fit ’n’ finish. Not as nuanced as Synchrony but more than good enough to make you feel like a big spender. Reviewed by NG, Issue 189 $2000–$3000 MartinLogan Source $2195 martinlogan.com GE 08 PoY 08 This modestly sized, attractive, two-way, electrostatic/cone hybrid sounds astonishingly like a “single-driver” speaker, with simply outstanding transient response (particularly in the midband), superior low-level resolution, and superb treble. Though the Sources don’t soundstage as well as certain other speakers and are a little “forward” in imaging (sort of like headphones), they are still one of the best electrostatic hybrids ML has yet offered. Reviewed by JV, Issue 180 Spendor SA1 $2195 spendoraudio.com Due to its not insubstantial price the Spendor SA1 has a lot of competition for your attention. But for a small listening room the SA1 may well prove to be a more musically rewarding choice than the vast majority of larger, more physically imposing transducers. If you are assembling a highend nearfield computer desktop system the Spendor SA1 definitely deserves to be among your Top Five must-audition options. Reviewed by SS in this issue Vandersteen 2Ce Signature II $2195 vandersteen.com PoY 02 This classic three-way floorstander delivers excellent top-to-bottom balance and an engaging musicality. Moreover, Vandersteen’s baffle-less, timeand-phase-coherent design can suggest the spatial focus usually heard with planars. It benefits from bi-wiring and should be placed away from walls. Reviewed by Shane Buettner, Issue 139 Sonics Anima $2600 immediasound.com Just thirteen inches tall, the Anima reveals all kinds of colors and details in the midbass and gives a very satisfying impression of low-frequency muscle. It also delivers harmonics and speed akin to a ribbon driver. Dynamics are a bit pinched with orchestral fireworks, and the slight elevation of the lower treble adds whitish sparkle and detail, but overall this is a very serious speaker. Reviewed by NG, Issue 172 Usher Be-718 $2795 usheraudiousa.com a single 6.5" mid/bass driver to DALI’s hybrid dome/ribbon tweeter module. Exceptionally quick, clear, and free from overhang, it combines low tonal coloration and agile dynamics in a musically compelling blend. Reviewed by RH, Issue 174 Emerald Physics CS 2 $2995 emeraldphysics.com A pair of dipole woofers in a baffle combined with a forward-radiating wave-guided compression driver (operating above 1kHz) and knit together by an external digital signalprocessing crossover makes for remarkably truthful and musical sound of considerable dynamic capacity, surprising bass extension, ultra-precise stereo imaging, and very flat response. Bi-amplification is required. Unusual but fascinating. Reviewed by REG, Issue 188 and bottom octaves, the Synchrony Two offers bonerattling, dynamic excitement in a sleek, five-driver, two-way, bassreflex design. Two of its woofers high-pass to the tweeter at differing frequencies, giving this PSB marvelous coherence and extension from bottom to top. A slight dip in the presence range and some residual lag in the bass suggest that careful attention to setup is required. Reviewed by NG, Issue 177 Harbeth C7ES-3 $3495–$3795 fidelisav.com GE 07 Arguably the ne plus ultra of BBC two‑way designs, with bass down to 46Hz, an essentially perfect midrange, and a top end that reproduces ambience fantastically well. The 7ES‑3 will play loud enough for serious music listeners (though not for head-bangers). With respect to accuracy, neutrality, and natural tonal balance the 7 establishes for PS a new benchmark for compact two‑ways. Reviewed by PS, Issue 171 ProAc Response D2 $3500 proac-loudspeakers.com PoY 07 $3000–$5000 A return to form for ProAc’s founder and chief designer Stewart Tyler. The compact two-way D2 channels the ghost of the legendary Response 2 and ups the ante with improved extension at both frequency extremes and higher output, along with the stunning imaging and soundstaging that have been hallmarks of Proac from the earliest days of the Tablette. Only a hint of port noise and some upper-treble brightness color what is an altogether richly satisfying listening experience. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 This stand-mount two-way delivers surprisingly deep bass extension from its 7" woofer, and the beryllium tweeter is clean, sweet, extended, and highly resolving. The Be-718’s treble reproduction is notable for its lack of grain and glare, even when pushed hard. The spatial presentation is spectacular, with a wide deep soundstage. A great speaker and a tremendous value. Reviewed by RH, Issue 176 Definitive Technology Mythos STS/ST $3000/$4000 PoY 07 definitivetech.com DALI Mentor 2 $2800 dali-usa.com PSB Synchrony Two $3000 psbspeakers.com Totem “The One” $3595 ($4170 with T4S stands) totemacoustic.com Falling midway between the Ikon and Helicon lines, the stand-mounted Mentor 2 mates A sonic extrovert, with a dark voluptuous tonality that reaches deep into the lower midrange A fitting salute to Totem’s 20th Anniversary, the limited edition The One is a superb small 26 September 2009 The Absolute Sound The ST, and its slightly scaleddown brother, the STS, deliver exceptional sound quality in an easy-to-drive package. With integral powered woofers and whopping 93dB sensitivity, the STS and ST can be driven to satisfying levels with moderately powerful amplifiers. Reviewed by CM, Issue 178 GE 09 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS monitor delivering exceptional coherence, a large holographic soundfield, a defined yet never too bright treble, and surprising wallop in the bass. The midrange is warm and natural, with essentially no sound from the enclosure. Most importantly, The One grabs your emotions, making for addictive listening. Reviewed by WG, Issue 184 Gershman Sonogram $3695 gershmanacoustics.com PoY 08 A high-output, three-way floorstander with near-fullrange capabilities and priced to move, the Sonogram is both lively and balanced with almost inextinguishable dynamic reserves. Despite a bit of added emphasis in the sibilance range and some vagueness of pitch in the bass, the Sonogram succeeds in providing nothing less than an Old School E-ticket ride. It delivers—often on a thrilling scale. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 hybrid-electrostatic line. The mids flow naturally with commendable clarity. Imaging cohesiveness is superb. Tonal balance is on the lean side, which suggests placement near room corners. Reviewed by DO, Issue 168 Acoustic Zen Technologies Adagio $4300 acousticzen.com The Adagio’s strength is a clarity that spans its entire range. Elements of its design— transmission-line mid/bass enclosures, modified circular ribbon drivers—contribute not only to the speaker’s overall lucidity, but also to its seamlessness, tonal accuracy, sparkle and sweet detail in the highs, richness and nuance in the mids, and depth and detail in the bass. The soundstage is satisfying. Reviewed by Sallie Reynolds, Issue 162 Vandersteen 3A Signature $3950 GE 02 vandersteen.com Like all Vandersteens, the 3A Signature is time-and-phase accurate. Its driver complement features the patented midrange and tweeter used in the vaunted Vandersteen 5. The 3A Signature has a relaxed presentation, is musically seductive, and will appeal to those who want to forget about the sound and enjoy the music, though it does trade off some dynamic contrast and midrange resolution for its overall ability to involve the listener. Reviewed by RH, Issue 122 MartinLogan Vista $4295 martinlogan.com Those of you in search of the closest approach to midrange realism would be hard-pressed to do any better than the Vista—one of the smallest and most affordable members of MartinLogan’s revamped Focal 1007Be $4495 audioplusservices.com These superior two-way minimonitors may not take you all the way to Magico Mini Land, but they’ll drop you off in a nearby neighborhood for onesixth the price. Subjectively, a little tipped toward the treble in balance (despite their exceptionally flat frequency response), they are models of transparency and resolution, with simply phenomenal soundstaging (as is the case with all really good two-ways). Reviewed by JV, Issue 176 sonic virtues that earned its big brother, the Total Eclipse, a 2001 Golden Ear Award. The midband is slightly warm, with highs that are gloriously open, tight, and extended, and bass that is well controlled. Mirrorimage side-firing 8" woofers can be positioned facing in or out, necessitating some experimentation for proper room setup. Reviewed by Sue Kraft, Issue 146 Sunfire CRM-2 satellites and Sunfire SRS-210E SubRosa subwoofer $4600 ($1600 for CRM2/$3000 for SRS-210E) sunfire.com The CRM-2 packs a 5'-long ribbon driver into an enclosure you can hold in the palm of your hand. Augmented by dual 4.5" side-firing bass/ midrange drivers, the CRM-2 offers the seamless coherence, transient quickness, and low coloration inherent in ribbons. Soundstaging is spectacular. Careful setup is essential to realizing the CRM-2’s potential. Must be used with a Sunfire subwoofer. Reviewed by RH, Issue 184 Magnepan MG 3.6 $4995 magnepan.com Yet another great deal from Magnepan, this large, fullrange ribbon/quasi-ribbon dipole gives you much of the phenomenal detail and transparency of its big brother, the 20.1, for considerably less moolah. As with the 20.1, be sure to bring a high-power, high-quality amp to the party, and make sure you have sufficient space to let these things “breathe” or the ribbon tweeter will start to glare. Reviewed by JV, Issue 121 $5000–$10,000 Coincident Partial Eclipse II $4499 coincidentspeaker.com Sonics Amerigo $5500 immediasound.com A three-way floorstander, the Partial shares many of the same The first Sonics model manufactured in the U.S., 28 September 2009 The Absolute Sound this three-way, bass-reflex floorstander is an unalloyed success with a clean, nearly boxless character, fast microdynamic reflexes, and a superior spacious presentation. Musically its attention to detail is classic Joachim Gerhard (known for Audio Physic prior to launching Sonics). Its understated beauty and excellent fit and finish make this wideband, full-bodied speaker a standout in its class. NG, review forthcoming Pioneer S2-EX $6000 pioneerelectronics.com GE 07 Making TAD technology more affordable, Pioneer offers a three-way stand-mount with pinpoint imaging and powerful dynamics that put many floorstanders to shame. The S2-EX’s coincident midrange/ beryllium tweeter is stunningly fast and accurate. Maybe a bit clinical up top, but remarkably uncolored overall. You’ll never again feel the same about a stand-mounted speaker. Reviewed by NG, Issue 169 Revel Performa F52 $6998 revelspeakers.com PoY 06 A near paradigm of tonal neutrality with muscular dynamics, unflappable composure at insane levels, and superior construction quality and finish. Capable of playing all musical genres with class and confidence. Some may quibble about a minor forward tilt, or a treble that could use a bit more bloom, or a shallow soundstage. Still, this is one of the great values to come down the high-end pike. Reviewed by NG, Issue 162 Hyperion Sound Design HPS968 $7000 hyperionsound.com JH’s new valued-priced, fullrange, dynamic-loudspeaker reference achieves a level of transient quickness, immediacy, The Absolute Sound September 2009 29 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS soundstage depth, and clarity that is difficult to match at any price. While setup is a bit tricky for one person, the speaker is quite efficient and couples easily with more affordable electronics, offering smoothness with a touch of warmth, plus very good dynamic impact and detail. Reviewed by JH, Issue 186 A refined speaker that can also rock, the Rienzi’s unusual bass enclosure allows owners to choose either a front- or rearfiring arrangement, which adds flexibility to room placement. Reviewed by WG, Issue 175 Esoteric MG20 $7800 includes stands esoteric.teac.com Detailed, yet relaxed, the Piega caresses musical lines with speed, finesse, and no artificial aftertaste. A proprietary coaxial ribbon is responsible for pure textures through the critical mids and upper octaves. Forget British mini-monitors—the Piega is the champ when it comes to imaging precision and stability. Slightly laid-back balance, with limited bass extension. Subsonics are an issue during vinyl playback. A subwoofer is recommended. Reviewed by DO, Issue 176 GE 08 A musically compelling performer, with exceptional coherence, transient speed, and resolution due to exclusive use of magnesium-alloy diaphragm technology. Images like a minimonitor with tight and palpable outlines. Nicely balanced with sufficient mid- and upper-bass energy to properly flesh out the power range of an orchestra. Deep bass extension is limited to about 45Hz. Requires at least 40Wpc. Reviewed by DO, Issue 177 Gradient Helsinki 1.5s $7999 www.gradient.fi GE 08 This unusual design from Gradient’s Jorma Salmi, with wave-guided tweeter, discmounted midrange, and sidefiring dipole woofer, is intended to erase your listening room from the sound you hear. And it delivers the goods: Few other speakers can give you an equal sense of being transported to the performance venue. With the right setup, its spatial performance is at the top level attainable at any price. Bass is limited below 50Hz, and a subwoofer will be needed for ideal presentation of largescaled music. Reviewed by REG, Issue 189 Verity Audio Rienzi $8795 verityaudio.com A compact, two-piece, threeway, floorstanding design, Verity’s Rienzi is a model of neutrality, resolution, and transparency at its price-point. Piega TC-10X $9000 audiophilesystems.com Quad ESL-2805 $9500 quad-hifi.co.uk Quad 2905 $12,000 quad-hifi.co.uk GE 08 Although JV would love to own $30k Magico Mini IIs or, if he really hit the lottery, $89k Magico M5s, in the real world these large Quads—the biggest ’stats that the venerable company has yet made—are one of the high-end speakers he would (and could afford to) buy. No, they aren’t the last word in dynamic range, deep bass, top treble, or wall-to-wall soundstaging. And, no, they don’t disappear like minimonitors. All they do is sound real on just about any kind of music at moderate levels. Reviewed by JV, Issue 186 GE PoY GE07 PoY07 08 08 The addition of mass and bracing to Peter Walker’s revolutionary ESL-63 design and of improvements in the manufacture of the panels yields bass that is more extended (but not subterranean) and powerful, image focus that is even more stable, and dynamic range that is enhanced. Mated to the right amplifier, this speaker is capable of reproducing music with a realism and naturalness that are compelling and addictive. Reviewed by JH/PS, Issue 169 $10,000–$20,000 Usher 8571 MkII Dancer $10,200 usheraudiousa.com GE 08 An overachieving floorstander poised to eat any number of high-end sacred cows for lunch, the Dancer produces a big, finely focused, high-resolution sound that is dynamically alive. Bass power, extension, and clarity are very good, too. Overall sonics are reminiscent of Wilson’s Sophia or WATT/ 30 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Puppy speakers, but at a fraction of the price. Reviewed by CM, Issue 154 Sonus Faber Cremona M $12,800 sumikoaudio.net The latest addition to the Cremona family, the Cremona M retains the lute-shape enclosure that Sonus Faber popularized in its flagship Amati and Guarneri models. The M is powerful and passionate with a rich, warm balance. Yet it’s no wallflower dynamically. In its timbral sophistication and impressive dynamic range, even at peak orchestral levels, it achieves the kind of top-tobottom coherence that makes magic happen. Reviewed by NG, Issue 189 Vienna Acoustics Mahler 1.5 $12,800 sumikoaudio.net When partnered with the right electronics and with careful room placement, the Mahler 1.5 is cable of tuneful authority, finely textured and filigreed harmonic resolution, and a wonderfully solid soundstage. Needs extensive break-in and an amplifier with a high damping factor. Reviewed by Guido Corona, Issue 188 Thiel CS3.7 $12,900 thiel.com MBL 121 $12,580 mblusa.com A stand-mounted omnidirectional three-way that brings legendary MBL performance to smaller listening rooms. Stunningly dynamic and extended in its bass response for its compact size. Enveloping, immersive, and passionately romantic with symphonic works, it can also sound a bit amorphous on studio-made discs. Setup requires attentiveness—to balance the direct sound with the reflected sound. Needs power and the finest ancillary components to truly bloom. NG, review forthcoming GE 09 The best speaker yet from one of the world’s top designers, with major breakthroughs in driver design, overall technology, and build-quality for the money. More important, it boasts reference-quality sound with flat response, superb resolution and transient response, bass depth and power just short of the most expensive super-speakers, and excellent soundstaging and imaging. One of the most coherent speakers around without a touch of romance or exaggerated highs. Reviewed by Anthony H. Cordesman, Issue186 Harbeth M40.1 $12,995 harbeth.co.uk GE 09 The new version of the M40 The Absolute Sound September 2009 31 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS (REG’s reference) has a slightly more midrange-forward, more “domesticated,” less “pro” tonal balance, and higher sensitivity. A BBC-style three-way monitor, with Harbeth bass and mid drivers and SEAS Excel tweeter. Neutral sound, exceptional midrange clarity, refined and extended treble, almost full bass extension in room, and surprisingly “out of the box” imaging. Reviewed by REG, Issue 190 Wilson Audio Duette $13,400 wilsonaudio.com Dave Wilson’s first full-range compact two-way achieves outstanding bass response (down to the high thirties) and dynamic range, low distortion, high resolution, and excellent size, scaling, and freedom from cabinet resonances. However, its tonal balance is quite lean, with a trough in the upper-bass/ lower-midrange (150–300Hz) that reduces warmth, which means that, more than most, it is definitely a listen-before-you buy proposition. The Duette is an impressive achievement, but it will not be to all tastes. Reviewed by PS, Issue 161 EgglestonWorks Nine $13,900 egglestonworks.com An excellent performer for the price with outstanding timbre and surprising deep bass and dynamics. Unusually good reproduction of the subtleties of female voice and the differences between different makes of violins, pianos, and other acoustic instruments. Natural, realistic soundstage, with imaging and depth that match what is on the recording. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 184 Nola Viper Reference II $15,000 alon.com If you are frustrated by loudspeakers that occasionally impress in a hi-fi sense, but don’t really allow you to focus on the music, TM found the open-baffle, multiway, ribbon/ cone Nola Viper to be a breakthrough—neutral, nonanalytical, and highly musical. Viper I reviewed by TM, Issue 181 (updated Reference II not yet auditioned) Rockport Technologies Mira $15,000 GE rockporttechnologies.com 04 The Mira is seductively warm and rich, yet gives up little in detail and openness. Perhaps its most notable strength, because it usually comes with only the most costly designs, is a dynamic energy in the upper bass and lower treble regions that brings tricky instruments such as drums, bass, brass, and strings to vivid life. Reviewed by WG, Issue 149 Jamo R 909 $16,000 jamo.com GE 07 This remarkable speaker, which uses dynamic drivers in an open baffle, offers the openness and resistance to room problems of a dipole planar combined with a power, solidity, and bass extension that few planars can dream of. Coherent, dynamic, extended in the bass (to 27Hz), very low in distortion, and tonally well balanced, the R 909 does a positively spectacular job of reproducing the scope and power of large-scaled music. Reviewed by REG, Issue 167 Wilson Audio Sophia 2 $16,700 wilsonaudio.com GE 02 The Sophia 2 builds on the original’s strengths— extraordinary transient fidelity, deep bass extension, a huge spatial presentation, and a cabinet that contributes little sound of its own—with a smoother midrange and treble and even greater resolution. One of the great values in high-end audio. RH, review forthcoming 32 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Vandersteen Model 5A $16,900 vandersteen.com GE 03 GE 08 The 5A is an ultra-highresolution speaker that’s coherent and musically engaging from top to bottom, with the kind of convincing depth of imaging that only time-andphase correct designs can provide. It may not play as loudly as some competitors, but offers superior performance in other respects. A relative bargain among statement loudspeakers. Reviewed by SB, Issue 139 that Fred Kaplan thought only mini-monitors could. Fundamentals and overtones are pure, uncolored, and detailed; the crossover is seamless; and dynamics are captured with effortless agility. Until the speaker fully breaks in there is some discontinuity between the bass and the midrange/treble. Reviewed by FK, Issue 160 Usher Be-20 $18,860 usheraudiousa.com Offering true full-range frequency response and a sound that is highly dynamic, extremely detailed, and very three-dimensional, this beryllium driver-equipped floorstander is the complete high-end package. The Be-20 is accurate enough to delight left-brainers, yet soulful enough to capture the hearts of rightbrainers. It looks stunning, too. Be aware that this hefty speaker needs room to breathe and works best in larger spaces (for mid-size rooms, try the smaller Be-10). Reviewed by CM, Issue 183 $20,000 and above Sonus Faber Elipsa $20,800 sumikoaudio.net GE 07 Yet another gorgeous speaker from this outstanding Italian manufacturer, the Elipsa’s tone colors are ravishing, its overall sound smooth, warm, and intensely seductive. At the same time, it will easily show differences in recordings as well as associated components. Reviewed by WG, Issue 173 Verity Audio Parsifal Ovation $20,995 verityaudio.com They take a long time to set up properly and an extremely long time to break in, but these speakers disappear to a degree Martin Logan CLX $21,832 martinlogan.com GE 09 A long time coming, this successor to MartinLogan’s one-and-only previous fullrange electrostat, the CLS, bests the original in every way, particularly in tonal balance where its lower midrange and upper bass are no longer sucked out but flat as pancakes (if flat’s your idea of a good pancake). The most transparent-tosources loudspeaker JV has auditioned, the CLX is the very model of resolution, neutrality, and realism. It is also, alas, limited to about 55Hz in the bass, which means you’ll need a pair of ML’s Descent-i subs to get the whole orchestra. However, if you don’t care much about low bass, then this is the speaker for you. It is for JV—his electrostatic reference. Reviewed by JV, Issue 190 Revel Salon2 $21,998 revelspeakers.com PoY 07 The result of five years of intensive research into every aspect of loudspeaker performance, the new Revel Salon2 represents a genuine breakthrough in dynamic loudspeakers. Although The Absolute Sound September 2009 33 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS impressive in every performance aspect, the Salon2’s treble is the cleanest, most natural, and best-integrated RH has heard from a dynamic transducer. Bring a high-powered amplifier. Reviewed by RH, Issue 178 GE 05 B&W 800D $23,000 bwspeakers.com “Wholeness” and “seamlessness” were the qualities that most struck reviewer Sue Kraft while auditioning B&W’s diamondtweeter-studded 800D. The 800D’s other attributes include world-class imaging, high resolution, a taut, well-defined bass, and unruffled response at high playback levels. Reviewed by SK, Issue 156 GE 03 Sound Lab M-1PX $23,970 soundlab-speakers.com Like a CLX with low end, this huge and hugely wonderful electrostat has the biggest soundfield, far and away the deepest bass (true 20Hz extension), and most lifelike dynamic range of any ’stat—in addition to the traditional virtues of ’stats (gorgeous tone color, lightning transient response, single-driver coherence, and phenomenal inner detail). Can sound a bit overly warm and dark in balance and overblown in the bottom octaves if placement and amplification aren’t carefully minded. Reviewed by JV, Issue 122 Magico V3 $27,000 magico.net GE 08 PoY 08 Magico’s V3 is an astonishing achievement in loudspeaker design, delivering a level of performance that is in many ways competitive with $100k loudspeakers. Although it won’t play as loudly as the six-figure speakers, the V3 has a timbral realism and palpability in the midrange that approach the state of the art. Properly set up and driven by sources and electronics of commensurate quality, the V3 is musically transcendental. Reviewed by RH, Issue 179 Vienna Acoustics “The Music” $27,000 sumikoaudio.net GE 09 Here’s a full-range, multi-driver unit with ’stat-like coherence due to its remarkable flat midrange driver with coincident tweeter. Equally at home with power music and small-scale works, it has a referencequality ability to reproduce the complete soundstage. A thrilling, accurate, yet musical speaker with fast transients, precise layered imaging, natural timbre, and articulate, extended bass. JH, reviewed in this issue back depth rival the best. A stunningly gorgeous music lover’s dream come true. Reviewed by SK, Issue 194 auditioning, but priced at levels where the competition is very demanding. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 193 Gershman Acoustics Black Swan $36,000 GE 07 gershmanacoustics.com Venture Audio Excellence III Signature $56,000 venture-audio.com The Black Swans rivaled the realism of AHC’s far more expensive TAD-1s, bringing classical, jazz, and rock recordings convincingly to life. Strings, woodwinds, brass, and piano were not only “right” in timbre, but detail was exceptional where the recording actually provided it. The bass was also outstanding—flat and deeply extended. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 168 GE PoY 06 Magico Mini II 07 $32,000 (with stands) magico.net The beautifully made Minis from perfectionist speakerbuilder Alon Wolf are triumphant examples of twin applied arts—industrial and acoustical design. Though limited to about 40Hz in the bass, the two-way Minis are everywhere else models of limitlessness—of what is possible when price is no object—with standard-setting coherence, resolution, neutrality, and soundstaging. The best mini money can buy. Reviewed by JV, Issue 179 Meridian DSP7200 $34,995 meridian-audio.com Offering many of the same features as Meridian’s spectacular flagship DSP8000, the musicality, neutrality, dynamics, and goose-bump imaging of the more compact DSP7200 is a testament to the no-compromises potential of integrated components. Limited only in the last bit of bass extension, its top-tobottom seamlessness, threedimensionality, and front-to- 34 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Driver technology is a key design element of this highly successful electrodynamic loudspeaker. Designer Njoo Hoo Kong’s reliance on a Heil Air Motion Transformer tweeter and custom graphiteloaded paper-cone drivers elevates this three-way design to high-end audio’s Promised Land. Pristine upper octaves, smooth harmonic textures, and exceptional dynamics make for a highly musical experience. Requires careful selection of amplification. Reviewed by DO, Issue 186 MBL 101 E Mk II $59,990 mbl.com Hansen Audio The Prince V2 $39,000 hansenaudio.com Highly revealing of upstream components, The Prince V2 is capable of exquisite musicality when matched with the right sources and electronics. The Prince V2 is characterized by a remarkable coherence, accurate timbre, deeply extended and powerful bass, fabulous buildquality, and gorgeous finish. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 186 Loiminchay Chagall $40,000 loiminchayaudio.com The kind of highly personal design that can produce the illusion of a live performance in a slightly warm hall with exceptional conviction. Unique styling and visual impact, easy to drive, and excellent, very deep bass for its size. Slightly more romantic than accurate, but this complements most modern recordings. Well worth GE 05 PoY 05 MBL’s stunning-looking, four-way, omnidirectional Radialstrahler References have a treble like Maggie’s ribbons, bass like Nearfield’s eight 18" subwoofers, soundstaging and coherence like Kharma’s CRM 3.2s, dynamics like Avantgarde’s Trios, and a “disappearing act” second only to their fabulous big brothers, the 101 X-Tremes. For sheer excitement on largescale classical or power pop they are hard to beat. Reviewed by JV, Issue 154 DALI Megaline $60,000 dali-usa.com GE 04 This large, elegant speaker offers a superior combination of virtues—power and scale on one hand, and purity and resolution on the other, with distortion lower than electrostatics and a dynamic capacity no electrostatic ever dreamed of. With ribbon tweeters that seemingly go on forever, bass that extends solidly below the bottom of the The Absolute Sound September 2009 35 36 September 2009 The Absolute Sound The Absolute Sound September 2009 37 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS LOUDSPEAKERS orchestral range, and an even tonal balance, the Megalines make for the most convincing reproduction of orchestral music REG has encountered. They are also superb on more intimate music. Reviewed by REG, Issue 146 Wilson Audio MAXX 3 $68,000 wilsonaudio.com The MAXX 3 may be the baby brother of the stupendous Alexandria 2, but it doesn’t concede much ground to its sibling. This powerful and dynamic loudspeaker has been significantly improved over the MAXX 2, displays tremendous pitch accuracy, and explores the bass region like few others. It works best in larger rooms and favors a highly detailed over a lush sound. Reviewed by Jacob Heilbrunn, Issue194 Magico M5 $89,000 magico.net The M5 may not take you all the way to the Promised Land, but, for the first time, it let JV see the shoreline in the distance. Superb at everything, it is, overall, the best loudspeaker JV has heard in his system—and his new reference. (Compared to some other topmost contenders it is also a bargain.) JV, review forthcoming Rockport Technologies Hyperion GE $94,500 03 PoY 02 rockporttechnologies.com Though they don’t soundstage like Magico Minis or “disappear” like MBL 101 Es, the Rockport Hyperions earn laurels for just about everything else—gorgeous tone color, tremendous dynamic ease and authority, natural instrumental size and scale, and superb treble and bass extension. If you have the space and the moolah, they will take you about as close as you can come to the absolute sound short of (and not very) the Magico M5s. Reviewed by JV, Issue 136 Wilson Audio Alexandria X-2 Series 2 GE PoY $158,000 09 08 wilsonaudio.com The new Series 2 Alexandria is quite simply the best all-around loudspeaker RH has heard in his room. It delivers stunning bass extension, truly effortless dynamics, and a palpable musical realism that elevate it to world-class status. The design, build-quality, and finish are world-class. Robert Harley’s reference. Reviewed by RH, Issue 186 Subwoofers REL Britannia B3 $1995 sumikoaudio.net PSB SubSeries 5i $549 psbspeakers.com At this point no one should be surprised at what this Canadian speaker company can do in the lower-price range. Even so, the performance of this econo-sub is semi-unbelievable. Extension, dynamic slam, and good musicality from this 10" bassreflex design make it the perfect match for misers with the Midas touch. Reviewed by NG, TPV, Issue 48, and CM, TPV, Issue 69 Focal Grande Utopia EM $180,000 audioplusservices.com This statement loudspeaker bowled over Roy Gregory with its combination of low coloration, complete ability to disappear into the soundstage, and stunning dynamic authority. The electromagnetically driven woofer allows fine tuning to the room, and the front baffle’s variable curvature dials-in the performance for any listening distance or height. Reviewed by Roy Gregory, Issue 193 MBL 101 X-Tremes $250,000 mbl.com PoY 08 These “mirror-image array” Radialstrahler towers (like two 101 Es, one facing up and the other facing downward directly above it), with separate powered bass towers, simply don’t sound like other speakers (even MBL’s 101 Es). The Xes are tonally neutral and sonically nearly invisible; voices and instruments don’t seem to be coming from drivers in frames or boxes. Instead they hang in space—free-standing objects that are so three-dimensionally “there” that listening to the 101 Xes is like going to a play, where listening to other speakers is like going to the movies. They must be driven by powerful amplifiers such as the MBL 9011 and carefully set up. Reviewed by JV, Issue 189 38 September 2009 The Absolute Sound GE 05 The ultimate self-effacing team player that never imposes colorations on the music, the B3 is divinely unbox-like. At all reasonable levels port noise and overhang have been banished. Only low-pass filtering is on tap, so make sure your main speakers are up to the task. Set up with care, the B3 earns the rarest of compliments—you’ll never even know it’s there. Reviewed by NG, Issue 163 JL Audio Fathom f112/f113 $2800/$3600 GE jlaudio.com 07 REL T2 $798 sumikoaudio.net PoY 07 A contemporary, streamlined version of REL’s classic subs with the brand’s traditional virtues. Strikes the right balance between extension, output, and low-frequency musicality without dominating the listening room. Filter selectivity is less flexible than top-line RELs but for most sub/sat applications the T2 is easy to integrate with the system and a medium/small room. Also available in two other sizes. Reviewed by NG, Issue 176 Definitive Technology SuperCube I $1199 definitivetech.com With dual 10" passive radiators, the SuperCube I mixes the precision of a sealed-box sub with the additional oomph of a ported enclosure, and reaches down to the mid-20Hz range at extreme SPLs. A built-in 1500-watt amplifier guarantees sufficient power. Reviewed by NG, TPV Issue 42 PoY 06 PoY 07 These two subs—identical except for woofer size (12" vs. 13.5") and amplifier power (1500W vs. 2500W)—raise the bar in subwoofer performance with their unlikely combination of brute-force power and tonal and dynamic finesse. Although capable of delivering high SPLs at very low frequencies with no sense of strain, the Fathoms are equally adept at resolving the pitch, fine dynamic shadings, and tone colors of an acoustic bass. Reference-quality performance at an eminently reasonable price. Fathom f112 reviewed by CM, TPV Issue 75; Fathom f113 reviewed by RH, Issue 170 Thiel SS2 SmartSub/SI 1 Integrator $4900/$4400 thielaudio.com PoY 05 Five years in the making, Thiel’s Integrator/SmartSub is the first subwoofer that enables consistent integration by design. As such, it is a landmark in subwoofer development. In its present state, the Integrator in particular lacks a few features and the last ounce of transparency. Yet no other subwoofer system brings so much needed structure to the integration process, while affording such plentiful and powerful means of adapting the sub to its surroundings. Reviewed by Allen Taffel, Issue 154 The Absolute Sound September 2009 39 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS The WB generates bass by suspending a featherweight PoY 06 18" carbon-fiber membrane between two massive rare-earth magnets fitted to a pole piece that runs through the center of the driver. Like a carbon-fiber Magneplanar, the membrane is pushed and pulled between the two magnets, resulting in outstanding control of starting and stopping transients. Though not the deepest-reaching sub, the W-B Torus is high among the most articulate and musical. Reviewed by JV, Issue 170 POWER AMPLIFIERS LOUDSPEAKERS Wilson Benesch Torus Infrasonic Generator $5950 (sub only), $10,300 (with amp/crossover) GE soundorg.com 07 JL Audio Gotham $12,000 jlaudio.com PoY 08 This subwoofer delivers the ultimate in bass power and extension, all with perfect pitch and unflappable stability. With proper setup—a non-intuitive process best left to the dealer— the Gotham also won’t interfere with main speaker purity. Still, this sub is not for everyone, as some (including me) may find it too tight and controlled. Note that JL recommends deploying the Gotham in stereo pairs. Reviewed by AT, Issue 184 Power amplifiers Under $1000 Odyssey Audio Khartago $795 odysseyaudio.com Although the 115Wpc Odyssey Khartago solid-state stereo amp has been around for better than a decade, it was new to JV until amp-connoisseur Alon Wolf (of Magico, no less) told him he used it in his shop and it was excellent. The Wolfman was right. Although the Khartago doesn’t have all the articulation and transparency of the standard-setting $40k Soulution 710 stereo amplifier, it has a shockingly similar (and very neutral) balance, no discernible grain, high resolution, and a deep, wide soundstage. Positively the best budget amp JV has heard. JV, reviewed in this issue NAD C 272 $799 nadelectronics.com Every few years, we encounter certain NAD products that seem to have that extra ounce of sonic magic, and the C 272 is one of them. At 150Wpc, it offers the current needed to handle difficult speaker loads, and sounds more powerful than its specifications would suggest, with good resolution, three-dimensionality, and an overall warmth and robustness. Reviewed by CM, Issue 148 Parasound Halo A23 $850 parasound.com PoY 02 Parasound’s A23 isn’t the last word in low-end authority, and it’s a bit cool in the midrange, but what it lacks in oomph it makes up for in finesse and pitch definition. Moreover, this reasonably priced amp is musically quite involving. Reviewed by SB, Issue 138 Belles Soloist 5 $995 belles.com A paradigm of minimalism and musicality, this small, cool-running sixty-five-watter is stuffed with sonic virtues: a forgiving tonal balance, good soundstage dimensionality, and natural depth. Paired with its companion preamp, the solid Soloist 3 is a great way to get into separates at an integrated-amp price. Reviewed by NG, Issue 174 40 September 2009 The Absolute Sound $1000–$2000 Vincent Audio SP-331 $1199 wsdistributing.com PoY 07 The SP-331 is one of the best-sounding sub-$1k power amplifiers we’ve yet heard. A hybrid tube/solid-state amplifier, it combines the richness and subtlety of fine tube designs—especially through the midrange—with the sheer low-frequency grunt, control, and agility of a good solid-state amplifier. In the treble the amplifier sounds slightly softer but also more delicate and refined than solidstate competitors in its price range. Reviewed by CM, Issue 173 Quad 909 $1550 quad-hifi.co.uk GE 01 Its sound quality sets a benchmark for its size and price. Its midrange, in particular, is exceptional. Up and down the scale, this latest iteration of Peter Walker’s patented “current dumping” circuit displays ease, relaxation, and naturalness. Reviewed by PS, Issue 128 PrimaLuna ProLogue 5 $1599 primaluna-usa.com GE 05 The 36Wpc vacuum tubepowered ProLogue 5 sounds more authoritative than its rating would lead you to expect, and offers a warm, rich sound, yet really does not sound “tubey” in any traditional sense, producing clean, deep, tight bass and grand soundstaging. A synergistic match with the companion ProLogue 3 preamp. Reviewed by SR, Issue 156 Naim NAP 150X $1650 naimusa.com While the NAP 150X’s tonal balance is slightly cool, this little amp possesses terrific speed, rhythmic drive, dynamic precision, and a very low noise floor. It can also recreate a broad, deep, and focused soundstage. Keep in mind that Naim’s unique cable and powersupply design require matching with a Naim preamp, such as the NAC 122x found elsewhere on this list. Reviewed by WG, Issue 177 $2000–$3000 Parasound Halo A21 $2000 parasound.com An excellent Class AB stereo transistor amp, designed by the redoubtable John Curl, capable of 250Wpc into 8 ohms (400 into 4 ohms). Though not the last word in solid-state amplification, the A21 offers a lot of power at an affordable price. Reviewed by JV, Issue 168 Wyred 4 Sound SX-1000 $2000 wyred4sound.com While many amplifiers use Bang & Olufsen ICE output devices, the SX-1000 combines it with its own direct-coupled, balanced, dual-FET input stage designed by Bascom King. The SX-1000 Series II is a powerful amplifier capable of effortlessly delivering copious amounts of power. The SX-1000 Series II also serves up detail with the aplomb of a sommelier uncorking a prize bottle. Reviewed by SS, Issue 193 Rogue Audio Stereo 90 $2495 rogueaudio.com This tube monoblock combines a rich treble and midrange with a gutsy, controlled bass and a brilliant clarity unusual in its class. Its soundstaging is particularly fine. Its one shortcoming is a tendency to push the midrange a bit forward. Reviewed by SR, Issue 171 PrimaLuna ProLogue Six $2599 primaluna-usa.com These beautifully built, affordable, and “hassle-free” 70Wpc monoblocks will alter your preconceptions about tube gear. Indeed, their transient TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS quickness and ability to drive difficult loads may fool you into thinking you’re listening to a very good hybrid. Yet with four very musical EL34s per chassis, they still have that wonderful tube magic. Reviewed by JH, Issue 169 POWER AMPLIFIERS Cambridge Audio 840W $2699 cambridgeaudio.com PoY 08 The key to the 200Wpc 840W is its proprietary XD topology, which allows pure Class A at low levels and a transition to an “enhanced” Class B without the crossover distortion normally associated with Class AB designs. The result is a wide soundstage, excellent microdynamics, and near limitless power—plus that familiar, buttery, pure Class A vibe. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 $3000–$5000 speed, extension, and control one expects from a high-end transistor amp without any associated brightness. It has the natural timbre and sonic realism we typically associate with tubes, coupled with startling transparency and holographic imaging. Pace, rhythm, and timing freaks will love this thing. Reviewed by JH, AVgM, Issue 5 Conrad-Johnson LP66S $4300 conradjohnson.com Have your sights set on a romantic tube stereo power amplifier? This 60Wpc design is it! Tonal emphasis is squarely on the lower midrange. Timbres and textures are slightly liquid and warm—highly complimentary to violin. The treble range is laid-back. Count on a mellow, relaxed presentation with an exceptionally low listenerfatigue factor and plenty of imaging magic. Reviewed by DO, Issue 193 Balanced AudioTechnology VK-55 $3995 balanced.com Vincent Audio SP-T800 monoblock $4500 wsdistributing.com A remarkable amp and terrific value, BAT’s 55-watt tube model may not be as revealing as some, but it offers a high degree of harmonic, textural, rhythmic, and ambient information. Tonally, the VK-55 is a bit warmer than neutral, with a gorgeous, well-balanced midrange, an easy, natural top end, and quite respectable weight in the bass. A 3-D soundstage and tight focus round out the virtues of this highly musical design. Reviewed by SK with WG comment, Issue 153 This 200Wpc hybrid amp is a remarkable performer. Its tube signature shines through clearly in the midrange, albeit slightly diluted by the solidstate output stage. Soundstage dimensionality is superior to that of conventional solid-state designs. It closely fulfils the promise of a hybrid design: Tube magic with plenty of bass crunch and drive in one nicely “gift-wrapped” chassis. Reviewed by DO, Issue 188 Edge G4 $3995 edgeamps.com NuForce’s best Class D amps yet, the Ref 9 SE V.2 monoblocks deliver the expected virtues (articulate, well-defined mids and deep, tightly controlled bass), plus noticeably sweeter, more grain-free highs than previous A downsized version of Edge’s more costly amplifiers, the 100W G4 offers some of the same sonic attributes as its more expensive brethren—the PoY 08 NuForce Reference 9 Special Edition (SE) V.2 monoblock $5000 42 September 2009 The Absolute Sound NuForce designs. The SE V.2’s clarity, definition, and control can bring certain speaker systems alive, but they can also make some high-resolution speakers sound slightly “clinical.” Reviewed by CM, Issue 188 $5000–$10,000 Meridian G57 $5495 meridian-usa.com Rated at 200Wpc into 8 ohms, the G57 is capable of delivering a full kilowatt, when bridged, into four ohms. As with other G Series components, the sound is expansive, soothing, and relaxing, yet with plenty of moxie when needed. The soundstage is impressively broad, tall, and deep. And almost as gorgeous as the sound is the sleek new full-width look. Reviewed by SK, Issue 152 Bel Canto 1000 monoblock $5990 belcantodesign.com If you like the concept of an amplifier that is compact, efficient, powerful, transparent, musical, and extremely reliable, the Bel Canto Ref 1000 Mk II could be the last amplifier you’ll ever want or need. While the Bel Canto may not warm up an overly sterile-sounding system like a classic tube amplifier, it certainly won’t subtract any harmonic warmth. Reviewed by SS, Issue 193 Atma-Sphere M-60 Mk III OTL $6800 atma-sphere.com Atma-Sphere’s uniquely simple, all-tube, OTL (output transformer-less) design offers a rare and exhilarating glimpse into the music few others can duplicate. This triodebased classic also possesses outstanding neutrality, clarity, definition, soundstaging, and unfettered dynamics. With 60W of pure Class A power on tap, relatively sensitive speakers with an impedance of 8 ohms or higher are recommended for best bass performance. Reviewed by SK, Issue 184 Chord SPM 1050 $6995 bluebirdmusic.com A relatively affordable design from England’s Chord, the compact SPM 1050 delivers 200Wpc and is all but unflappable when pushed hard. Indeed, it likes it that way. It has terrific control and grip over speakers, delivers explosive dynamics as well as nuance, and is coherent across the band. Cool under fire, the 1050 never sounds forced or exaggerated. WG, review forthcoming McIntosh MC402 $7000 mcintoshlabs.com GE 09 PoY 04 Co‑winner (with another Mac, the all‑tube MC2102), of TAS’ Amplifier of the Year in 2004, this solid‑state giant boasts a tube‑like solidity and continuousness allied to absolute tonal neutrality (combining warmth and detail), with seemingly unlimited reserves of power and with noise and distortion figures that rival anything from Halcro. By any measure, a great amplifier and PS’s reference. Reviewed by PS, Issue 147 Parasound Halo JC 1 $7000 parasound.com The latest collaboration between legendary designer John Curl and Parasound has resulted in the Halo JC 1: “silky-smooth, crystal clear, and abundantly detailed. The kind you could listen to all day long without fatigue.” Reviewed by SK, Issue 141 Plinius SB-301 $8685 eliteavdist.com GE 07 PoY 07 Big and heat-sinked to beat the band, the Plinius outputs 310Wpc of the sweetest Class AB NG has ever heard. A model of silken control and The Absolute Sound September 2009 43 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS neutrality, it doesn’t sound like tubes or transistors, or any combination of either. Rich in tone color, with wide, open dynamics and sweet, embraceable highs, it never failed to improve any set of speakers that it hooked up with. Reviewed by NG, Issue 169 POWER AMPLIFIERS The Air Tight ATM 300 is one of the handful of 300B SET amplifiers that lay claim to magical sound extending beyond the midrange. This amp’s airy highs, natural tonality, and low-bass extension defy common perceptions of 300B SETs. Reviewed by Scot Markwell, Issue 128 Air Tight ATM 300 $8795 axissaudio.com Balanced Audio Technology VK-75SE GE $9000 01 balanced.com BAT’s VK-75SE is a tube design that, while displaying many of the attributes we love about glowing glass—smoothness, liquidity, depth, harmonic complexity—does so with, as reviewer Sue Kraft puts it, a “lack of candy-coating in the midrange.” In addition, the VK75SE is virtually grain-free and excels at dynamics. Reviewed by SK, Issue 133 Mark Levinson No. 433 $11,000 marklevinson.com Edge G8+ $13,488 edgeamps.com The No. 433 power amplifier embodies the classic Mark Levinson sound, with a slightly laid-back and inviting perspective, tremendous soundstage depth and dimensionality, and a rock-solid bottom end. Although a threechannel design, the No.433 holds its own with many higher-priced stereo amplifiers. Ideal for multichannel music and theater systems to drive the front three channels. Reviewed by RH, Issue 161 The Edge designs don’t have the darkness and grain that so frequently plague even the best solid-state amps. That said, there’s no faux vacuumtube sound here either, just a remarkable sense of neutrality, openness, and detail that doesn’t draw attention to itself but instead serves the music. When the G8’s compared to the best tube models, the only things lacking are the last degrees of air, decay, and bloom. Reviewed by WG, Issue 149 Pass Labs X350.5 $11,550 passlabs.com PoY 02 A 350Wpc solid-state stereo amp that has what Pass amps always seem to have in abundance: remarkable midrange presence and immediacy. A shade darkersounding and less bloomy than something like an Edge 10.1, it is exceptionally lively from top to bottom, with remarkable deep bass and fast, sweet treble. JV “Budget-priced” (for a Boulder), these 200Wpc monoblocks brought a new level of realism to MS’s system, excelling in low-level resolution, dynamics, and bass reproduction. Through the 850s, the soundstage was more three-dimensional, instruments more realistic in timbre, lyrics better articulated, vocals more life-like, and the music ultimately more engaging. Reviewed by Max Shepherd, Issue 166 This 80-pound, dual-mono, bridgeable amplifier is Simaudio’s premier stereo unit, boasting 250Wpc into 8 ohms (an even thousand when bridged). Like its companion preamplifier the P-8, the W-8 is tonally neutral, has iron control yet exquisite finesse, and appears to do nothing but amplify the signal fed to it. Reviewed by PS, Issue 185 Mark Levinson No. 436 monoblock PoY $14,500 07 marklevinson.com $10,000–$20,000 Boulder 850 monoblock $11,000 boulderamp.com Simaudio MOON W-8 $13,500 simaudio.com Nagra PMA monoblock $12,295 The Nagra monoblocks confound expectations. They are small and lightweight, and possess only two output transistors. No, they’re not as powerful as monster amps. But they have more than enough power to get the current-hungry Magnepan loudspeakers up and running. What’s more, they do it with the finesse of only a few other select amplifiers. Their smooth luminous sound is utterly enchanting. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 173 44 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Smooth, sophisticated, and superbly musical, the Levinson 436 power amp is the definition of refinement. There’s no lack of detail or three-dimensionality with this 350Wpc powerhouse. Images are beautifully layered and sculpted, with rock-solid control in the bottom octaves, as well. The overall presentation is eminently easy on the ears, relaxing, and a bit dark and laidback, ever so gracefully pulling the listener into the music in what can only be described as classic Levinson style. Reviewed by SK, Issue 169 Pass Labs XA100.5 monoblocks $16,500 passlabs.com PoY 08 These Class A masterpieces from Nelson Pass brings the virtues of Class A to a more efficient package. The XA100.5 monoblocks have a purity and transparency that are jawdropping. Timbres are also well served, with a warmth and ease reminiscent of tubes but without “tubey” colorations. Gorgeous build-quality and metalwork. Reviewed by RH, Issue 186 Spectral DMA-360 MKII monoblock $17,990 spectralaudio.com The DMA-360 monoblocks combine high output current with lightning-fast audio circuits, producing an unparalleled portrayal of music’s dynamic expression. These amplifiers also deliver what is in RH’s experience the largest, best-defined, and most accurate spatial presentation of any amplifier he’s heard. Timbral realism is also the DMA-360s’ strong suit, a consequence of the amplifiers’ amazing resolution of fine inner detail. These are referencegrade amplifiers at a fraction of the price of competing units. Reviewed by RH, Issue 190 Air Tight ATM-3 monoblock $18,195 PoY axissaudio.com 08 These beautifully made, metered, push-pull, 6CA7based monoblocks combine the realistic textures and timbres of SET amplifiers (though they are not SETs) with the fine resolution, more extended bandwidth, more neutral balance, and superior transient speed of Class A solid-state (though they are not solid-state, either). Little marvels of fidelity, they mate wonderfully well with fast, neutral loudspeakers like Quad 2905s or Focal Micro Utopia Be’s. Offering 100Wpc The Absolute Sound September 2009 45 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS POWER AMPLIFIERS in ultralinear mode, they can also be switched to 50Wpc triode mode. Reviewed by JV, Issue 188 Esoteric A-100 $19,000 esoteric.teac.com natural and slightly “soft,” and the amp has terrific harmonic integrity. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 192 GE 09 This innovative tube design offers fantastic resolution of a recording’s origin and acoustic signature. If you crave tube magic, rest assured that the A-100 delivers the goodies. But it also breaks through the traditional barriers of tube amplification; lowdistortion harmonic textures, transient speed, and resolution are integral to its music reproduction. It is the state-ofthe-art in medium-power tube amplification. Reviewed by DO, Issue 191 Audio Research Reference 210 monoblock GE $19,900 05 audioresearch.com Lamm M1.2 Reference monoblock $22,290 lammindustries.com GE 09 Another winner from the fertile mind of Vladimir Lamm. Combining brawn and finesse, the M1.2 drives even challenging loads with ease. Its siren song of suave harmonic textures, tight bass control, articulate transients, kinetic drive, and essential tonal neutrality is musically most persuasive. And there’s enough tube magic under the hood to infuse the midrange with invigorating warmth and spaciousness. Reviewed by DO, Issue 188 PoY 06 Audio Research Corporation has been making Class AB, 6550-based, pentode-tube power amplifiers since the 1970s. In better than thirty exceptional years, the company has not made better amps than its 220Wpc Reference 210 and 600Wpc 610T monoblocks, which are significantly faster, lower in noise, more extended in bandwidth, and higher in resolution and dynamic range than any previous ARC efforts, without a sacrifice of the bloom, air, size, and space that ARC pentode amps are famous for. Reviewed by JV, Issue 159 $20,000 and above Pass Labs XA160.5 monoblock $22,000 passlabs.com “An amplifier with soul,” the XA160.5 is the most “tube-like” transistor amp AHC has heard. Its sound is warmer than most, and the music emerges from deep black silence. Moreover, its soundstage depth matches its width, dynamics are musically Balanced Audio Technology VK-600SE monoblock GE $26,000 05 balanced.com This fully-loaded version of the VK-600 possesses a remarkable transparency and immediacy that are musically vivid without being sonically vivid, although soundstage depth is slightly foreshortened. The top end is extremely smooth and non-fatiguing, with perhaps a very slight loss of air in the upper treble. The VK-600SE’s 300W into eight ohms, and ability to double its power as the load impedance is halved, means it will drive virtually any loudspeaker. Needs an unusually long warm-up to sound its best. Reviewed by RH, Issue 159 Lamm ML2.1 monoblock $29,990 lammindustries.com GE 03 The single-ended-triode ML2.1 sounds nothing like the typical SET. It does not trade off 46 September 2009 The Absolute Sound accuracy for euphony; it is not bandwidth-limited; and it is surprisingly powerful sounding (though not particularly “bloomy”) within its 17-watt limits. Given a sufficiently sensitive speaker it will produce one of the most detailed, spacious, dynamic, and beautiful sounds on the market. Like all Lamm products, the ML2.1s are a bit dark in balance, very quiet, and very reliable. JV Audio Research 610T GE monoblock GE07 $39,900 08 audioresearch.com PoY 07 Capable of better than 600Wpc into any real-world load, the pentode-tube-powered Class AB 610T is quite simply the single best tube amplifier JV has yet heard, with seemingly limitless power, gorgeous tone color, huge soundstaging, minute resolution of lowlevel detail, and truly lifelike bloom. With the right front end and speakers ranging from cone Magico M5s to planarmagnetic Symposium Acoustics Panoramas, the 610T comes closer to sounding “real” than anything else JV has tried. His tube reference. Reviewed by JV, Issue 177 Soulution 710 $40,000 axissaudio.com Jaw-dropping resolution and transparency-to-sources set this 120Wpc (into 8 ohms, 240Wpc into 4) solid-state stereo amp apart from any other JV has tested. It is preternaturally “not there,” making inherently neutral speakers, in turn, sound more “not there,” and music (and the engineering and mastering that went into putting that music on LP or disc) “more there.” If you truly want to hear what’s on your records—good, bad, or indifferent—audition this supremely honest, astonishingly colorless, incredibly low distortion amplifier. JV, review forthcoming Boulder 1050 monoblock $42,000 A truly superb power amp that offers the very best in bass, power, transients, and lowlevel detail. It’s slighlty warmer and more tube-like than many solid-state designs, but this adds to musical realism. Upper midrange and treble are truly exceptional. If you want the real-world sound of acoustic instruments, this may be the amp for you. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 188 VTL Siegfried monoblock $50,000 GE vtl.com 08 PoY 08 At 800 watts per side, VTL’s superlative Siegfried monoblock is prodigiously powerful. It features an array of features, including automatic biasing of the 6550 output tubes, to banish many of the problems traditionally associated with tubes and high power. Driving the Wilson MAXX 2, it displayed iron-fisted control over the bass, and spooky clarity, and, above all, represents a decided move away from the more romantic sound of earlier VTL designs. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 180 MBL 9008A/9011 monoblock $50,380/$87,800 GE mblusa.com 05 The massive 9011 monoblocks remain the most powerful and beautiful solid-state amplifiers JV has heard in his system, particularly when driving MBL speakers. While the “littler “ 9008s sound very much like their bigger brothers—which is to say they have sensational (albeit not quite 9011-level) front-to-back transparency, lowlevel resolution, and large- and small-scale dynamics, as well as gorgeous tone color and a topto-bottom liquidity that (along with a slight overall darkness) is an MBL signature—they don’t have quite the same grip or transient speed as the more expensive 9011s, or the 9011s’ nearly unique ability to “grab The Absolute Sound September 2009 47 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS POWER AMPLIFIERS INTEGRATED AMPLIFIERS hold” of a note from starting transient to lingering decay. Nonetheless, both are highly recommendable, and the 9011 is state-of-the-art. JV Krell Evolution One monoblock $60,000 krellonline.com While the Evolution One is not a radical sonic breakthrough, the best aspects of the original Krell sound-character and “voicing” have been preserved, but the original virtues of deep-bass power and rich natural timbre have been steadily enhanced, while air, life, microdynamics, soundstage depth and detail, and the upper octaves have improved to contenders for the state-ofthe-art. A true sonic benchmark you really need to listen to. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 158 Soulution 700 monoblock $115,000 axissaudio.com Just like the Soulution 710 but with more potential power and the capability of bi-amplification, these incredibly expensive Swiss monoblocks are the solid-state paragons of neutrality and transparency-to-sources. So low in distortion and high in resolution they will reveal every detail of music-making, miking, engineering, and mastering (many of which will have gone previously unheard and unresolved) on every disc in your collection. And like their stereo little brother, they disappear as sources, making really good speakers disappear as sources, too, leaving only the music and the quality of the recording behind. JV’s new solid-state references. JV, review forthcoming Integrated Amplifiers Under $1000 NAD C315 BEE and NAD C325BEE $349 and $449 nadelectronics.com The entry-level C315 is still the go-to amp for audiophile newbies who crave sonic neutrality, good power output, nice tactile feel, and NAD’s characteristic quality control. NAD family values have always been about the sonic results rather than the outward flash. NAD’s honest approach to tonal balance rejects sonic additives that make for a fatiguing long-term relationship, choosing instead to be lightly subtractive at the frequency extremes and in soundstage dimensionality. The portableplayer mini-jack on the front panel is a welcome addition. Looking for more oomph, the 50Wpc C325 will make BEElievers of the most jaded audiophiles. C315 reviewed by WG, Issue 140; C325 reviewed by NG, Issue 183 Cambridge Audio Azur 540A v2 $499 audioplusservices.com PoY 06 The Azur 540A is quite an overachiever, delivering ultrasmooth, almost tube-like liquidity from a budget solidstate integrated amplifier. The amplifier sounds more powerful than its 60Wpc rating. Nice build-quality, lots of features, and an outstanding remote control round out this bargain. Reviewed by RH, Issue 162 Rega Brio 3 $695 soundorg.com A very good sounding, wellbuilt little amp at a fair price, the Brio 3 outputs 49Wpc into 8 ohms and 64Wpc into 4 ohms—enough to drive any reasonably sensitive loudspeaker, and its input array will accommodate the typical assortment of sources owned by most music fans. The inclusion of a real phonostage—not just a linelevel input labeled “phono” requiring an outboard device— is a nice touch. Reviewed by BW, Issue 167 48 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Vincent SV-129 $799 wsdistributing.com Another barebones integrated, Vincent’s AV-129 is a bit dark and grainy, but it really delivers the essence of the music. An immediate, communicative midrange leads to burnished tone colors, explosive dynamics, tight, forceful bass, fine ambience-and-depth retrieval, and sufficiently wide dynamics. Reviewed by WG, Issue 178 Dussun T6 $900 aaa-audio.com A replacement for the already good DS99, Dussun’s T6 maintains the minimalist vibe of its predecessor while improving on it in a few key areas. In addition to having greater overall transparency than the DS99, the T6 has tightened up the lower-mid frequencies and opened up the highs. Moreover, the soundstage of this terrific amp is now broader as well as a bit deeper. Reviewed by WG, Issue 194 NAD 372 $999 nadelectronics.com NAD’s 150Wpc 372 is a plainlooking device designed to deliver high performance and good value. But unlike many NAD amps over the years, which have sounded romantic, the 372’s tonal balance is quite neutral. While it misses the last degree of subtle phrasing and dynamic scaling, the 372 is surprisingly detailed, delivers a hug of a soundstage with lots of air, depth, and ambience, and has power to spare. Reviewed by WG, Issue 177 $1000–$2000 PrimaLuna ProLogue One $1375 primaluna-usa.com The sweet and affordable ProLogue One features a 12AX7, 12AU7, and a pair of EL-34s per channel in a very simple circuit. In classic EL-34 style, the ProLogue throws a very wide and deep soundstage, and has a wonderful midrange without sounding gooey like a Dynaco Stereo 70 or other vintage design. Very neutral with little signature of its own. Reviewed by JD, Issue 151 Naim Nait 5i $1450 naimusa.com One of the great bargains in high-end audio, this new version of the Nait 5i brings more than a taste of expensive separates to a mid-priced integrated amplifier. The Nait is sweet without sounding rolled-off, presents a huge sense of space, tremendous separation of images, and, most importantly, sounds like music. Reviewed by RH, Issue 183 Exposure 3010S $1795 bluebirdmusic.com Exposure’s electronics deliver the goods by beautifully balancing detail with warmth, rhythmic precision with lyricism, and delicacy with power. With an optional phono card, the 3010S morphs with the music as each recording demands; it can be either sweet and mellow, lean and mean, or a combination of the above depending on the disc. Reviewed by WG, Issue 181 Cambridge Audio Azur 840a $1799 audioplusservices.com The 120Wpc Azur 840A solid-state integrated amplifier features Cambridge’s innovative “Class XD” circuit. Apart from its substantial power output, the 840A’s greatest strengths are its articulate, well-defined sound and its lifelike dynamics (this is not one of those polite, selfeffacing British amps). What is more, the 840A is highly flexible, offering multizone GE 05 GE 05 GE 08 PoY 02 PoY 04 PoY 08 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS INTEGRATED AMPLIFIERS capabilities and home-theater “pass-through” modes. Reviewed by CM, Issue 167 Goldenote S-1 Signature $1866 koetsuusa.com This Italian-made integrated exhibits wide dynamics, generous transparency, and a gorgeous rendering of timbre. Although it is highly resolving, detail is presented in a natural rather than analytical way. Superb build-quality with oversized power supply and heat-sinking make the S-1 Signature sound more powerful than its 60Wpc rating. “A real find” said RH. Reviewed by RH, Issue 193 version of Quad electrostatics and fine mini-monitors with a sound that is sweet and seductive, yet also vibrant and dynamic. PS, review forthcoming PrimaLuna DiaLogue 2 $2625 GE primaluna-usa.com 08 PoY 07 The first product in PrimaLuna’s higher-performance line of tube units is a real honey, surpassing the ProLogue Two’s performance across the board. Rated at only 38 watts in ultralinear mode, it sounds much more powerful due to its outstanding transformers, but requires speakers that are at least moderately efficient. Remote triode-switching and a home-theater bypass mode are welcome additions. Reviewed by JH, Issue 186 $3000 and above Vincent SV-236 Mk II $1995 wsdistributing.com The well-built Vincent SV-236 integrated amplifier combines the best of two worlds by using a vacuum-tube preamp to drive a 150Wpc solid-state power amplifier. Listeners will appreciate the Vincent’s combination of deep, powerful, authoritative solid-state bass and tube-fueled delicacy, shimmering detail, and almost surround-like imaging. New Mk. II version features increased power and better parts for the same price. Review forthcoming $2000–$3000 Cayin Audio A 88T $2395/$2495 (KT88/6550) acousticsounds.com Costing a mere fiver under $2500, this hand-built honey boasts fit and finish that would do McIntosh proud, while its designer freely admits it was made to sound like Mc’s fabled MC275. A no-apologiesnecessary, low-price alternative to the latter, it will drive any Pathos Classic One MK III $3199 audioplusservices.com This is not only a fine amplifier; it is beautiful in every sense of the word. But if sheer dynamic scale and loudness are priorities, this 70Wpc tube model may not be for you. Instead, this is an amplifier that always gets the tone, timbre, and balance of music right, but only if played at natural levels and over reasonably sensitive speakers. Reviewed by PS, Issue 160 Audio Space Ref 3.1 (300B) $3990 audiospace.com.hk Just amazing! This integrated offers extreme soundstage transparency coupled with crystalline clarity. Truly high-definition sound, on a par with the best solid-sate designs can offer, but with a spatial conviction solid-state rarely approaches. Substitute vintage 6SN7 or 7N7 triodes for an instant sonic upgrade. A stunning accomplishment at its asking price and DO’s nomination for Product of the Year. Reviewed by DO, Issue 194 50 September 2009 The Absolute Sound The VTL IT-85 bathes music in a warm, golden glow that is hard to resist. While it is not the most powerful integrated amplifier—careful matching to loudspeakers (preferably minimonitors) is a must—the IT85 provides a large soundstage and effortless mids and highs. No other integrated in its price range comes close to offering as musical and pure a sound. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 168 an effort that’s as beautiful to listen to as it is serious to behold. From the heavy aluminumclad chassis and massive power supply to the silken midrange transparency and airy top-end, this conservatively rated sixtywatter is pure high end. It’s also thoroughly modern, sporting a hands-free bias control that’s fully automated, compensating for the wear of each tube. To extract the V-60’s full sonic measure, a speaker’s sensitivity is an important consideration. Reviewed by NG in this issue Muse Model 200 $4500 eliteavdist.com ATC SIA2-150 $5000 atc.gb.net The Two Hundred operates from music’s interior, gleaning details from images without overlaying any of its own editorial slant onto music sources. In general tonality, it strikes a middle balance that allows it to yield to the personality of the source, veering where appropriate to the warm or cool, the lean or rich. With its flexible MAP architecture, Muse asks how you want your music served up and then proceeds to dish out huge, complex sonic portions. Reviewed by NG, Issue 192 There is nothing Old School about the performance of this Art Deco-styled 150Wpc integrated. The midrange is all forthrightness and fluidity. Its neutral-to-warm tonal balance never crosses the threshold into the starkly clinical. Upper mids and lower treble are smooth and biased to the sweeter side of the spectrum. Perhaps the most impressive aspect is the wide net the ATC casts in soundstaging and imaging. A thoroughly modern instrument that quickly gets down to the business of making music. One of the best NG has heard. Reviewed by NG, Issue194 VTL IT-85 $4250 vtl.com Plinius 9200 $4835 plinius.com The 9200 is a thorough and timely re-imagining of the brilliant but aging 8150/8200. Still compact in size, it pumps out a healthy 200Wpc, and thanks to its strong Class A bias, the 9200 is sweeter and richer than ever. Even the all-new phonostage is quieter and more dynamic. Bass doesn’t sound as darkly ominous or extended as in years past, but control and definition are strikingly improved. Reviewed by NG, Issue 156 Pathos Logos $5495 audioplusservices.com Boasting cutting‑edge styling and a sonic personality that eschews any form of audiophile hype, this tube front‑end/ transistor back-end hybrid is a real music lover’s delight. Minimalist with a vengeance, the only controls are source selection, volume, and mute (though at least they are available via remote). Reviewed by PS, Issue 182 PoY 08 Vincent V-60 $4995 wsdistributing.com Pass INT-150 $7150 passlabs.com The V-60 is one of Vincent’s new flagship offerings and it’s Powerful, subtle, effortless, Pass Labs’ first foray into the ultra- The Absolute Sound September 2009 51 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS INTEGRATED AMPLIFIERS STEREO RECEIVERS, CD RECEIVERS AND ALL-IN-ONE SYSTEMS PREAMPLIFIERS competitive integrated amplifier market is an unvarnished success. This control amplifier doubles its prodigious 150Wpc output into 4 ohms making it a good candidate for less-sensitive loudspeakers. Its character suggests near complete neutrality tempered with pleasing warmth—an ease and fluidity that’s not euphonically tube-like but more characteristic of solid-state with a strong Class A bias, which is a feature of this amp. A powerhouse design with a heart that should make anyone rethink the “separates” option. Reviewed by NG, Issue 184 Simaudio MOON i-7 $7500 simaudio.com Simaudio’s Moon i-7 is designed and built like a separate preamplifier and power amplifier in the same chassis, with dual-mono construction, a sophisticated and expensive stepped-attenuator volume control, and fully balanced circuitry. With an absolutely gorgeous rendering of tone color and tube-like liquidity, the i-7 is one of the all-time-great integrated amplifiers. The buildquality and chassis metalwork are absolutely first-class. This is a product for those who want the performance of separates but the form-factor of an integrated. Reviewed by RH, Issue 179 Accuphase E550 $13,000 axissaudio.com Stereo Receivers, CD Receivers, and All-in-One Systems NAD C720BEE $599 nadelectronics.com Heir to the classic 7020 receiver, the C720BEE represents NAD’s no-frills, no-nonsense philosophy—in this case, 50Wpc of rich midrange and noise-free, glitch-free performance. Solid and sensitive tuner performance makes it appealing for radio junkies, too. Except for a lack of air in the treble and some lax pitchresolution down below, this is one honey of a BEE. Reviewed by NG, Issue 167 Polk i-Sonic $599 polkaudio.com This tabletop marvel plays CDs and DVDs, receives FM and XM satellite radio, and has inputs for external sources such as portable music players. But best of all, the i-Sonic sounds terrific, with an extremely neutral and uncolored tonal balance. The bass goes surprisingly deep, and the treble is highly refined and silky smooth. Reviewed by RH, Issue 169’ GE 08 The Accuphase E550 is high-end audio at its finest. This full-featured integrated is an exercise in precision and accuracy without being overly analytical, while its 30 Class A watts will drive all but the most demanding of loads. Sweet, musical, and delightfully dynamic, the E550 is destined to be a classic. Reviewed by SK, Issue 181 Arcam Solo Mini $999 americanaudiovideo.com Beneath its brushed-aluminum skin, USB-jack and slot-loadedCD mechanics, the Mini offers articulate and highly listenable sonics without over-reaching at the frequency extremes. There’s genuine bass refinement although the deepest bass will not be fully resolved. With a cool-running 25Wpc and a high-resolution Wolfson multi- 52 September 2009 The Absolute Sound bit DAC from the premium Arcam DiVA CD73, the Arcam is well suited to drive any fine compact loudspeaker of reasonable sensitivity. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 Peachtree Audio Nova $1199 signalpathint.com The versatile Nova can serve as an 80Wpc hybrid integrated amp, a tube preamp with three analog and five digital inputs, a Class A tube headphone amp, or a solid-state USB DAC (based on the superb ESS Sabre DAC) with remote input-switching. But frankly, the Nova’s DAC section alone justifies its price, making the other good stuff pure “gravy.” Reviewed by CM, Playback Issue 21 NAD Viso Two $1299 nadelectronics.com PoY 08 A DVD-receiver that is not only drop-dead gorgeous but features discrete amplifier output stages, a progressivescan DVD player (with 1080i upscaling via HDMI output), and provisions for an XM module or iPod docking station. The two-channel version sports 50Wpc of NAD’s conservatively rated power. Sonically the VISO Two hews to the NAD philosophy of top-notch dynamics and a tonal balance with a mellow character near the frequency extremes. Suddenly saving space doesn’t seem like such a sacrifice. Reviewed By NG, Issue 188 April Music Aura Note $1895 aprilmusic.com The Aura Note looks as if it stepped out of a time machine onto London’s Carnaby Street, circa 1965. There’s a lot of tech here (50Wpc and twin USB inputs) but it’s designed for the nostalgic sensualist with a feeling for audio history. Robustly built, the Aura Note offers impressive oomph in the bottom end and is more than persuasive reproducing a broad soundstage and the dynamic swings of the full orchestra. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 Resolution Audio Opus 21 $2500 amp, $3500 CD player, $1500 tuner/phono preamp GE resolutionaudio.com 07 Implausibly, the Opus 21 component stack combines all the advantages of an all-in-one box—intuitive operation, stylish aesthetics, reasonable cost— with those normally reserved for serious high-end systems— modularity, flexibility, and superior resolution, dynamics, and extension. This little stack’s practicality will thrill your Significant Other; its big sound will thrill you. And if you don’t need the full stack, consider the standout CD player, which constitutes its own bargain. Reviewed by AT, Issue 167 Primare DVDI10 $2595 soundorg.com Beneath the bespoke look, aluminum casework, and discrete top-mount controls is a multi-tasker of substance, thanks in part to its coolrunning 75Wpc Class D amplifier and an onboard A/D converter. Sonically the DVDI10 features a strong sense of pace and timing and an appealing tonal balance that neither veers toward the warmly romantic or the coolly clinical. Given appropriate speakers and a vivid 1080p display it will perform at levels certain to raise eyebrows amongst audiophiles and videophiles alike. Reviewed by NG, Issue 193 PreamplifierS Under $1000 NAD C162 $599 nadelectronics.com Like other NAD products, the C162 delivers plenty of resolution and three- The Absolute Sound September 2009 53 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS PREAMPLIFIERS dimensionality while drawing out the natural warmth and expressiveness of instruments and voices. To get the most from it, try matching it with the companion C272 amplifier via a set of PNF Audio Icon interconnects and Symphony speaker cables. Also features an astonishingly good phonostage; some listeners may buy it for that feature alone. Reviewed by CM, Issue 148 Vincent Audio SA-31 $599 wsdistributing.com The SA-31 is a well-made entrylevel vacuum-tube preamp that provides tone controls and a loudness contour switch. The preamp’s sound is characterized by a rich, seductive midrange and hearty and solidly weighted bass. Though not quite the equal of today’s best $1k preamps in resolution, definition, or high-frequency “air,” the SA-31 offers terrific bang for the buck. Reviewed by CM, Issue 173 PS Audio Trio P-200 $995 psaudio.com The heart of the P-200’s circuitry is PS Audio’s “gain cell” technology, said to deliver excellent linearity because input signals aren’t attenuated or shunted to ground through a potentiometer. Robustly built and very easy to use, the Trio is an excellent minimalist linestage preamp, ideal for pared-down music systems. Reviewed by Barry Willis, Issue 170 Rogue Audio Metis $995 rogueaudio.com PoY 05 Rogue Audio’s award-winning Metis is a USA-made, vacuumtube-powered (6SN7-based) preamplifier. The dynamic liveliness and harmonic richness we expect in any good tube design are present here, and at levels that remind us of the sound of $2500 tube preamps. But unlike tube designs that sound focused in the midrange but soft at the frequency extremes, the Metis’ great strength is sound that remains evenly balanced and finely resolved from top to bottom. Reviewed by CM, Issue 160 $1000–$2000 Van Alstine Transcendence 8 $1099–$1697 avahifi.com Configured as a linestage (the optional phonostage fared less well), the T8 is one of those rare products that genuinely transcends the constraints of budget amplification. Its sound is not particularly smooth or euphonic. But it won praise based on its stable imaging and killer dynamics. It benefits from being mated with a romantic tube amp. Reviewed by DO, Issue 173 provides a sense of immediate connection to the music. Its midrange sounds pure, its dynamics nimble, and vocalists’ phrasing seems just right. A slight coolness aside, this unit lets you forget about gear and enjoy the music. Reviewed by WG, Issue 177 PrimaLuna ProLogue 3 $1599 primaluna-usa.com The vacuum-tube-powered ProLogue 3 preamp makes an ideal companion to PrimaLuna’s ProLogue 5 tube power amp. Like the power amp, the preamp combines tube warmth and richness with a clear, crisp, precise presentation reminiscent of the best solid-state designs. Bass, too, is taut and clear. Reviewed by SR, Issue 156 Cambridge Audio 840e $1799 cambridgeaudio.com Quad 99/QC-24 $1100/$1100 quad-hifi.co.uk GE 01 Along with a dandy mm and mc phonostage, the Quad 99 features a novel “tilt” control for tone correction. A solid middle-level performer, it lacks the ultimate transparency, liveliness, and dynamic openness of the very best units. The all-tube QC-24 linestage is the least expensive to suggest that elusive quality of “continuousness” in its presentation. The QC-24 has first-rate imaging in all dimensions, and a lively, engaging, remarkably neutral presentation. Reviewed by PS, Issues 128 and 135 Naim NAC 122x $1450 naimusa.com Because Naim preamps have no built-in power supplies, they must be mated with one of the company’s amps or outboard supplies to operate. When so configured, the NAC 122x is a notably quiet performer that 54 September 2009 The Absolute Sound GE 05 PoY 08 The preamp companion to the 840W amp, the 840E is highly configurable, with excellent connectivity and a wonderful premium resistor-ladder volume control. Of course, none of this would matter if the musicality and neutrality were anything other than at the top of class and they are. It’s almost unsettling how quiet this preamp is. The 840E/840W tandem represents one of the most satisfying debuts in recent years. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 $2000–$4000 Manley Laboratories Shrimp $2300 manleylabs.com Stepping up to the plate with spunk, clarity, and wall-towall soundstaging, the Manley Shrimp tubed linestage is a serious contender in the sub$2k price range and beyond. Leaning to the warm side of neutral, its minimalist, singleended-only design can be soft on top, but offers eminently musical and inviting sound. An excellent value for the music lover and tube enthusiast and now equipped with an RF remote control. Reviewed by SK, Issue 178 ModWright SWL 9.0SE/SWL 9.0 Signature Edition $2495/$2995 These two all-tubed linestages (the Signature Edition adds a number of design upgrades) offer particularly wide and deep soundstaging, coupled with an extended bottom-end and a sweet treble. “Addictive, seductive, beautiful, exciting” is how SR summed up the SWL 9.0 SE Signature Edition. Reviewed by SR, Issue 181 Vincent Audio SA-T8 $2500 wsdistributing.com This tube line preamplifier is about bass precision, spacious soundstaging, speedy transients, pure midrange textures, and rhythmic drive. The lower treble is a bit coarser texturally relative to the midrange. Microdynamic nuances are reproduced with commendable conviction. A rare musical blossom at this price point, and an absolute steal considering its twin virtues of crystalline clarity and ample boogie factor. Reviewed by DO, Issue 188 Linn Majik Kontrol $3100 linn.co.uk The Kontrol preamplifier is arguably the strongest single component in Linn’s Majik Series family. Its signature characteristics are effortless clarity and transparency, and an ability to reveal rich layers of transient and textural details. One welcome touch is a line-level input that users can re-configure as a surprisingly effective mm or mc phonostage. Reviewed by CM, Issue 173 The Absolute Sound September 2009 55 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS PREAMPLIFIERS Artemis Labs LA-1 $3500 aydn.com GE 05 $5000–$10,000 Meridian G02 $4495 meridian-audio.com One of three debut components from this fledgling company, this 5687based tube design digs deep into the heart of the music. Beautiful without being overtly romantic sounding, the LA-1 is exceptionally holographic, dynamically lively, tonally and texturally natural, and, audiophile-speak aside, simply more musically engaging than most of the competition in this range. Reviewed by WG, Issue 155 The G02 controller replaces its predecessor, the 502, and features balanced dual-mono construction as well as a unique dual-differential volume control. SK called it “effortless, refined, and absolutely gorgeous” when combined with Meridian’s other G Series gear, concluding “these machines have class written in spades all over them.” Reviewed by SK, Issue 152 Conrad-Johnson ET2 $3500 ($1250 for phono option) conradjohnson.com The all-tube Calypso delivers most of the performance of Aesthetix’ two-box $13,000 Callisto linestage for about a third the price. What’s more, it benefits from Aesthetix’s second-generation styling, functionality, and industrial design. Sonically, the Calypso is characterized by extremely good dynamics and dynamic nuance. Although the treble is smooth and somewhat laid-back, transparency and resolution are first-rate. Noise floor is highly dependent on tube quality, which has been variable. Competes with the megabuck preamps. Reviewed by RH, Issue 151 Despite its entry-level status, the ET-2 is a low-distortion, high-resolution line preamplifier that delivers timbral accuracy and phenomenal bass control. The overall presentation is clean, smooth, slightly laidback, yet highly detailed, with an emphasis on harmonic accuracy. It can certainly hold its own in elitist company. The optional phonostage can also be confidently recommended. Reviewed by DO, Issue 193 $4000–$5000 Parasound Halo JC-2 $4000 parasound.com GE 08 The JC-2 is that extreme rarity—a near-reference-quality product that many of us can actually afford. Neutral and natural, transparent-to-sources, quick and delicately detailed (though not as hard-hitting and detailed as the higherpriced spreads), here is one solid-state preamp that doesn’t trade away key parts of the baby (air, bloom, color, three-dimensionality) for the bathwater of razor-cut imaging and iron-fisted control. The poor (or poorer) man’s ARC Reference 3. Reviewed by JV, Issue 182 Aesthetix Calypso $4500 musicalsurroundings.com PoY 03 Atma-Sphere MP-3 $4750 atma-sphere.com This no-frills tubed preamp from Atma-Sphere is a musthear for the purist music lover. Offering a crystal-clear, smooth, and concise window on the music, the MP-3’s expansiveness is a perfect match for both tube and solid-state amplification. Balanced-only operation; phono optional. Reviewed by SK, Issue 184 56 September 2009 The Absolute Sound McIntosh C46/C2200 $5500/$6000 mcintoshlabs.com GE 04 Sonically and functionally a great preamplifier, the solidstate C46 features a truly useful set of controls, including an eight-band equalizer that is even up to correcting some room-related problems. It also has an excellent phonostage. In day-to-day use PS has never experienced a more pleasurable unit. McIntosh’s first new alltube preamp in more than 40 years, the C2200 is a triumph that sports a gallery of features (including a good phonostage) and classic McIntosh sound. The midrange is the most neutral PS has heard in any tube unit, the bass response is equally fine, at once firm yet natural, and the highs are sweet, pure, and extended. Reviewed by PS, Issue 147 Edge G2 $5898 edgeamps.com Like its amps, Edge’s preamps are a different kind of solid-state— grain-free, open, neutral but not cold, and not at all dark or grainy. The sound described is with the G2 powered by its internal gel batteries. When the G2 is driven by AC, the sound is noticeably drier, hashier, and less magical. But given that the batteries only need charging once a week, this is not a practical concern. Reviewed by WG, Issue 149 BAT VK-42SE $6995-$8245 (depending on options) balanced.com BAT designer Victor Khomeno is rightly proud of the numerous programming features on the 42-SE preamplifier. But that’s only the start of the story. A preamp that punches above its weight and a great value, this exemplary solid-state design is most notable for its smooth, silky sound and superbly low noise floor. Where it falls short of more elaborate designs is in resolution and dynamics. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 179 Hovland HP-200 $7500 (add $2000 for P-200 phonostage) hovlandcompany.com An uncommonly beautiful piece of audio gear, Hovland’s HP200 is an elegant, detailed, and natural-sounding preamplifier. Its detail doesn’t wow you in that “I never heard it like that before” sort of way, but rather reveals the inner workings of a performance. And it’s natural in that it allows instrumental and vocal timbres and textures to sound like themselves. Reviewed by WG, Issue 162 Pass Labs XP20 $8600 passlabs.com GE 09 Very quiet, with no trace of solid-state hardness, excellent musical life, and the best low-level detail AHC has yet encountered. Soundstaging is as real in imaging, width, and depth as the recording permits. Excellent deep bass, and clean, detailed, upper midrange and treble that gets the most out of flute, clarinet, strings, and piano. And it does the same with the full range of male and female voice. AHC’s new reference preamp, although it was a hard choice relative to the Boulder 1010. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 192 Audio Space Reference 2 $9900 audiospace.com A genuine Audio Space oddity, the Reference 2 is a 300Bpowered preamplifier. Despite its peculiar gain strategy (or perhaps because of it), it sounds more like the real thing in the midrange (when used strictly as a linestage) than any other preamp JV has auditioned, with nonpareil midband timbre, imaging, and bloom. Though it has its own built-in mm/ mc phonostages, both were too noisy for JV’s taste. The GE 07 PoY 07 The Absolute Sound September 2009 57 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS PREAMPLIFIERS PHONOSTAGES Ref 2 is, however, a superb combination with ARC’s PH7 phonostage. Reviewed by JV, Issue 174 Spectral DMC-30SS $9995 spectralaudio.com Spectral’s DMC-30SS is a tour de force in preamplifier design, with its ultra-fast circuits, heroic volume control, and meticulous attention to every detail. Its sound is hard to describe because it imposes so little signature on the signal passing through it. Putting the DMC-30SS into the system is like washing months of winter off a picture window. Timbres are richly saturated, soundstages huge and defined, and resolution of transient detail is unmatched, provided that these qualities exist in the recording. Reviewed by RH, Issue 190 ability to adjust the level of each input to match. Excellent remote-control features. Superb Boulder construction. A true high-end product. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 188 Simaudio MOON P-8 $13,500 simaudio.com If it weren’t for the absence of a mode (i.e., stereo/mono) switch, PS would find this twochannel, dual-chassis, dual-mono preamplifier literally perfect in function and user-friendliness. Like any superior modern solidstate unit, it’s tonally neutral and pretty much characterless. Additionally, its transparency is see-through, dynamic response hair-trigger and very wide, detail amazing, with that paradoxical combination of iron grip and utter ease. Drawbacks? Well, it does cost $13,500. Reviewed by PS, Issue 165 VTL 7.5 Series II $18,500 vtl.com $10,000 and above Mark Levinson No. 326S $10,000 marklevinson.com PoY 06 The No. 326S possesses greater transparency and fidelity to the source than previous ML preamps, with less of the characteristic ML house sound. Astonishingly focused, and detailed, yet smooth, suave, and sophisticated. Superb features and ergonomics make the No. 326S a pleasure to use on a daily basis. Reviewed by RH, Issue 161 Boulder 1010 $13,000 boulderamp.com A preamp that complements all of the sonic virtues of the Boulder 1050 power amp, and does so with exceptional resolving power and detail. An excellent phonostage. The This latest iteration of VTL’s preamp ups the ante by improving parts quality and lowering the noise floor by moving from a 12AX7 to a lower-gain 12AU7 tube. The result is an extremely explosive and neutral-sounding preamplifier that will appeal especially to lovers of orchestral works or rock and roll. Swapping tubes might provide more bloom, but no one will accuse the unit of being lush or colored. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 180 Balanced Audio Technology Rex $20,000 balanced.com This massive, two-chassis, all-tubed preamplifier sets a reference standard in midrange liquidity, palpability, and lack of electronic artifacts. The Rex is supremely seductive and engaging, making the listener forget he’s listening through the electronics to the music. The only caveat is that the Rex runs hot, even in 58 September 2009 The Absolute Sound standby mode. If you can handle the cost, heat, and rack-space requirements, RH knows of no sweeter-sounding preamplifier. Reviewed by RH, Issue 182 MBL 6010 D $23,800 mblusa.com GE 05 One of the two best solid-state preamps JV has auditioned. Its noise floor is so incredibly low that it consistently resolves fine harmonic and dynamic details that simply aren’t audible on other great preamps. At the same time its transient speed and authority are beyond compare. To ice the cake, it has absolutely gorgeous tone color, the same liquidity and transparency that so distinguish MBL’s 9011 amps, excellent imaging and soundstaging, and superb ambience retrieval. Reviewed by JV, Issue 164 Soluution 720 $40,000 axissaudio.com The other of the two best solidstate preamps JV has heard. More dead-neutral in balance (though sweet enough in the mids and treble never to sound clinical) and less dark and liquid than the MBL 6010 D, the 720, like Soulution’s amplifiers, is killer-transparent to sources. It’s not more detailed than the ultra-high-resolution 6010 D, but it’s not less. Like the 700 and 710 amps, this is a component that just “disappears” as a sound source, allowing other components ahead of and behind it to show their true colors (or their lack of same) more completely. Probably the preamp for the audiophile who wants to hear everything on every disc but doesn’t want to turn his stereo into a sonic X-ray machine. JV, review forthcoming Krell Evolution Two $50,000 krellonline.com The Krell Evolution series puts the third dimension back in music by providing exceptional depth. It also provides exceptional reproduction of hall sounds and musical mechanics—bowing sounds, score rustling, etc. This effect is enhanced by the imaging qualities of the Evolution Two. When the imaging on a recording is natural and detailed, the Evolution preserves the size, the place, the stability, and the layers of imaging. The result is a more open soundstage, better reproduction of life and air, and a greater ability to lose yourself in the music. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 158 PHONOSTAGES Under $2000 Parasound Zphono $150 parasound.com The mm/mc Zphono is excellently built and makes very nice sounds: large soundstage, excellent layering and bloom with remarkably good balance, dynamic range, and detail. To be sure, a little veiled, a little lacking in ultimate definition, with a vague sense of things being held somewhat at arm’s length. But at $150, you really can’t complain. Reviewed by PS, Issue 172 Gram Amp 2 SE $399 elexatelier.com This stripped-down little number has a sweet, mellow sound, and very low noise and perceived distortion. It’s strictly for moving magnets and high-output moving coils. The sound is a little veiled (though remarkably grain-free), and, while not the last word in wide dynamics, has astonishing composure and musical integrity. Reviewed by PS, Issue 134 Grado PH-1 $500 gradolabs.com The wood-bodied PH-1 is a versatile unit that works equally well with high- and lowoutput cartridges. Though it is The Absolute Sound September 2009 59 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS PHONOSTAGES susceptible to environmental noise, the sound is open and easy, with an expansive soundstage, natural highs, and bass that has texture, tonal refinement, and power. Reviewed by WG, Issue 141 assembled ($995; $1295 for moving-coil version), surely ranks among audio’s great values. Its 47k Ohms impedance and low output make it best for mm and high-output mc cartridges. Reviewed by WG in Issue 175 Simaudio MOON LP3 $500 simaudio.com PS Audio GCPH Phono $995 psaudio.com Simaudio’s little LP3 is a very convincing performer, and quiet too. It offers 40dB gain for moving-magnet and 60dB gain for moving-coil cartridges, and either 100 or 47k Ohms loading, and parts quality is militaryspec. Though its frequency extremes aren’t particularly extended and its midrange is a mite hooded, this is an excellent mid-entry-level phonostage. Reviewed by WG, Issue 180 PS Audio’s GCPH phonostage is one of the best-sounding and most versatile offerings in its price class. Notable strengths include killer bass, natural warmth, a highly threedimensional sound, and silent backgrounds. Welcome design touches include externally adjustable gain and load switches, and a remote control with volume and absolute-phase adjustments. And yep, it can directly drive power amps, too. Reviewed by CM, Issue 191 Nova Phonomena $999 musicalsurroundings.com Phonomena II $600 musicalsurroundings.com The sequel to the original Michael Yee design, the Phonomena II is based on the latest discrete circuitry of the top-flight Nova Phonomena, minus the battery pack. Like the original it’s easily adjustable and quite extended, with a kind of heavy gravity in the bass octaves. A bit cooler and brasher on brass fortissimos, but the sound is alive and electrifying with dynamic energy. For balance and value the Phonomena II is a stunner. Reviewed by NG, Issue 191 Marchand Electronics LN112-AA $995 marchandelec.com A sweet, open, and very natural sounding tube phonostage, the LN-112, which can also be ordered either as a kit ($595), or partially ($795), or fully GE 02 Grace, poise, low noise, and neutrality characterize this excellent unit, which includes options for fine-tuning the loading and gain of both moving coils and moving magnets. Add the external power supply for even lower noise and distortion, and greater transparency. Some listeners may want more dynamic “punch” and personality, but this is hard to beat for low coloration. Add $600 for BPS power supply. Reviewed by PS, Issue 172 JR Transrotor Phono II $1500 axissaudio.com Splendidly machined from a chunk of aluminum with enough heat-sinking for a reactor, the Phono II has yet to meet a cartridge it can’t convincingly drive. Fully adjustable for mm and mc, it may well be the last phonostage you’ll ever want. Sonically on the cooler and clinical side—but only slightly so. Reviewed by NG, Issue 172 60 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Simaudio MOON LP5.3 $1500 simaudio.com PoY 08 A stellar performer, the LP5.3 is quiet, transparent, and tonally neutral, and is capable of not only recreating a remarkable sense of the space an LP was recorded in, but also the subtlest interactions of the musicians who occupied it. The LP5.3 is flexible, too, with four levels of impedance loading and single-ended and balanced outputs. Reviewed by WG, Issue 180 $3000–$6000 Aesthetix Rhea $4000 musicalsurroundings.com PoY 03 With three inputs, variable cartridge-loading—adjustable at the listening chair via remote control—and a front-panel display of gain and loading, the Rhea is the Swiss Army Knife of phonostages. Although it has tons of gain, the noise level is extremely low, making it compatible with a wide range of cartridge outputs. The Rhea’s family resemblance to the Calypso linestage is unmistakable: transient quickness and speed without etch, a feeling of effortlessness on crescendos, and a deep, layered soundstage. Reviewed by RH, Issue 151 Naim SuperLine $5950 (with SuperCap 2) naim-audio.com With no built-in power supply, the SuperLine is designed to mate with either another Naim component or one of three standalone Naim power supplies: the FlatCap2x ($1100), the HiCap2 ($1900), or the SuperCap2 ($5950). With any of the three it’s a terrific phonostage, but when mated with the SuperCap it blossoms into one of the finest tools available for LP playback. Reviewed by WG, Issue 194 Audio Research PH7 $5995 audioresearch.com GE 07 PoY 07 Meet the new boss. If you can imagine a remote-controllable phonostage with the air, color, and bloom of the Aesthetix Io and the dynamics and soundstaging of the Lamm LP2 Deluxe, then you’ve got an idea of what ARC’s all-tube PH7 phonostage sounds like. That said, you really have to hear this one for yourself to get a true sense of its transparency and the magical way it images. ARC hasn’t been on such a roll since the heady days of the SP10 and D79B. Reviewed by JV, Issue 172 $6000 and above Artemis Labs PL-1 $4000 aydn.com Lamm LP2 Deluxe $7290 lammindustries.com Like its companion linestage, the PL-1 is a tube phonostage that delivers exquisitely musical and lifelike sound. Record after record left WG with that “as if hearing it for the first time” feeling. Beautifully balanced, with low noise and a great range of tone colors, the PL-1 is also dynamically explosive and very transparent. Reviewed by WG, Issue 155 With a superb built-in coupling transformer to handle loweroutput moving coils, the all-tube Lamm LP2 phonostage has the inestimable advantage of being dead quiet, which makes it ideal for folks, like JV, who live in RF Valley. Though not as “alive” or bloomy as the Aesthetix Io or ARC PH7 on large-scale dynamics, the Lamm is rich, beautiful, and extraordinarily delicate-sounding on all music, with superior detail and transient response. Reviewed by JV, Issue 157 GE 03 GE 04 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS PHONOSTAGES MUSIC SERVERS DIGITAL PROCESSORS Aesthetix Rhea Signature $7000 musicalsurroundings.com The Signature version of Aesthetix’ Rhea vividly demonstrates the value of component quality. Although the circuit is identical to that of the Rhea, the Signature uses cost-no-object parts throughout. The sonic result is a much better defined bottom end, even smoother timbres, and (surprisingly) greater dimensionality. An expensive upgrade over the $4k Rhea, but worth it. RH, review forthcoming Manley Steelhead $7500 manleylabs.com GE 04 The Steelhead should be counted as one of the great phonostages, and its extraordinary set of features makes it a vinyl-tweaker’s fantasy rig. Driven by an outboard solid-state power supply, the main chassis houses six tubes, two moving-coil and moving-magnet inputs, fixed and variable inputs, and a bevy of front-panel controls. The sound is superb—rich but not fat, detailed yet natural, extended, controlled, and highly involving. Plus, it has the huevos to drive an amp directly and now has a remote control. Reviewed by WG, Issue 152 Audio Tekne TEA-2000 $12,000 tangramaudio.com Audio Tekne’s exquisitely made and expensive electronics are examples of the artisanal high end—in this case the work of Japanese master Kiyoaki Imai. Built around very-high-quality power transformers, two superb step-up transformers (one for very-low-output moving coils and one for typical coils), and a tube gain stage, the TEA-2000 is a wonderment. Unlike other step-up-transformer-based phonostages, the TEA-2000 gives up nothing in the way of transparency and detail. Indeed, it sounds so much like a very slight and pleasantly warmer, considerably higher-output, marginally more detailed PH7, it is uncanny. JV Music Servers (listed alphabetically) Apple TV $329 apple.com When you consider its price and sonic capabilities it’s hard to understand why any audiophile with a computer and Wifi doesn’t already have an Apple TV in his system. It retains the essential nature and feeling of the music as faithfully as a good CD transport. You’ll never have the impression that the music was merely “there” as with many mid-fi components. A true 21st century music-delivery device is finally here. Reviewed by SS, Issue 183 Logitech Slim Devices Transporter $1999 slimdevices.com The Transporter is a versatile product whose flexibility may be its best and worst trait. It can be used as a music server, DAC, or stand-alone digital preamp, so many users may employ it in a way that prevents it from sounding its best. Still, if you are thinking of buying any $2000+ DAC you absolutely must consider a Transporter. It’s simply that good. Reviewed by SS, Issue 193 Logitech Squeezebox Duet $399 slimdevices.com The Duet is the radio king. Through it you can listen to almost any FM radio station in the world. Its full-color remote can leap through tall buildings with a single bound and it even doubles as a digital clock. The sound quality and ergonomics of the Logitech Squeezebox Duet make them worthy of installation in the most exalted high-end system. It also doesn’t hurt that it is ridiculously cheap. Reviewed by SS, Issue 183 62 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Music Vault II Hard Drive MusicVault II 500, $1485; MusicVault II, $1725; MusicVault II, 1500, $1920; MusicVault II 2000, $2265 soundsciencecat.com If you peruse the Internet you will discover that NAS hard drives can be had for as little as $100. If you buy the right one and have the skills, you can conceivably cobble together a device that has nearly all the capabilities of a Music Vault II. But your home-brew unit will not have is the same degree of customer service and ergonomic ease as the Music Vault II. Reviewed by SS, Issue 193 anyone to enjoy music anywhere in his home makes it the greatest thing since sliced bread. Reviewed by SS, Issue 189 Sooloos Music Server Price varies with configuration sooloos.com Along with Qsonix, Sooloos offers a much easier to use music server than the competition thanks to its touchscreen user-interface. The tools for finding and presenting you with the music you might want to hear are exemplary. After living with a Sooloos, it’s hard to go back to searching for CDs. Now owned by Meridian. Reviewed by RH, Issue 177 Digital Processors Audyssey Sound Equalizer $2500 audyssey.com Qsonix Q110 Music Server Price varies with configuration GE 08 qsonix.com When it comes to music servers, the user interface is paramount. This is where the Q110 excels—its touchscreen panel and “drag ’n’ drop” operation justify the higher price compared with building your own PC-based server. Qsonix is continually adding new features, including seamless integration with the MusicGiants on-line store. Reviewed by RH, Issues 177 and 184 Sonos BU 150 (includes ZP-90 ZonePlayer, ZP-120 ZonePlayer, CR100 Controller 100, and CC100Charging Cradle 100) $999 (bundle price) sonos.com I read somewhere that the Sonos system is about as sexy as a toaster. That may be true, but it’s also as reliable, unintimidating, and easy to use as a toaster. The fact that the Sonos system makes it easy for The Audyssey compensates for room effects to produce remarkably smooth, uncolored, and neutral sound and it can even do this over quite a large listening area. The chosen “target curve” is flat down through the bass, with none of the curve-shaping (with bass up a little) that is common in room-correction devices. The result sounds rather lean with many recordings, and user control of the target curve is minimal: Only some top-end roll-off options are offered. This is a surround unit with eight channels, but is usable for two-channel. Reviewed by REG, Issue 178 Copland DRC 205 Room Compensation Device $2990 GE 07 divergent.com This relatively inexpensive device can revolutionize your system. It offers automatic and rapid setup without a computer, but can be further adjusted to listener preference using a PC (software included). Compatible with all sources via analog input and output, it goes in your tape- PoY 07 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS DIGITAL PROCESSORS DIGITAL SOURCES monitor loop, where it corrects what is wrong with your room/ speaker combination. Pure sound, and true sonic accuracy at the touch of a button Reviewed by REG, Issue 173 TacT Audio RCS 2.2XP $5190 (base unit)/$6860 (fully loaded) GE tactaudio.com 05 Recently upgraded to a “P” GE designation, TacT’s 2.2 lets 05 you do a crossover-plus-timedelay at, say, 200Hz from a corner-placed woofer to a main speaker out in the room (where midrange and treble response are smoother and imaging better). The RCS 2.2XP also does the overall “room correction” to bring the in-room response to whatever “target curve” you choose. Reviewed by REG, Issue 158 Lyngdorf Audio TDAI ADC RP 2200 GE $7200 07 lyngdorf.com A superb digital amplifier combined with the “RoomPerfect” system, which corrects room/speaker problems but preserves general speaker character (by-passable if desired). No choices except some overall balance curve selections are offered, but RoomPerfect gives excellent results on its own. Setup is rapid and easy (no computer). Also useable for the Lyngdorf corner-woofer setup. Reviewed by REG, Issue 170 Digital Sources Under $1000 High Resolution Technologies Music Streamer/Music Streamer+ GE 09 $99/$299 hirestech.com Unlike many inexpensive DACs, which may sound clean but lack the “juice” that makes recorded music sound right, the MusicStreamer retains music’s essential timbres. Even 320kbps MP3 music files have a musical rightness that very few DACs manage to convey. For under $100 the MusicStreamer qualifies as the biggest bargain SS has heard in a long, long time. The MusicStreamer+ may be an even bigger value than its little brother the MusicStreamer. Couple it with transparent electronics and be prepared to get closer to your music than you ever thought possible from a $299 USB DAC. It does not support higher-res files, but what the MusicStreamer+ does must be heard to be believed. Reviewed by SS, Issue 194 Oppo DV-980H $169 oppodigital.com PoY 06 Oppo’s DV-980H is, hands down, the best universal player $169 can buy. It’s a more than respectable entry-level CD player, an even better DVDAudio/SACD player, and a surprisingly good upscaling DVD player, too. Offering smoother, more detailed, and more focused sound than anything near its price, the DV980H makes a perfect, multiformat, audiophile’s starter player (though “gild-the-lily” types should note that Oppo’s $395 DV-983H raises the performance bar higher still). Reviewed by CM, Issue 183 Bel Canto USB Link 24/96 $295 belcantodesign.com The USB Link 24/96 is a cleverly conceived USB-toS/PDIF converter that enables any PC to play music through virtually any DAC. Along with this flexibility comes higher resolution than most USB-capable DACs, plus a less plastic, more dynamic, airier sound. The Link cannot completely overcome USB’s intrinsic sonic limitations, but it is ideal for those who must use that interface. Reviewed by AT, Issue 194 64 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Musical Fidelity V-DAC $299 musicalfidelity.com Musical Fidelity’s humblelooking V-DAC (which provides coax, optical, and USB inputs) is an astonishingly good performer. In terms of voicing and handling of timbres and textures, it nearly equals the sound of some of the nicer four-figure CD players we’ve heard, sacrificing only a touch of bass extension and an elusive bit of three-dimensionality. But at this price, why quibble? Reviewed by CM, Playback Issue 20 NAD C515 BEE $299 nadelectronics.com PoY 08 Joins the C315 BEE integrated amplifier as the entry-level tandem in NAD’s high-flying BEE line. In both cases the BEEs hold their own, revealing orchestral minutiae, dynamic thrills, and timbral details that would have escaped a sub$300 player a short while ago. There’s more bloom in the treble, although it’s still on the dry side. Inner dynamic lines may not be as pristinely defined as higher-priced units, but the sonic delights of the C515 BEE should make all listeners look long and hard at their options in the under-$1000 range. Reviewed by NG, Issue 183 Cambridge Audio 540C v2 $499 audioplusservices.com The 540C CD player sounds far more sophisticated and refined than any $439 machine has a right to. The midrange is relatively grain-free, and the treble lacks the metallic sheen often heard in entry-level products. Reviewed by RH, Issue 162 Focusrite Saffire $499 focusrite.com Focusrite’s FireWire-toS/PDIF converter constitutes a genuine breakthrough in extracting audiophile-grade sound from a PC. Though not quite reference caliber in inner detail, instrumental body, or bass definition, the Saffire delivers a rich, relaxed, airy, rhythmically cohesive, fleshand-blood presentation that is the antithesis of USB. Note that the Saffire is a minor pain to install and set up. Reviewed by AT, Issue 194 NAD C 542 $499 nadelectronics.com NAD’s C 542 delivers a warm, easy, and open sound, though it is slightly rough around the edges and a bit forward in perspective. Given the NAD’s overall musicality and value, these flaws are hardly a distraction. Reviewed by WG, Issue 137 PS Audio Digital Link III $995 psaudio.com The DL III’s upsampling feature takes standard 44.1kHz CD playback into the high-resolution realm. At user-selectable 96kHz or 192kHz sampling rates, it made standard-issue CDs sound similar to their SACD counterparts. Reviewed by BW, Issue 170 Rega Apollo $995 soundorg.com PoY 06 Rega’s Apollo CD player is the finest sub-$1000 CD player CM has heard, offering substantially more resolution than other players in its class, plus a richly textured sound that spans the entire audio spectrum (though faint hints of treble hardness do occasionally poke through). Reviewed by CM, Issue 186 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS DIGITAL SOURCES $1000-$2000 Benchmark DAC1Pre $1575 GE 09 benchmarkmedia.com PoY 08 According to REG, this controversial unit delivers absolutely top-quality performance that belies its small size and modest price. For its amazing sound quality, jittersuppressing D-to-A conversion, and superb analog linestage, all at a modest price, REG called it “the beginning of a new era in audio”; the reaction of others has been more mixed. Reviewed by REG, Issue 183 Exposure 3010S $1795 bluebirdmusic.com A highly articulate CD player, Exposure’s 3010S possesses impressive breadth and depth, and good air and detail. Initially hard-sounding, after run-in the Exposure rewards with a musically natural presentation capable of bloom, complex harmonics, excellent rhythmic pace, and deep, authoritative bass that’s always easy and effortless sounding. Reviewed by WG, Issue 181 NAD Masters Series M55 $1795 nadelectronics.com NAD’s M55 universal player boasts first-rate video performance (thanks to Faroudja processing) and sound quality that takes NAD’s traditional house sound to much higher levels than ever before by offering dramatically increased levels of resolution, transient speed, definition, and three-dimensionality. The player performs equally well with CDs and high-resolution discs, and is a compelling value for money. Reviewed by CM/TM, Issue 174 Cambridge Audio Azur 840C $1799 PoY audioplusservices.com 07 quality that’s competitive with $6k players, standing out for its ease, smoothness, resolution, dimensionality, and stunning spatial presentation. The 840C’s technology is also different than its competitors, with custom digital filtering that upsamples to 384kHz/24-bit, dual-differential DACs, a beefy custom transport, and a massive power supply. A great CD player at an unbelievable price. Reviewed by RH, Issue 174 $2000–$3000 $3000–$5000 Creek Destiny $2495 musichallaudio.com Audio Research DAC7 $3495 audioresearch.com Like its companion piece from Creek, the Destiny integrated amp, the Destiny CD player rivals the performance of more expensive separates and, in combination with the amp, does some things better than any other digital and solidstate combo that JH has heard at anywhere near its price. Reviewed by JH, Issue 170 The ARC DAC7 is at the vanguard of a new wave of digital components that pull off the miraculous, analog-like feat of being detailed, musically insightful, and relaxed at the same time. The DAC7’s sound is big, airy, and gorgeous. Its bass is simply stellar, and its USB input, though limited to 16/48 resolution, is among the best-sounding available. Reviewed by AT, Issue 194 PrimaLuna ProLogue 8 $2499 primaluna-usa.com Bryston BDA-1 $1995 bryston.com AT’s new reference DAC, the Bryston BDA-1 reveals previously unattainable (from digital) worlds of information about the sound and performance of the music it plays. Though not quite as sweet-sounding as the ARC, the Bryston is slightly more revealing and rhythmically taut, while still maintaining a relaxed, analog-like presentation. Only a sub-par USB input mars an otherwise exceptional product. Reviewed by AT, Issue 194 Sony BDP-S5000ES $1999 sony.com A Blu-ray battleship if there ever was one. Ruggedly built, with Ethernet and memory card at the ready for BD-Live content, it also offers 14-bit HD video processing and onboard 7.1-channel audio processing of the latest multichannel highresolution formats. Audio and picture quality are crystalline; even stock CDs fared well. The premium price suggests it’s for the Sony system completist– not that there’s anything wrong with that. Reviewed by NG, Issue 193 The Azur 840C shatters the price/performance equation in CD playback with sound 66 September 2009 The Absolute Sound An amazing value with a unique tube-based clock. At its best, with the board upgrade, the Eight closes in on even the most expensive competition. It’s blessed with plenty of boogie factor, superb clarity, sensuous mids, and lovely harmonic bloom. Its portrayal of the soundstage is wonderfully transparent. Out of the box, upper octaves are a bit grainy and bright. Tube dampers help significantly, as do vintage preamp tubes. Reviewed by DO, Issue 183 Bryston BCD-1 $2695 bryston.com GE 08 PoY 08 A CD player for the ages, this new Bryston is truly reference-caliber at an eminently reasonable price. The BCD-1 sports the latest digital components, an audiophilegrade Class A output stage, user-friendly operation, durable construction—and gets the music right. Particularly impressive are its dramatic dynamics and ability to unravel interwoven musical lines. Buoyant without being lean, this player requires a good set of tiptoes to achieve its full potential. Reviewed by AT, Issue 183 Arcam DV-139 $3499 arcam.co.uk With Arcam’s Full Metal Jacket (FMJ) chassis construction, a first-rate video scaler, and meticulous attention to audio circuits, the DV139 delivers outstanding performance. Great on DVD-A, it’s a bit softer in the treble on SACD, which is a benefit on many discs. Stunning video quality on DVD. Overall, a terrific one-box solution to the format wars. Reviewed by RH, Issue 174 Denon DVD-5910CI $3800 denon.com The first DVD player to employ the Silicon Optix HQV videoprocessing chip, the Denon DVD-5910 naturally has terrific video performance. But the audio is equally good, whether you’re playing CD, SACD, or DVD-Audio. The massively overbuilt player delivers powerful bass and a smooth yet extended treble, with a musically involving character. A flat-out bargain for its capabilities with all formats. Reviewed by BW, TPV Issue 67 Classé Delta CDP-102 $4500 classeaudio.com Another Classé tour de “source,” the CDP-100 combines the sensuous design elegance of the TFT-touchscreen-equipped TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS DIGITAL SOURCES CP-500 with solid but mellow PCM performance that never fails to flatter the music. Textures are velvety smooth, with terrific fluidity across the tonal spectrum. Although less forward than some and a little light in the bass, it shares the high musicality and build-factor of the other Delta electronics. Reviewed by NG, Issue 154 Berkely Audio Design Alpha DAC GE PoY $4995 09 08 berkeleyaudiodesign.com The Alpha DAC is not only one of the best-sounding digital-toanalog converters, it’s also an amazing bargain. In addition to world-class decoding of CD sources, the Alpha DAC can handle any sampling rate to 192kHz and word lengths to 24bit. The robust analog output stage and variable output level allow the Alpha DAC to drive a power amplifier directly. This feature is significant, because the Alpha DAC is capable of such resolution, timbral purity, and dynamics you’ll want to hear it without the limitations of a preamp in the signal path. A reference-quality product at a moderate price. Reviewed by RH, Issue 189 Meridian G08.2 $4995 meridian-audio.com PoY 04 The G08.2 replaces the popular 588 and is built around a computer-style CD/ DVD-ROM drive capable of spinning the disc much faster than needed for standard CD operation. According to Meridian, this allows for multiple high-speed re-reads, providing ten times the errorcorrection capability of a conventional CD player. As with the rest of the G Series, the sound is effortless, refined, and gorgeous. Reviewed by SK, Issue 152 $5000–$10,000 Luxman DU-50 $5000 onahighernote.com Preferring to emphasize its sonic virtues, Luxman’s importer calls this a “music player,” but it will in fact play any five‑inch disc on the planet save for Blu-ray Discs. Yet its musical presentation—delicate and refined, or rich, robust, and dynamic, as called for—makes it one of the best digital players and the best universal player PS has yet auditioned, with far and away the most user‑friendly ergonomics. A novel feature is a choice between two on‑board DACs. Reviewed by PS, Issue 177 Plinius CD-101 $5225 plinius.com The CD-101 is a lavish musical performer and attentiongrabber with drive and pace to burn. Its lack of edginess brings new heights of resolution and a reduction in distortion. Without a numeric display, the lethargic track navigation system (via pulsating pin lights) takes a few spins to get used to. The massive machined remote control could easily be a lethal weapon. Reviewed by NG, Issue 156 Linn Unidisk SC $5510 linn.co.uk According to Barry Willis this Linn universal player’s sound quality “was in a class by itself—simultaneously lush and detailed, with a deep, silent background and reach-outand-touch-it soundstaging.” The Unidisk SC is more than a uni-player; it’s also a remotecontrolled preamp, digital-toanalog converter, and the hub of a Linn-centric, networked, distributed-audio system. Reviewed by BW, TPV Issue 67 Esoteric X-05 $5995 esoteric.teac.com GE 09 The X-05 is, in its own soulful 68 September 2009 The Absolute Sound way the anti-digital disc player. With the X-05’s silky upperoctave harmonics and air, and its effortless transients, music emerges freed of the glassy haze that overlays most digital playback. The familiar sonic chasm between digital and analog truly disappears. This CD/SACD player represents the full realization of SACD’s high-resolution potential. Reviewed by NG, Issue 190 Simaudio MOON Supernova $6500 simaudio.com First-rate sound and firstrate construction make the Supernova a contender for the last Red Book player you’ll ever need. With a slight nod to the cooler side of neutral, it’s surefooted with images, fleshy and dimensional, with a sprinter’s speed off the transient line. The Supernova possesses a special sensitivity with micro-dynamics that draws it ever closer to the best SACD playback. Ergonomically, Simaudio’s trademark fast-reaction mechanism and software will make the Supernova, well, super to use. Reviewed by NG, Issue 179 Marantz SA-7S1 $6999 marantz.com PoY 07 This elegant and superbly built CD/SACD player has a wonderfully smooth and yet extraordinarily detailed sound that puts it among the top echelon of CD and SACD playback devices. Unusually, three digital-filter options are offered for each format, each option giving a subtly but definitely different sound. Reviewed by REG, Issue 174 Wadia 581 $6950 wadia.com Wadia is back, and its 581 is a landmark release that combines the sophistication of the company’s flagships with a newfound sense of musical freedom. The 581’s CD sound is big and boisterous, exhibiting reference-caliber dynamics, extension, and imaging. It also does full justice to SACDs, albeit in two channels only. Reviewed by AT, Issue 169 Esoteric X-03SE $8200 esoteric.teac.com Glare, grunge, and grit are utterly foreign to this full and mellowsounding model, which is more interested in the big picture than spotlighting details. The Esoteric lingers over notes, giving them their full value. Its sound is not effervescent, but stately with extremely measured pacing. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 161 Classé CDP-502 $8500 classeaudio.com The CDP-502 is one of the few players that offers DVD compatibility and outstanding CD-sound quality. A robust bottom-end, slightly forward midrange perspective, and a clean treble presentation make the CDP-502 competitive with similarly priced CD-only players. Throw in outstanding video quality and DVD-A compatibility, and you have a one-box solution to the CD/ DVD player dilemma. Reviewed by RH, Issue 183 $10,000 and above MBL 1521 A CD Drive/1511 F DAC $10,950/$10,650 GE PoY 07 06 mblusa.com As with other MBL electronics, these digital items are helping to redefine what’s possible in their categories. It’s not that they sound like analog; they do not. What they do is provide a richness of tone color, seamless resolution of musical lines, refinement of dynamic nuance, dimensionality, and sense of involvement that go beyond anything WG has before experienced with digital playback. Reviewed by WG, Issue 164 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS Compatible with every disc 07 format, the P-03 Uni/D-03 takes the universal-player idea to the extreme. Featuring Esoteric’s own state-of-theart VRDS disc-transport mechanism, the P-03 Universal player, in combination with the D-03 DAC, delivers sound that is among the best digital playback RH has heard. Video quality (1080p output via HDMI) is also state-of-theart. Note that the P-03 Uni is available without video capabilities (P-03) for $4000 less. Adding the Esoteric G-0Rb rubidium clock vaults performance even higher. Reviewed by RH, Issue 171 TURNTABLES DIGITAL SOURCES Esoteric D-03 D/A converter/ Esoteric P-03 transport $14,000 (D-03 D/A converter); $14,000 (P-03 CD/SACD transport); $18,000 P-03 Uni (CD/ GE 07 DVD/SACD transport) esoteric.teac.com PoY Meridian 808.2 Signature Reference $15,995/$16,995 meridian.co.uk Although the 808.2 shares its model number with the 808, this new machine is an entirely different animal. With a unique “apodising” digital filter that removes a particularly nasty form of distortion that is largely responsible for “CD sound,” the 808.2 realizes a surprising improvement in CD playback. “The most significant product in the history of the Compact Disc,” said RH. The 808.2i adds preamplifier with volume control and source-switching. Reviewed by RH, Issue 194 Esoteric G-Orb Rubidium Master Clock $16,000 esoteric.teac.com In digital-audio playback, who would have thought you’d need the precision of an atomic clock? That’s exactly what the G-0Rb is, and when used with transports and converters with clock inputs, it elevates their sound to a new level. Expensive, but worth it. Stunning build and metalwork. Reviewed by RH, Issue 180 Nagra CDP and CDC $14,295 and $16,750 temposales@rcn.com Spectral SDR-4000 Pro $17,500 spectralaudio.com Whether you choose the volume-controllable CDC or the straight CDP, Nagra’s designs rank among the finest of today’s ultra-pricey compact disc players. (Note: the CDP’s straighter signal path retrieves somewhat more musical detail and emotional expression.) Beautifully built on compact, brushed-aluminum chassis, the Nagras have outstanding tonal purity, exceptional clarity and resolution, and a sheer beauty of sound. The Patek Philippes of CD players. Reviewed by WG, Issue 176 The Spectral SDR-4000 Pro, along with the Meridian 808.2, is the state-of-the-art in CD playback, in RH’s experience. The player possesses a stunning combination of super-high resolution with an unparalleled sense of ease, qualities that are usually mutually exclusive. The Spectral also conveys a sense of space, and of instruments within that space, like no other CD-playback device. Throw in lightning-fast dynamic reflexes, and you’ve got a presentation that is not only intellectually engaging but emotionally satisfying. Reviewed by RH, Issue 190 70 September 2009 The Absolute Sound MBL 1621 A CD Transport/1611 F Digital-toAnalog Converter $24,000 and $24,750 mblusa.com If you’re heavily invested in Red Book CD, you may not know how good it can get until you audition this pricey-butworth-it transport and DAC from MBL. This combo is capable of eliciting magical levels of musical detail—much of it previously unheard—from silver disc, with unusually lifelike timbres and transient response, and unparalleled extension, definition, and slam in the bass. More exciting and higher in apparent detail than the dCS gear, it is also less holistic and more “hi-fi,” although I can see where many would prefer this presentation. JV PoY dCS Scarlatti/Puccini 08 dCS Scarlatti Transport, $32,999; Scarlatti Clock, $9999; Scarlatti DAC, $23,999; dCS Puccini $17,999; dCS Puccini U-Clock, $4999 audiophilesystems.com The Scarlatti is dCS’s top-ofthe-line CD/SACD player. A three-box solution—separate transport, DAC, and clock—it upsamples PCM to DSD and plays back SACD via the same five-bit Ring DAC technology found in dCS’s single-box Puccini. However, parts-quality in the Scarlatti is across-the-board higher than in the Puccini, and its sound is commensurately better. Of all the digital gear JV has reviewed or tested, the Scarlatti and Puccini come closest to sounding “complete”—to fully blending many of the virtues of analog with those of digital, particularly in CD playback. Reviewed by JV, Issue 183 Burmester 069 CD player $59,995 PoY burmester.de 08 A contender for the absolute top of the state of the art in every aspect of CD listening— imaging, detail, dynamics, bass, and upper octaves—and superbly built and finished. Gets the best out of “ordinary” CDs, and not just the best recordings. Like most of its competitors for this level of quality, it is, however, extremely expensive and careful auditioning is needed to determine whether its nuances are: (a) the ones you prefer, and (b) worth the cost. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 184 Soulution 740 $60,000 (transport and DAC) axissaudio.com A bit darker in balance than the dCS Scarlatti/Puccini, this expensive Swiss CD player is, nonetheless, the highest-resolution, highest-transparency digital device JV has yet heard, capable of sounding “fool-you” realistic on well-recorded CDs. At this price point, one would be well advised to listen to all the contenders before pulling out that Rubidium Mastercard; nonetheless, if you’re shopping for the very best, the 740 is an absolute must-hear. JV, review forthcoming Turntables and Record Players Under $1000 Pro-Ject Debut III $349 (with arm and Ortofon OM5e cartridge) sumikoaudio.net The Debut III offers music lovers a lot of analog virtues, like warmth and naturalness, at a bargain price. With the cartridge already installed, this ’table is very easy for even a novice to get going. One can improve clarity, bass articulation, and pitch stability by substituting a better Ortofon OM stylus, using an isolation platform (or pucks), or adding the inexpensive Pro-Ject Speed Box MkII. Reviewed by JH, Issue 172 Rega P1 $395 soundorg.com PoY 07 Rega’s P1 is entirely Britishmade and uses the classic Rega The Absolute Sound September 2009 71 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS motor, drive system, and main bearing. But instead of glass, the platter is made of MDF, and the arm is the new RB100, which comes pre-mounted with the Ortofon OM5e movingmagnet cartridge. You won’t get much frequency extension or wide dynamics here, but what you do get is the pace, musical interplay, and involvement that makes analog special. Reviewed by WG, Issue 171 TURNTABLES Music Hall MMF 2.2 $450 musichallaudio.com This entry-level ’table/arm/ cartridge combination is “point-and-shoot” analog, with no set-up or operational fuss. The tonal balance is somewhat weighted toward the upper midrange, with limited bass extension. Reviewed by PS, Issue 191 Pro-Ject RM-5-SE $699 with arm; $999 with arm and Sumiko Bluepoint No. 2 cartridge sumikoaudio.net The RM-5 is a scaleddown version of Pro-Ject’s larger ’tables, and its sonic performance, aided by a carbon-fiber arm, tear-shaped plinth, and isolation feet, is a pleasant surprise. It’s a step up from entry-level ’tables and will appeal to audiophiles looking for more resolution, control, and realism, as well as a more flexible platform for tweaking. Reviewed by JH, Issue 172 Rega P3-24 $895 soundorg.com A standard for some 20 years, the latest edition of Rega’s P3 sports an improved plinth, motor, and tonearm. Known for its rhythmic incisiveness, the P3-24 also delivers greater dynamic range, a more convincing sense of air and space, a lower noise floor, richer tonality, and improved bass over earlier versions. For an extra $375 one may add the TTPSU power supply, which takes the performance to a significantly higher level. Reviewed by WG, Issue 180 and PS, Issue 191 Pro-Ject RM-5SE/Sumiko Blue Point No. 2 $999 sumikoaudio.net Easy to assemble, Pro-Ject’s RM5SE features a teardrop-shaped, black-lacquered MDF plinth, a suspended motor assembly, a stainless steel and Teflon bearing, and a 9" carbon-fiber arm. As supplied, with Sumiko’s Blue Point 2 cartridge, the RM-5E is musically involving, with a warm balance, stunning rhythmic incisiveness, fine dynamic shading, good detail, and a natural feeling of depth. Reviewed by WG, Issue 180 $1000–$2000 Pro-Ject Xpression III $699 sumikoaudio.net Rega P5 $1395 soundorg.com The Xpression III features an acrylic platter, machined cone feet, a carbon-fiber arm tube, and other refinements rare at this price. Supplied with Sumiko’s Oyster cartridge, the Xpression III has excellent clarity, smoothness, and a wide and deep soundstage. Reviewed by PS, Issue 191 When paired with Rega’s Exact phono cartridge, this ’table produced a highly musical sound that JH preferred to most digital players, regardless of price. The P5 is a low-vibration/ low-coloration design that “is as close to a ‘set it and forget it’ analog front-end as you’re likely to find,” and “the absence of ‘groove noise’ is astonishing.” Reviewed by JH, AVgM, Issue 15 72 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Clearaudio Emotion/ Satisfy $1400 with Satisfy Carbon Fiber and ceramic magnetic bearing; $2000 with Maestro cartridge musicalsurroundings.com The Emotion sports an acrylic plinth, high-quality bearing assembly, and matte acrylic platter, which is belt-driven by a decoupled synchronous motor. The Satisfy arm is a gimbaled-bearing design whose minimalist, one-bolt cartridgecarrier makes alignment a snap. It offers a dynamically lively and engaging presentation, conveys bass with power and speed, and works well with any number of cartridges. Reviewed by CM, AVgM, Issue 9 Sota Comet S301 w/ PoY 08 Dynavector 10x5 $1545 with cartridge ($1150 without) sotaturntables.com SOTA uses internal damping to isolate the Comet from vibration; the bearing cup is made from a Teflonimpregnated self-lubricating polymer; the platter assembly consists of a high-density polymer main platter, which sits atop a polymer-based sub-platter, and is driven by a 24-pole AC synchronous motor. The result is an easy, authoritative presentation that’s warm, rich, and solid, with wide as well as nuanced dynamics, and a large, 3-D soundfield. Reviewed by WG, Issue 180 Pro-Ject RM 9.1 $1799 ($2299 as tested with Sumiko Blackbird cartridge, which is $899 when sold separately) PoY sumikoaudio.net 06 With the RM-9.1, Pro-Ject has made an already good design much better, without raising the price. Like some of its competitors, notably the Rega P5 and VPI Scout, it includes an arm that is far superior to the stock arms you’ll find on entrylevel turntables, and the Sumiko Blackbird’s performance comes close to that of some higherpriced lower-output moving coils. Reviewed by JH, Issue 164 VPI Aries Scout w/JMW-9 $1850 GE vpiindustries.com 08 If you want to experience a huge taste of analog heaven without the hellish price tag, the VPI Aries Scout deserves your attention. This simple, affordable ’table uses an inverted bearing with a Teflon thrust plate and a scaled-down version of the JMW unipivot arm to create an exceptionally quiet background and high signal-to-noise ratio. Music leaps out of silence into the room. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 172 $2000–$5000 Kuzma Stabi S $2075 themusic.com GE 05 The Stabi S is Kuzma’s least expensive turntable, but you wouldn’t know it listening to the thing. Blessed with deep, warm background silences, the Stabi S makes a great complement to the Stogi S tonearm. Not a good choice for rooms where footfalls are a problem (because it is unsuspended), it is otherwise a fine mid-priced ’table. Reviewed by CM, Issue 159 Clearaudio Performance $2799 with Satisfy CarbonFiber arm musicalsurroundings.com The Performance’s precision ceramic-magnetic bearing allows its platter to float on a cushion of air, contributing to this turntable system’s startling transparency, openness, and clarity, very good native speed stability, and low noise floor. Its improved Satisfy arm is equally at home with a highperformance moving coil or a modest moving-magnet cartridge. Like most massloaded designs, a rigid stand is required for this gem to shine. Reviewed by JH, Issue 180 The Absolute Sound September 2009 73 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS TURNTABLES Well Tempered Amadeus $2800 welltemperedlab.net GE 09 This latest version of William Firebaugh’s inventive ideas on turntable and arm design has an ultra-quiet background, superbly non-resonant, neutral sound, complete speed stability, surprising bass extension, easy setup and operation, and compatibility with a wide range of cartridges. Only one caveat: Add-on isolation devices may be needed. Overall, highest high end at a budget price. Reviewed by REG, Issue 191 Linn Sondek LP12 $2810 (turntable only) linn.co.uk Nottingham Analogue StudioSpace 294 GE PoY 07 $3999 with Ace- 07 Space 294 arm aslgroup.com/Nottingham Nottingham’s Space 294 beltdrive turntable is a beautiful analog playback platform that offers very good speed stability and nearly noise-free operation. Driven by an ultra-low-torque motor, the 294’s massive platter must be push-started by hand (you’ll get used to it). Completing the picture is the 12" unipivot Ace-Space 294 carbonfiber tonearm. The system strikes a fine balance between resolution and musicality. Reviewed by CM, Issue 172 The original high-end turntable, Linn’s LP12 conveys the rhythm and pace that are the very foundations of music, and it gets better with age—owners of any vintage LP12 can upgrade to the current model. Reviewed by SB, Issue 136 Basis 1400 Signature $2900 basisaudio.com PoY 02 Clean, lively, and nimble, the Basis 1400 lacks the great authority, deep black backgrounds, and projection of size and scale of the really great turntables. But this ’table proves eminently satisfying and doesn’t leave you hankering for something else. Reviewed by PS, Issues 132 and 140 Pro-Ject RM-10 $2999 with arm; $3499 with arm and Sumiko Blackbird cartridge sumikoaudio.net GE 07 The RM-10 improves upon the fine performance of the RM-9.1 by adding a longer arm, a more massive plinth and platter, an isolation base, and magnetic repulsion. These enhancements produce blacker backgrounds, more solidity in the bass, and a cleaner window on the soundstage. Reviewed by JH, Issue 172 Wilson Benesch Full Circle analog system $4750 soundorg.com Wilson Benesch’s Full Circle analog system bundles the Full Circle turntable, A.C.T. 0.5 tonearm, and Ply moving-coil cartridge in a specially priced package. The Full Circle succeeds brilliantly as a high-quality, mid-priced turnkey analog system, and it also happens to be visually appealing audio products. Reviewed by CM, Issue 163 $5000–$10,000 Clearaudio Ambient $5500 with Satisfy Satiné arm; $6000 with VTA base; $5200 without arm; $5800 with Satisfy Carbon-Fiber musicalsurroundings.com The Ambient uses a multilayer, highly compressed wood (“Panzerholz”) as the core of the ’table’s plinth, adding richness and warmth to the Clearaudio “house sound.” Yet, it retains the rock-solid speed stability of Clearaudio’s bigger ’tables. Reviewed by JH, Issue 167 74 September 2009 The Absolute Sound TW Acustic Raven One $6500 highwatersound.com Recently improved, the Raven One is arguably the single finest value in quality record players. With its superb speed stability, detail, low-noise floor, and highly involving sound this beautifully made German design is so good that you have to spend a lot more to do a lot better. (Reviewed in tandem with the Tri-Planar UVII arm.) Reviewed by WG, Issue 193 Well-Tempered Lab Reference II $6578 welltemperedlab.net This belt-driven turntable (equipped with the “trapezelike” Well-Tempered arm) is as rich-sounding as the best, and as long-term listenable. All it lacks is a little dynamic oomph, a little openness in the top treble, and a little detail in comparison to the top arms and ’tables. Reviewed by REG, Issue 142 SOTA Cosmos Series IV $6665 GE GE sotaturntables.com 04 08 This classic turntable boasts superior tonal neutrality, soundstaging, background silence, and isolation. Virtually any tonearm that weighs less than 2.5 pounds can be accommodated, while the massive suspended subassembly renders the Cosmos essentially immune to any form of feedback. A vacuum hold-down system eliminates warps while binding the record to the platter far more intimately than any clamp or ring. Reviewed by PS, Issue 145 SME Model 10A $9900 sumikoaudio.net This magnificent integrated turntable is one of those rare products with that difficultto-define sense of rightness. The arm is SME’s excellent 309, the platter/mat/clamping system rivals some vacuum hold-downs, and the sound has extraordinary stability, control, definition, dynamics, and detail, sacrificing only that last degree of blackness of background and size and scale that heavier turntables seem to command. Reviewed by PS, Issue 129 $10,000 and above Basis 2200 Signature turntable and Vector Model 4 arm $10,8000 GE PoY basisaudio.com 08 08 Designed by A.J. Conti, the 2200/Vector 4 setup redefines for PS what is possible in the playback of vinyl sources. In every area and aspect of vinyl performance, this Basis combination outperforms all other turntable/arm setups with which he has long experience in some four decades of pursuing high-end audio (this includes several costing multiples its price). Design, engineering, and precision in machining, fit, and finish approach a standard of perfection surpassed by none and equaled by virtually none. Reviewed by PS, Issue 180 Basis Audio 2800 $15,100 basisaudio.com GE 07 PoY 07 Built to an amazing degree of mechanical precision, the Basis 2800 Signature is nothing short of revelatory in its ability to seemingly disappear from the playback chain. This ’table imposes no discernable colorations on the music, allowing a deeper and more immediate connection with your LPs. In a world of six-figure turntables, the Basis 2800 Signature just might hold its own with anything out there. Reviewed by RH, Issue 172 Basis Debut Signature $15,900 ($20,500, vacuum version) GE GE basisaudio.com 01 03 This beautifully made vacuum hold-down turntable from A.J. Conti gives up little to the very best. All it lacks in comparison is a touch of weight and The Absolute Sound September 2009 75 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS authority in the bottom octaves, some stage width and depth, and a bit of overall smoothness and dynamic life. Detailed, authoritative, and rich in tone color, the Basis combines extremely well with the Graham unipivot tonearm and Conti’s own Vector arm. Debut V Reviewed by JV, Issue 132 TURNTABLES SME Model 20/II $17,000 with IV.VI arm sumikoaudio.net GE 03 SME has deliberately designed the tweaking out of its turntables, and this middle-of-thetop-range model is a beautiful example of the SME approach. Although some have accused it of being over-built, this ’table and arm are masterpieces of industrial engineering and design, with a greater degree of control over the playing of LPs than any others PS has used. Reviewed by PS, Issue 140 TONEARMS TW Acustic Raven AC-3 GE 08 $18,000 highwatersound.com The three-motor Raven AC-3 is an unsuspended ’table of relatively low mass made from very high-quality materials, including spectacular bits of copper. Every part of this black beauty has been machined to the highest possible tolerances; every aspect of its design (from its standard-setting speed controller to its gelfilled, copper-topped platter) has been tested and retested by measurement and by ear. The result of all this labor and ingenuity is a ’table that reproduces the duration of notes—from starting transient through lingering decay—more completely than any other. Perhaps the most purely “musical” ’table on the market. Reviewed by JV, Issue 180 Avid Acutus Reference $19,000 avidhifi.co.uk Avid’s Acutus Reference is one of the most musical-sounding record players you can buy. It is also one of the most intelligently designed—compact in size, thoroughly engineered, beautifully made—and one of the easiest to set up and maintain. The Acutus Reference clearly ranks among the handful of top analog playback systems. Reviewed by WG, Issue 170 SME 20/12 $28,000 with tonearm sumikoaudio.net GE 07 Alastair Robertson-Aikman’s last ’table was designed as an overall system to accommodate SME’s lightweight, yet rigid, 12" magnesium tonearm. With its jet-black backgrounds, ultralow bearing noise and tracing distortion, superb isolation, precise speed accuracy, and rock-solid speed stability, this reference turntable system has an effortlessness and sense of rightness that are mesmerizing. If you insist on using a shorter arm, try a different SME ’table. Reviewed by JH, Issue 176 Kuzma Stabi XL Reference turntable and Air Line arm $31,800 ($33,250 w/VTA adjustable tower) themusic.com This gorgeous, wonderfully well engineered, and easy-touse-and-adjust, twin-motored, belt-driven ’table and outboard air-bearing arm challenge the vaunted Walker Black Diamond in resolution, transparency, and transient response (although the Walker beats it convincingly in timbre, soundstaging, and overall realism). Reviewed by JV, Issue 167 SME Model 30/2 $36,000 sumikoaudio.net GE 05 PS praised the 30/2’s tonal neutrality, pitch accuracy, resolution, transparency, rhythmic grip, ambience, low coloration, and soundstaging, 76 September 2009 The Absolute Sound with the SME Series IV.VI arm, concluding that its specialness “lies in three related areas of sonic performance: background silence, dynamics, and that elusive impression of liveliness, vitality…that persuades you the music has come alive in your living room.” Reviewed by PS, Issue 154 AAS Gabriel/DaVinci $45,000 without arm tangramaudio.com GE 09 Like DaVinci’s Grandeeza tonearm, with which it is intended to be used, the Swiss-made AAS Gabriel/Da Vinci turntable is an object of considerable beauty. The arm support and the motor controller are mounted on separate massive cylindrical pillars, the extremely heavy, acoustically inert, magneticallysuspended platter (the AAS Gabriel was one of the very first magnetic-suspension ’tables) on its own gigantic cylinder. In combination with the Grandezza arm, this is a record player capable of state-of-the-art resolution and transparency—as finely detailed, faithful to sources, and tonally neutral as any ’table/arm JV has heard. Reviewed by JV, Issue 191 Walker Proscenium Black Diamond GE PoY $57,000 07 06 walkeraudio.com The Walker Proscenium Black Diamond air-bearing turntable/ tonearm transforms many of the smartest ideas from turntables past into a work of audio art that not only looks fantastic but sounds fantastic, too. And now, with Walker’s new and improved tonearm, the best source component JV has tested thus far has taken a significant leap forward in overall sonic quality (and it was scarcely chopped liver to start with). Gorgeous in tone color, extraordinary in resolution, superb on bass, and nonpareil on soundstaging, it is JV’s long- standing reference. Reviewed by JV, Issue 167 Clearaudio Statement $150,000 musicalsurroundings.com PoY 08 This over-the-top, 4'-tall, 770pound turntable/arm costs more than an S-Class Mercedes, but delivers a level of LP playback that is unmatched in Don Saltzman’s experience. The Statement is utterly quiet, stable, and capable of extracting the finest detail from record grooves. Reviewed by DS, Issue 186 (see also HP’s Workshop this issue) Tonearms Under $2000 Rega RB301 $495 soundorg.com Turntable manufacturers who don’t build their own arms frequently package their models with Rega’s terrificsounding and affordable RB300. Musically compelling, with excellent balance and good detail, if not the final word in any one category. Reviewed by DM, Issue 127 Kuzma Stogi S $1225 themusic.com GE 05 The Stogi S is a hydraulically damped unipivot with a simple string-and-weight anti-skating mechanism, dual underslung counterweights, and provisions for making both coarse and fine azimuth adjustments. In our reviewer’s system, this arm enabled a Shelter 90X cartridge to produce almost shockingly three-dimensional sound with rock-solid bass. Reviewed by CM, Issue 159 VPI JMW-9 Signature $1400 vpiindustries.com Compared to the standard JMW-9, the Signature version offers worthwhile upgrades such as a stainless-steel bearing assembly, Nordost Valhalla The Absolute Sound September 2009 77 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS TONEARMS CARTRIDGES wiring, variable fluid-damping, mechanical anti-skate control, and higher effective-mass design. HP praised the Super Scoutmaster Signature package for its “considerable dynamic ‘jump’” and “musical authenticity.” CM (Reviewed by HP, Issue 159) Wilson Benesch A.C.T. 0.5 $1795 soundorg.com Wilson Benesch’s unusual A.C.T. 0.5 tonearm features a tapered carbon-fiber arm tube with a kinematic bearing that handles much like a unipivot. The 0.5 works beautifully with affordable cartridges, but can also tap the potential of higher-priced moving coils. An arm your system can grow with over time, the A.C.T. 0.5 is also included in Wilson Benesch’s Full Circle analog system. Reviewed by CM, Issue 163 $2000 and above SME 309 $2195 sumikoaudio.net A black tapered titanium beauty, the 309 is a rarity in today’s highperformance models—an arm with a removable head shell for easier cartridge-swapping. Also see SME Model 10A, above. Reviewed by PS, Issue 129 VPI JMW-10.5/JMW-12.5 $2300/$2600 vpiindustries.com Available in 10" and 12" versions, this beautifully made unipivot may be trickier to set up than some, but its sound rewards the effort. It’s highly revealing without being cold, with some of the deepest, most powerful bass to be heard. VTA adjustment during playback allows for exceptional finetuning. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 129 Basis Audio Vector Model 4 $3800 GE basisaudio.com 07 Basis Audio’s A.J. Conti has solved a fundamental problem with unipivot tonearms— dynamic azimuth error. Rather than allowing the arm to “roll” when the cartridge encounters record warp, the Vector maintains perfect azimuth alignment via Conti’s simple yet ingenious new design. The result is an extremely neutralsounding arm that RH has yet to hear mistrack on any LP. Reviewed by RH, Issue 172 Graham Phantom B-44 Mk II $4700 GE graham-engineering.com 07 The culmination of all that Bob Graham has learned about tonearm design over the past few decades, the Phantom utilizes Graham’s trademarked “Magneglide” stabilization system to eliminate the “rolling” effect that plagues unipivot arms. The Phantom’s tracking is exceptional, creating a sound that is extremely smooth and detailed, with a large soundstage, extended highs, and a deep, nuanced bottom end. Reviewed by WG, Issue 173 Tri-Planar Ultimate VII $4700 GE PoY triplanar.com 04 05 GE 08 This classic example of great arm design is now in an “Ultimate VII” version, which the company expects to remain constant for another three-tofive years. If earlier models were characterized by tremendous solidity, focus, dynamic agility, bottom-end reach, overall neutrality, and transparency to the source, then the beautifully built Ultimate is quite simply all that multiplied by many degrees. Reviewed by WG, Issue 191 SME Series V $5300 sumikoaudio.net Robust and dynamic-sounding, the now-and-forever classic SME V is rich with features that include a cast-magnesium one-piece wand, ABEC 7 bearings, and fluid-controlled lateral damping. The V projects a ripe, soothing character with 78 September 2009 The Absolute Sound unsurpassed bass resolution, excellent inner detail, and great tracking ability. NG Da Vinci Grandezza “Grand Reference” $9700 tangramaudio.com This 12" transcription tonearm is a genuine work of audio art. A gorgeous concoction of tone wood, wolfram, plantiumor gold-plated bronze and stainless-steel, it is a thing of indescribable loveliness, and sounds as wonderful as it looks. As neutral and as nearly invisible as air, it is a truly transparent tonearm, capable of revealing tremendous detail with tremendous energy, within a tremendously large, beautifully laid-out soundstage. Costly, but worth it, the Grandezza is the best pivoted arm JV has heard or used. Reviewed by JV, Issue 191 Cartridges Under $500 Shure M97xE $89 shure.com An incredibly affordable entry-ticket to the world of analog sound, Shure’s M97xE moving-magnet cartridge offers generally neutral tonal balance with slight hints of roll-off at the frequency extremes, unflappable tracking, and an overall presentation that is unfailingly smooth. A great starter cartridge. Reviewed by CM, Issue 172 Grado Prestige MC+ Mono $90 gradolabs.com Interested in dipping your toes into the mono waters, but not in taking a financial bath? This is the cartridge for you. The Grado mono is an excellent tracker that fully shows the virtues of mono LPs—sledgehammer bass and excellent imaging solidity. More expensive cartridges will flesh out the sound more and offer greater detail, but the Grado is a joy to listen to. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 180 Ortofon 2m Red and Black $99 and $669 PoY ortofon.com 08 The swansong design of Ortofon’s former chief engineer Per Windfeld, the entry-level 2M Red uses a tipped elliptical, while the 2M Black wields a formidable Shibata diamond stylus—the same as used on the vaunted MC Jubilee. Compared with the now-extinct Shure V15 series, the 2M Black has a lighter touch and certainly a faster one with a more resolved character irrespective of frequency. The Black’s greatest attribute, however, is how it provides a more transparent window into the world of micro-energies, plumbing the complexities of orchestral depth and dimension. In comparison, the 2M Red clocks in as a little drier and sounds as if it’s making more of an effort in the upper treble. Keep in mind that although it lacks some of the velvety finesse and smooth harmonic finish of the Black, this is one sophisticated and musical cartridge—for the price of a nice dinner for two. Reviewed by NG, Issue 182 Grado Prestige Gold 1 $220 gradolabs.com Grado’s Prestige Gold cartridge has its flaws—a lack of inner detail and audible grain chief among them—but its strengths are such that you can easily listen through them. These include a somewhat warm yet pleasant balance, a sweet if not hugely airy treble, and taut if not layered bass. The overall presentation is lively. Reviewed by WG, Issue 141, CM, Issue 172 The Absolute Sound September 2009 79 PoY 07 Grado Reference Platinum 1 $350 gradolabs.com The Platinum 1 is the most affordable of Grado’s mid-tier Reference models, offering reduced coloration plus superior resolution and tracking relative to Grado’s entry-level Prestige models. Though it could use more openness, detail, and “air,” the Platinum can nearly equal the performance of $1k+ moving coils, making it a bargain at its price. Musical and unfussy. Reviewed by CM, Issue 191 Sumiko Blue Point Special EVOIII $399 sumikoaudio.net The EVOIII offers substantial improvements over the original Blue Point Special—a fundamental heartiness, terrific top-to-bottom consistency, and the ability to gracefully handle tracking challenges. This is one moving coil that will not bite you with excess edge or glare. Reviewed by CM, Issue 147 $500–$1000 Grado Reference Sonata 1 $600 gradolabs.com A wonderful performer, the Sonata may lack the Benz Micro ACE S Class $700 musicalsurroundings.com The ACE offers a wide-open midrange, plenty of definition and air around instruments and voices, and tight, clean bass. With the right phonostage, it can do a great job of walking that fine line between resolution and smoothness. Reviewed by CM, Issue 147 Sumiko Blackbird $799 sumikoaudio.net This high-output moving-coil is smooth yet detailed, with a wide soundstage and fine lowend authority. Massed strings lack the upper-midrange glare one hears with some moving coils; midrange instruments are particularly seductive; images are stable; and transparency, transient quickness, and inner detail are all good. Reviewed by JH, Issue 164 Dynavector Karat 17D3 $950 GE 07 dynavector.com Dynavector’s 17D3, the third generation of a twenty‑year‑old design, is ruler-flat top to bottom with all the life and liveliness of past Karats, the see‑through transparency, the superb tracking, the crackling musicality, brilliance, and clarity abounding. It also throws a sensationally wide and deep soundstage with extraordinary dynamics and resolution. Reviewed by PS, Issue 172 Clearaudio Maestro Wood $995 musicalsurroundings.com Sharing the solid-Boron-rod cantilever and stylus of the esteemed Insider MC cartridge the Maestro Wood, a moving- magnet design offers an easygoing balance and gushes sweet sonics like squeezing a ripe, red plum. It exudes a warm, darkly sensuous tonal balance but it’s not a softy in the dynamics department nor does it smear inner details. Whether it rounds transient details and rhythms too much will remain a question of taste. Rated at 3.6mV it won’t tax most phonostages either. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 musical design that offers wonderful value. Reviewed by WG, Issue 166 Shelter 501 Mk II $995 axissaudio.com Wilson Benesch PLY $1795 soundorg.com The 501 Mk II is one of those rare products that does everything well. Its threedimensionality brings to life recordings one thought lacking in spaciousness, while its neutral tonal balance, resolution, focus, air, transients, extension at both frequency extremes, and overarching cohesiveness “always seemed cut from whole cloth.” Reviewed by CM, Issue 147 Built by Benz to Wilson Benesch specifications, the carbon-fiber-framed PLY moving-coil cartridge blends some of the virtues of the Sumiko Blackbird and the Shelter 501 MkII, offering a touch of the dynamic liveliness and transient detail of the Blackbird, plus a taste of the three-dimensionality of the 501 MkII. It’s a pleasing combination. Reviewed by CM, Issue 163 $1000–$2000 Benz Micro Glider SM $1000 musicalsurroundings.com It’s all about superlative tonal balance in the medium-output (0.8mV) Glider SM. There’s a reassuring dash of warmth in the lower mids and bass, a lush midrange and a presence range and treble that have the air and harmonic delicacy but none of the dreaded etch and dryness. Not as warm as the Clearaudio Maestro Wood but with added inner detail and energy. Reviewed by NG, Issue 191 Lyra Dorian $1110 immediasound.com PoY 06 Lyra’s entry-level Dorian— also available in a mono configuration—is a relatively high-output moving coil with terrifically good sound that Lyra fans will recognize. Though not as detailed, dynamic, and nuanced as the company’s top models, it is a very clean, Grado Reference 1 $1500 gradolabs.com A beautiful-sounding movingiron cartridge. Not the last word in detail or transient speed or top-end air, the Reference is nonetheless enormously musical. Reviewed by Adam Walinsky, Issue 112 Ortofon Kontrapunkt C $1900 ortofon.com GE 08 This latest and best of Ortofon’s Kontrapunkt Series, the C images more precisely than any pickup in PS’s experience, a function of its unsurpassed grip and control. The C’s background is almost unbelievably black, music emerging in bas‑relief. Neutrality is absolute, resolution breathtaking. By any measure, an outstanding pickup. Reviewed by PS, Issue 172 Shelter 5000 and 7000 $1950 and $2800 axissaudio.com Shelter cartridges enjoy a reputation for smoothness, vibrant tonal colors, holographic soundstaging, and an eminently listenable sound, but designer Yasuo Ozawa hoped to give his new models “more life”—meaning more The Absolute Sound September 2009 81 CARTRIDGES The second-generation version of the Bluepoint Oyster—long considered a go-to choice among affordable, high-output moving-coil cartridges—the No. 2 offers improved resolution, superior three-dimensionality, richer and more potent bass, and smoother, less aggressive highs. A huge step up from entry-level cartridges. Reviewed by CM, Issue 172 transparency and resolution of the very best, yet it delivers a naturally sweet treble, refined tone colors, and very good detail, particularly in the midband. Reviewed by WG, Issue 141 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS Sumiko Bluepoint No. 2 $299 sumikoaudio.net TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS detail, transient speed, and explosive dynamics. Those qualities are exactly what Shelter’s 5000 and 7000 deliver, though the latter justifies its higher price by providing more finely resolved and open-sounding highs, more potent, refined bass, and greater dynamic poise. Reviewed by CM, Issue 180 CARTRIDGES $2000 and above Clearaudio Concerto v2 $2400 musicalsurroundings.com This is the entry-level cartridge in Clearaudio’s “super-class” of moving coils, and super it is! The Concerto uses wood to add a touch of warmth and richness, yet retains the superb focus, resolution, transient quickness, and top-end extension that have been hallmarks of Clearaudio’s reference cartridges. Reviewed by JH, Issue 167 Depending how you hear it, this is allied to or accentuates one of the loveliest midranges around: fat, lush, fabulously rich. Is it tonally neutral? No, but it sure is musical and beautiful. Reviewed by PS, Issue 172 Clearaudio Stradivari v2 $3500 GE musicalsurroundings.com 07 PoY 07 In his recent survey of five moving‑coil pickups, PS gave the Stradivari his personal “Golden Mean” award because it ideally mediates warmth and detail, control and relaxation, liveliness and listenability, at virtually no sacrifice to tonal neutrality. There is an organic rightness about this pickup that elevates it to reference caliber. Reviewed by PS, Issue 172 Koetsu Rosewood Signature Platinum $3500 koetsuusa.com An excellent soundstager with phenomenally good bass, the Helikon is a little cool and white in balance, though not analytical. The bargain in high-end movingcoil cartridges. HP’s Workshop, Issues 132 and 136 The great-great-grandson of the cartridge that started the moving-coil craze (the Supex), the Rosewood is relatively high in Technicoloration, but who cares? When something sounds this beautiful, exceptions should be made—and regularly are by audiophiles who are more interested in hearing timbres sound gorgeous. JV Transfiguration Phoenix $2750 profundo.us Ortofon MC Windfeld $3750 ortofon.com The Phoenix doesn’t stand out for its detail, speed, rhythmic precision, dynamic range, topor bottom-end extension, or pretty neutral tonal balance. It stands out because it manages to bring all these things into a highly coherent, beautifully balanced package that makes it hard to stop listening. Reviewed by WG, Issue 177 If you value high neutrality and high resolution, low coloration and low distortion, and tracking ability to rival the best moving magnets, then this outstanding new moving coil—the pinnacle Lyra Helikon $2555 ($2780 for SL and Mono versions) immediasound.com Benz Micro Ebony L $3500 musicalsurroundings.com The L exhibits the familiar Benz broad, shallow presence trough from about 1kHz–10kHz. 82 September 2009 The Absolute Sound design from the longest established and still the largest manufacturer of phono pickups in the world—is for you. It won’t guild your vinyl lilies, but it will reproduce them with highest fidelity. PS’s new reference. Reviewed by PS, Issue 188 Dynavector XV-1s $4500 dynavector.com Big dynamics and a robust, lively quality characterize this outstanding moving coil. The XV-1s retrieves layer after layer of inner detail, all without sounding etched. RH, not yet reviewed (see also HP’s Editors’ Choice Awards in Issue 186) Dynavector XV-1s Mono $4950 dynavector.com The Dynavector XV-1s mono is an excellent tracker that excels at detail retrieval and bell-like clarity. Fast and lithe, it pokes into the crevices of the soundstage, excavating the tiny nuances that help provide the illusion of the real thing. An extremely neutral creation, it will never be mistaken for a forgiving cartridge. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 180 London Reference $5295 mayaudio.com London/Decca’s classic, cantilever-less, “positive-scanning,” moving-iron cartridge has just been brought into the 21st century with a new stylus, chassis, and magnetic engine. Transient response is simply terrific. The London doesn’t have quite the very-low-level resolution of a great mc, but then it doesn’t have the hi-fi etch, either. A poor tracker, it will require careful tonearm-matching and setup. Reviewed by JV, Issue 169 Lyra Titan mono $6340 immediasound.com GE 03 The Titan mono is a stunning achievement, delivering taut bass and a wealth of detail. If you have a substantial mono collection, the Titan will prove more than worthy of its name and its steep price. JHb, review forthcoming Air Tight PC-1 $6800 GE 07 axissaudio.com PoY 06 Here is a genuine surprise—a world-beating mc from SET-manufacturer Air Tight. Although JV just extolled the London for its transient speed, the PC-1 sounds like a London on steroids. Whip-fast, exceptionally high in resolution and low in coloration, and a great soundstager/imager, to boot. Reviewed by JV, Issue 173 Da Vinci Audio Lab Reference Cartridge Grandezza $7300 tangramaudio.com The veritable Soulution of moving-coil cartridges, this highmass, low-output moving coil from Da Vinci in Switzerland is a model of transparency, neutrality, and detail, wowing everyone who’s heard it. It may not have all the weight of the PC-1 Supreme or the soundstage breadth of the Goldfinger v2—its two foremost rivals—but, thanks to its colorlessness and clarity, it beats both in fine resolution of timbre and texture. Be aware this is a very low-output coil (0.17mV), which means you’ll need a suitable phonostage. Reviewed by JV, Issue 193 Air Tight PC-1 Mono $7300 axxisaudio.com The performance of the Air Tight PC-1 on mono LPs is a revelation. The Air Tight combines whip-lash speed with potent dynamics. But its most spellbinding characteristics are its ease of presentation and refulgent timbres. On a fiendishly difficult Joan Baez recording on Vanguard, it impeccably tracked the most treacherous passages without distortion or breakup. Awesome. Reviewed by JHb, Issue 180 PoY 08 GE 09 Clearaudio Goldfinger v2 $10,000 GE musicalsurroundings.com 08 PoY 07 The latest Goldfinger, with twice the number of magnets and lower-weight coils, is astonishingly accurate in timbre, very fast, From the folks that hone and own the FM analog-tuner market comes this dedicated XM Satellite tuner tricked out within an inch of its bit-life by Magnum’s innovative radio-head, Director of Audio Design Zdenko Zivkovic. The MD0609T proves that rather than fear the digital compression of the XM codec, it is better to overcome it by designing the DAC and audio boards that turn the sonic key to success. Not quite as good as Dynalab’s analog best, but far better than anyone would have imagined. Of course you’ll have to pay for the XM subscription, but with 170-plus station offerings you’ll never tire of the breadth of the content. Reviewed by NG, Issue 180 Magnum Dynalab MD106T $4395 magnumdynalab.com A high-end system isn’t fully dressed without a great FM tuner, and this all-analog triode design emphatically makes that case. Its quiet, black backgrounds, and sparkling, airy treble easily exceed Magnum’s own budget-conscious winner, the MD-90. Terrific sensitivity and selectivity give the MD106T exceptional focus and soundstaging. Reviewed by NG, Issue 152 The Gargantua II is well named. At $1488, it is hardly an accessory, but it surprised SR by revealing in her reference system a new level of its native sweet clarity. SR uses the $350 Tsunami II with less-expensive gear and in her small system. Both cords have the nice habit of clarifying delicate highs, deepening perceived bass, and opening up and airing out the soundstage. SR Argentum Acoustics Aureus-2 Speaker Cable and Mythos Interconnect Interconnect: $400/1m (RCA) Speaker: $1500/3m argentumacoustics.com The Argentum is an agile performer with swift and spicy transients. It has a strong midrange flavor even with the audience perspective just slightly back of the front couple of rows. In both cable and interconnect, the continuous cast (Ohno) mono-crystal copper conductors are rated as laboratory-grade and are cryogenically treated. The cable may be muting the interplay of micro-dynamics and transparency, but not much. An excellent mid-priced entry with an “excitement factor” that is written all over the music. Reviewed by NG, Issue 193 AudioQuest Columbia/DBS Interconnect and CV-8/DBS Speaker Cable Interconnect: $450/1m Speaker: $800/8' audioquest.com The entry-level interconnect for AudioQuest’s battery-powered DBS (dielectric bias system) technology, the Columbia’s highs are well defined yet Cable Research Lab Silver Cable and Interconnect Interconnect: $1400/1m (RCA), $1550/2m (RCA) Speaker: $1700/6' Power cords: $795/1.5m cableresearchlab.com PoY 08 Classic cabling that stays out of the way of the signal never goes out of style. In spite of CRL’s serpentine look, its construction quality, materials, and terminations are superb. Easy to maneuver, it is also one of the more easygoing and natural sounding cables we’ve heard, with solid dynamics, soundstaging, and harmonic detailing. A “stealth” cable that deserves serious attention. Reviewed by NG, Issue 189 Crystal Cable CrystalConnect Micro Interconnect / CrystalSpeak Micro Speaker Cable Interconnect: $730/1m ($615/add’l meter) Speaker: $2320/2m ($770/ add’l meter) crystalcable.com Clean, composed and transparent, the jewel-like Crystal Micro cables offer an open soundstage where images snap into focus and music is conveyed with a turbine- The Absolute Sound September 2009 85 INTERCONNECTS, SPEAKER CABLES, AND POWER CORDS As good as the AT PC-1 is, this new considerably pricier moving-coil from Air Tight is substantially better in every way. Like the PC-1, the Supreme is a model of low internal impedance and high energy. Killer good on transients top to bottom, with phenomenal grip and definition in the low bass, it is also exceptionally lifelike in the midband, with even more of the gorgeous density of tone color, high resolution, and superior soundstaging that made the PC-1 one of JV’s mc references. Along with the Grandezza and the Goldfinger, the best mc on the market. Reviewed by JV, Issue 190 Magnum Dynalab MD0609T $3995 magnumdynalab.com Acoustic Zen Technologies Tsunami II and Gargantua II Power Cords $350 and $1488 acousticzen.com sweet-sounding; its bass is taut yet possesses plenty of weight and warmth and a heaping helping of three-dimensionality. Though not the last word in transparency, the Columbias do a great job of balancing clarity and smoothness. The least-expensive speaker cable that has AudioQuest’s batterypowered DBS technology, the CV-8 offers well-defined and nicely weighted bass, a neutral midrange with a hint of warmth, clear but never edgy highs, and truly excellent soundstaging. Roundness on transients makes this cable easy to listen through for hours on end. Reviewed by NG, Issue 147, and CM in AVguide.com, 11/2003 Reviewed by CM, AVgM, Issue 2 TUNERS Air Tight PC-1 Supreme $9000 axissaudio.com Tuners Interconnects, Speaker Cables, and Power Cords (Listed alphabetically) CARTRIDGES A friend of JV’s said, quite accurately, that the Koetsu Onyx Platinum was like returning to an old girlfriend. She may have packed on five or ten pounds, but she’s ohso-comfy to come home to. This dark, gorgeous-sounding cartridge may not have all the energy, detail, and staging of some coils, but it makes up for any shortfalls in sheer musicality. Kind of like the Quad 2905 of moving-coil cartridges. Reviewed by JV, Issue 186 smooth, and extended, and (as is always the case with Clearaudios) extraordinarily high in detail with the widest, deepest, and tallest soundstage of all coils. A little grainier than the Grandezza, not as purely beautiful as the Koetsu Onyx Platinum, nor as overall well-balanced as the PC-1 Supreme, it still belongs in this exalted company. Reviewed by JV, Issue 176 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS Koetsu Onyx Platinum $8000 koetsuusua.com 86 September 2009 The Absolute Sound The Absolute Sound September 2009 87 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS INTERCONNECTS, SPEAKER CABLES, AND POWER CORDS like smoothness. Even some softness in the bass and a bit of forwardness in the treble don’t diminish one of the most transparent cables NG has heard. Unique splitter rings allows easy change-out of terminations or bi-wire upgrades. Reviewed by NG, Issue 164 extended highs, a delightfully full and natural midrange, and solid bass. You may find other pricier interconnects that excel in one specific area or another, but when it comes to overall system synergy, this is one cable you’ll be “wearing” like a favorite pair of shoes. SK Harmonic Technology Magic Reference II SE Power Cord $1499 GE harmonictechnology.com 09 Furutech Reference III and Evolution Interconnect and Cables Reference III Interconnect: $1320/1.2m (XLR), $1155/1.2m (RCA) Reference III Speaker: $1573/3m Reference III Power: $1210 Evolution Interconnect: $740/1.2m (XLR), $650/1.2m (RCA) Evolution Speaker: $770/3m furutech.com Furutech uses cryogenically treated, ultra-high-purity, OCC (Ohno Continuous Casting) single-crystal copper conductors in both its mid-priced Evolution and premium-priced Reference III audio cables. The top models offer better connectors, superior dielectric materials, and passive EMI-absorption filters made from GC-303 (and EMIabsorbent material developed by 3M Company). Furutech’s cables have great transparency and purity, plus an uncanny ability to block out noise, hash, and grunge. Reviewed by CM, Issue 173 Harmonic Technology Magic Link Two Interconnect $820/1m (RCA), $900/1m (XLR) harmonictech.com With improved clarity and articulation over Harmonic Tech’s more affordable Pro Silway line, the Magic Link Two consistently yields smooth, Designed for use primarily with front-end components, the Reference II SE delivers tremendous clarity, smoothness, and definition across the entire frequency spectrum, and does so without constricting dynamics or softening the treble. Built-in noise filter acts as an AC conditioner to remove line noise. SK Harmonic Technology Pro-11 + Speaker Cable $575/8' harmonictech.com The TechPro-11+ is sensual, romantic, and highly present with vocals, with full rich body and a slight forwardness. There’s a distinct sweetness in the upper octaves that, once experienced, makes it tough to live without. Soundstage reproduction is also a strong suit, as the full weight and breadth of an orchestra seem to laterally expand with this wire. Reviewed by NG, Issue 146 Kimber Kable Hero Interconnect/8TC Speaker Cable PoY 02 Interconect: $200/1m Speaker: $400/8' PoY kimberkable.com 06 Yielding only a tiny bit in sheer control, ultimate top-end transparency, and inner detailing to PS’s reference Kimber Select KS-1021, Hero’s bass lives up to its name, prodigious in amplitude and definition (rather better even than its pricier brother). This interconnect is either dead neutral or tilts a notch to the yang, with 88 September 2009 The Absolute Sound dynamics at once powerful yet finely resolved in an essentially grain-free presentation. Tilting a tad toward the yin, the 8TC has that elusive ability to remain musical no matter what is happening fore or aft, ideally mediating detail, liveliness, tonal neutrality, and dynamic contrasts within a very realistic, holographic soundstage. Hero reviewed by PS, Issue 138; 8TC reviewed by PS, Issue 146 The soundstaging is equally impressive, delivering a huge and transparent rendering with precise placement of images. Small knobs on the termination boxes allow you to fine-tune the sound to your system. Reviewed by RH, Issue 190 MIT AVt 1 Speaker Cable $599/8' mitcables.com Baldur brings much of the balance and harmonic integrity of state-of-the-art Valhalla to prices even “normal” audiophiles (as opposed to normal people) can afford. It has a buttery way with transients and low-level details. Although never edgy, there is a whitish zone in the lower treble. Perhaps not as weighty and focused as some, but with an overall balance and musicality that are addictive. Reviewed by NG, Issue 164 Perhaps canted ever so slightly toward the yang, the MIT AVt 1 counts power and definition among its many virtues. Perhaps there is ever so slightly less bloom than with other cables, but the AVt 1 nevertheless suggests great openness, with a remarkable ability to project musical events into the room and an impression of snap and bite that in the best sense of those words is irresistible. Reviewed by PS, Issue 146 MIT Oracle MA Speaker Cable $24,900/8' PoY mitcables.com 08 Over the past four years, no cable has dethroned MIT’s Oracle V2 in RH’s system— until MIT’s new MA (Maximum Articulation) showed up. Although priced the same as the discontinued Oracle V2, the new MA is vastly improved, with far greater resolution, greater separation of individual instrumental lines, more space and depth, and a shocking increase in bottom-end depth, power, and articulation. Reviewed by RH, Issue 190 MIT Oracle MA-X Interconnect $7995/1m mitcables.com PoY 08 Like MIT’s Oracle MA speaker cable, the companion Oracle MA-X interconnect fully reveals the textural warmth, body, and saturation of tone colors one hears from live instruments. Nordost Baldur Interconnect and Speaker Cable Interconnect: $499/1m Speaker: $1499/3m nordost.com Nordost Blue Heaven Interconnect and Speaker Cable Interconnect: $229/1m Speaker: $610/8' nordost.com Similar in personality, the Blue Heaven interconnects and cables excel at low-level detail, upper-octave smoothness, and transient speed. Also expect to hear exceptional inner detail and nuance emerge from the velvety black and silent background. Note that it may be a bit on the cool clinical side for some treble-happy systems, but remains ideal for neutral and darker ones. Reviewed by NG, Issue 138 PNF Audio Icon Interconnect and Symphony Speaker Cable Icon: $190/1m Symphony: $400/10' pnfaudio.com PNF produces one of the finest sets of reasonably priced cables we have heard. We say “sets” here, because the Icon and Symphony offer complementary The Absolute Sound September 2009 89 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS INTERCONNECTS, SPEAKER CABLES, AND POWER CORDS strengths and work best when used together, with a huge amount of resolution and focus, clear and deeply extended bass, dynamic expressiveness, and the ability to enhance both clarity and smoothness. They lean toward the “clarity” side, so avoid components with midrange brightness or edge. Reviewed by CM, AVgM, Issue 4 transmission system is purely one of perspective. From the amplifier’s point of view the power cord is the first few feet of the power-deliver system.” With the Python, expect greatly improved transparency, soundstaging, tighter focus, and air, “fostering a greater impression of hearing an actual instrument in an acoustic space.” Reviewed by RH, Issue 164 Paul Speltz “Anti-Cable” Speaker Cable $80/8' anticables.com Purist Audio Design Dominus Interconnect and Speaker Cable Interconnect: $5250/1m Speaker: $10,980/1.5m puristaudiodesign.com The all-silver Dominus is very detailed, very dynamic, very rich. Less open than Nordost Valhalla and darker in balance, it is also quieter, and because of its fluid-damped construction, virtually immune to floorborne and airborne vibration. JV Rega Couple Interconnect $195/1m soundorg.com The Couple offers plenty of upper midrange/treble detail, with fine resolution of textures, yet without exaggerated transients or edginess. Its bass is tight and punchy, and it is wonderfully neutral throughout the midrange. While it doesn’t offer the almost “luminous” midrange quality you’ll hear in some very expensive cables, its essential neutrality makes a fine substitute for a “pennies-onthe-dollar” price. Reviewed by CM, AVguide.com, 10/2003 Shunyata Python Alpha Helix CX Power Cord $1095 GE PoY 05 06 shunyata.com As RH put it in his review, “the idea that a power cord comes at the end of a very long power- A godsend to those who want good sound but don’t want to spend big bucks. SK was blown away by its neutrality and lack of coloration, high frequencies that were open and clear with no tizziness, a midrange of exceptional clarity, transparency and detail, and bass that was extended, with remarkable articulation. Reviewed by SK, Issue 162 Synergistic Research Alpha Interconnect PoY $150/1m 03 synergisticresearch.com Balance and transparency are its strengths, along with a rich midrange and a sweet, smooth, never forced or strident treble. The affordable Alpha challenges some of the finest reference cables out there. Reviewed by NG, TPV Issue 38 Synergistic Research RELspec Reference Subwoofer Cable $1320/3m synergisticresearch.com Pricey but potent, these inspired subwoofers cables are specifically optimized for REL subwoofers and include RELspecified Neutrik connectors. They improved the inherent musicality and pitch precision of the Britannia B3 in every instance—the lowered noise floor yields more detail, an enhanced sense of space, and expanded ambience retrieval. Reviewed by NG, Issue 163 90 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Synergistic Research Tesla Series Interconnect and Speaker Cable Accelerator interconnect: $1400/1m Accelerator speaker cable: $1700/8' Precision Reference interconnect: $2600/1m Precision Reference speaker cable: $2800/8' Apex interconnect: $3600/1m Apex speaker cable: $7400/8' synergisticresearch.com Some of the most transparent cable at any price. A splendid balance of detail, romantic richness, and Grand Canyonlike soundstaging that is magnified as you move upward through the line. The top-ofthe-line Apex, however, is the real low-level resolution master, mining details and harmonic shadings like few wires NG has heard to date. Sneak Preview by NG, Issue 171 TARA Labs RSC Air 1 and Air 1 Series 2 Interconnect and Speaker Cable PoY Interconnect: $1295/1m 06 ($225 each add’l meter); Speaker: $2495/8' ($225/ add’l foot) taralabs.com Everything about these cables says big—dynamics, extension, and volume. It’s also one of the mellower cables NG has heard with a darker character, and a deeply polished and resonant signature that should appeal to many. They have an expansive soundstage, and orchestral images always seem more rooted and stable. Ambience retrieval is at a cutting-edge level. Separate positive and negative speaker runs for each channel. Reviewed by NG, Issue 164 TARA Labs The One Power Cord $1495/6' ($140/add’l foot) taralabs.com Although the difference it makes might not be quite as staggering as the interconnect, speaker, and digital cables mentioned below, TARA Labs’ “The One” power cord has much the same effect as the company’s other remarkable wires, and it rounds out the top-of-the-line package with top-of-the-line sound. WG, review forthcoming TARA Labs Zero Gold Interconnect and Omega Gold Speaker Cable PoY Zero Gold interconnect: 07 $14,900/1m ($2000 per add’l meter) Omega Gold speaker cable: $22,000/8' ($3000 per add’l foot) Zero Gold digital cable: $8900/1m ($1000 per add’l meter) Zero GX Phono Cable: $3800/1m taralabs.com JV is fully aware that recommending any wires that put you out 40 to 50 grand is borderline insane. (Well, not even borderline.) Nonetheless, the Zero’s X-ray ability to clarify very-low-level tone colors, dynamic nuances, and performance details, its remarkable level of ambience retrieval, its electrifying transient speed and definition, its frontto-back transparency, and its bottom-octave color, clarity, and authority are unrivaled thus far in his experience. Reviewed by JV, Issue 159 Transparent Audio The Link interconnect, The Wave speaker cable, HighPerformance Powerlink AC cord, PowerWave 8 AC conditioner transparentcable.com The Link: $85/meter The Wave: $180/8' High-Performance Powerlink: $105 PowerWave 8: $995 Although we have experience only with Transparent’s lower-priced offerings (at the moment), what we’ve heard has been extremely impressive. The $85 The Link interconnect The Absolute Sound September 2009 91 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS INTERCONNECTS, SPEAKER CABLES, AND POWER CORDS HEADPHONES AND HEADPHONE AMPS brings more than a taste of high-end interconnects to an entry-level price. Similarly, the $180 The Wave speaker cable is a bargain, offering superior tonality, wider dynamics, and a more open soundstage. The $105 High-Performance Powerlink AC cable is a vast improvement over stock AC cords, and just might be the most cost-effective upgrade possible in an entry-level system. The Powerwave 8 conditioner is also an extremely cost-effective upgrade, rendering wider dynamics, smoother timbres, and a greater sense of musical involvement. RH, review forthcoming Wireworld Platinum Eclipse Interconnects $3000/1m wireworldcable.com When Wireworld’s David Salz builds a new reference cable it’s worth taking note. With Ohno Continuous Cast pure silver conductors, and trick carbon fiber connector shells sporting silver contacts sonics are fluid, naturalistic and exceptionally detailed. Not inexpensive but so transparent you’ll simply forget they’re there. NG, review forthcoming Wireworld Stratus 52 Power Cords $100/2m wireworldcable.com Conventional wisdom says power cords should be thick and unwieldy. Offering competitive performance with elite power cords costing many times their price, the Wireworld Stratus 52 have a defiantly flat profile, are lightweight, and are available in color choices. Another major factor in the Stratus’ favor–they are pliable enough to negotiate corners. A major advancement for today’s well-groomed media rooms. Reviewed by NG, Issue 169 iPod or other digital player. While they are comfortable, keep in mind that as an “open air” design the SR60i is not ideal for noisy environments. Reviewed by TM, AVgM, Issue 3 headphones and headphone amps (listed alphabetically) Bose Quietcomfort 2 $299 bose.com The overall octave-to-octave balance of the Quietcomfort ’phones is quite good, and transparency is fairly high. TM rates them on a par in pure musicality with some of the better Sennheisers. And they have noise cancellation, which TM rates as a must when in transit. Reviewed by Tom Martin, Issue 166 Cayin HA-1A Head Amp $875 acousticsounds.com An exercise in unalloyed hedonism, the sexy Cayin is actually a vacuum tube integrated amp that offers the pleasure of switching between triode (great for orchestral) and ultralinear (more punch for rock) settings. Highly adjustable for headphones of various high to low impedances, it also has speaker terminals for a set of high sensitivity desktop speakers. Reviewed by NG, Issue 178 Etymotic ER4PER/4S $299 each etymotic.com GE 05 Etymotic’s iPod-friendly ER4Ps have greater sensitivity and bass output than other ER4 models (the ER4Ss are more accurate, but harder to drive). From the lower midrange on up, the ER4Ps offer truly impressive transparency and clarity, plus bass that is reasonably warm and full—provided you insert the ER4Ps deeply enough within your ear canals to achieve a good seal. CM Grado GS1000i $995 gradolabs.com An open air dynamic design that is comfort personified and built for long listening 92 September 2009 The Absolute Sound sessions. Your ears will never feel more coddled than with these luxury foam ’phones from the maestros at Grado Labs. They are terrific for low-level listening with an unforgettably mind-expanding soundstage. A bit laid-back and relaxed so not for tonal neutrality freaks. The full coverage ear pads can get a bit warm for some users. Reviewed by NG, Issue 178 Grado RA1 Head Amp $350 gradolabs.com No frills from this compact, battery-powered amp. Only neutrality and terrific bottomend control. It seemed to mate (coincidentally?) well with the Grado GS1000. Perfect for high-end road warriors A specialist that brings out the best from Grade’s rich and varied line of headphones. Reviewed by NG, Issue 178 Grado SR325is $295 gradolabs.com Though some listeners find Grado ’phones overly bright, they sound completely different from everything else, with a unique hear-through-the-veils kind of transparency. Reviewed by DS, Issue 156 HeadRoom Desktop Head Amp [with DAC] $999 (configurationdependent) headphone.com If your idea of ideal PC listening involves headphones, it’s hard to imagine a better experience than that delivered by the HeadRoom Desktop Amp. Use the USB input and you’ll be treated to headphone sound that is open, refined, detailed yet gentle, and tight in the bass. If you must drive the HeadRoom via its analog inputs, be sure not to skimp on cables. Reviewed by AT, Issue 177 HeadRoom Total BitHead Portable Head Amp $159 headroomaudio.com These portable devices work wonders on all music sources played through headphones— most especially with MP3 files, boosting sound levels and improving dynamics. Moreover, Headroom’s proprietary processing circuit solves the “in-the-head” imaging of headphone listening by seemingly projecting the image in front of the listener, generating something like a soundstage. Reviewed by RH, Issue 155 Grado SR60i $79 gradolabs.com Ray Samuels Audio Emmeline Hornet Head Amp PoY $370 06 raysamuelsaudio.com The Mighty Mouse of headphones, Grado’s SR60i offers superb midrange transparency and natural dynamics. Treble is wellbalanced, though not quite as smooth or refined as in some higher-priced designs. Bass is well-defined, but rolls off a bit early. The SR60i can also be driven directly from an Apple This miniature headphone amplifier is perfect for a portable (or even a desktop) music system, with its combination of small size, rechargeable battery, and amazing sound quality. When used with an iPod, the Hornet renders a huge increase in clarity, resolution, dynamics, and bass weight and definition. RH The Absolute Sound September 2009 93 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS HEADPHONES AND HEADPHONE AMPS iTAS Ray Samuels Audio Predator Portable USB DAC/ Head Amp $495 raysamuelsaudio.com This excellent unit adds a USB DAC to the outstanding headphone-amplifier circuit of the Hornet. Tiny size makes it ideal for travel. RH Sennheiser CX-300 $89 senneheiserusa.com The CX300 is Sennheiser’s most capable in-ear headphone. Bass is robust, but not painfully exaggerated, midrange frequencies are pleasingly clear, and highs are bright and crisp without being overly harsh or strident. Though not the last word in absolute purity or accuracy, the comfortable CX300s offer many attributes of higher-end models at a bargain price. CM Sennheiser HD650 $599 sennheiserusa.com A very revealing model, the HD650 has a smooth upper range and well-balanced middle and lower registers. While not quite as dynamic as some, these have a silky-sweet sound. Reviewed by DS, Issue 156 Shure E5c/SE530 $549/$449 shure.com In an era when “ear bud” headphones are a dime-adozen, how can Shure possibly sell a $549 model? Because the E5c offers stunning sonic performance and amazing comfort in a compact package that elevates the portable-audio experience to a new level. When combined with the Ray Samuels Emmeline Hornet products and a good source (no MP3s, please), the E5c has electrostatic-like resolution, surprising bass extension, and outstanding clarity. Reviewed by RH, Issue 155 Sony MDR-NC500D $399 sony.com These beautifully built and technically advanced headphones combine excellent sound quality with the best noise-canceling process available. The MDR500D employs sophisticated DSP that analyzes the noise source and contours the cancellation signal for maximum noise attenuation. The audio signal is digitized and DSP processed. Built-in rechargeable lithium battery provides hours of use. RH Stax SRS-2050 II Earspeaker System $750 yamasinc.com stock PC speakers on a tight budget. The tiny alloy satellites are surprisingly dynamic, detailed, and extended, while the sub is reasonably tight, if a bit hollow sounding. The two balance well and even generate air and a decent (albeit 2-D) soundstage. Though somewhat ergonomically challenged, sonically this system is unquestionable a major upgrade from off-the-shelf PC speakers. Reviewed by AT, Issue 177 B&W Zeppelin $599 bowers-wilkins.com Combining the SR-202 electrostatic open-back headphone and SRM-252 II amp this may be Stax’s most basic system but it should be required listening for any audiophile who wants to understand the addictive nature of headphones. With the exception of the lack of bottom octave slam, the Stax provide the kind of speed, transparency, and low distortion that are beyond the reach of most contemporary loudspeakers. NG Employing advanced amplifier and driver technologies found in B&W’s upper-end loudspeakers, the Zeppelin is the best-sounding and coolest looking iPod speaker system we’ve heard. The shape isn’t just for good looks; it also happens to be the ideal acoustical platform for the system’s dual 3.5" midrange drivers, 1" tweeter, and single 5" woofer. Throw in advanced digital signal processing along with five separate amplifiers (150W total) and you have one serious musicmaking machine. Reviewed by RH, Issue 178 UltraSone PROLine 2500 $399 ultrasoneusa.com FatMan iPod $649 fat-man.co.uk The German-made UltraSone moves the driver off the center of the earpiece, so that rather than firing straight into your hearing canal it fires at the folds making up your outer ears. The 2500 is an open design with a titanium-plated driver and has an overall outstanding balance of virtues, purity, and extension, though with some recordings it can sound strident with strings. Reviewed by DS, Issue 156 Fatman’s two-piece iTube is a combination iPod dock with 13Wpc vacuum-tube integrated amplifier. The amp sports two inputs—one for the dock (which comes with an excellent remote) and one for an auxiliary source. Though not terribly powerful, the Fatman is long on tonal purity, resolution, and soundstaging, making it one the best purposebuilt iPod systems we’ve heard. Reviewed by CM, Issue 173 iTAS DussunT2i $800 aaa-audio.com Acoustic Energy Aego M $299 acoustic-energy.co.uk Consider the Aego M if you want significantly better than 94 September 2009 The Absolute Sound A small, vertical design for desktop applications, Dussun’s T2i includes an 8x oversampling Sigma-Delta USB DAC that accepts digital signals directly from a hard drive, as well as two line-level inputs and a headphone jack. While warm and easy-sounding, it’s also a little thick and rolled-off—but very cool on the job and excellent for its intended use. Reviewed by WG, Issue 194 Meridian F80 $2999 (i80 universal dock, $399) meridian-audio.com Arguably the world’s coolest table radio, Meridian’s little Ferrariindustrial-designed F80 combines a CD/DVD player, AM/FM tuner, an 80Wpc amplifier, hightech speakers, and Meridian’s acclaimed Digital Signal Processing technology into one sweet package. That skims the surface. Play some favorite tunes through the F80, and prepare to be blown away by the sound from this amazing portable audio/ video sound system. Reviewed by WG, Issue 179 Sony XDR-F1HD Radio $200 sony.com A ridiculously good tuner for a price so low it is almost an embarrassment to the high end. The actual tuner is better than the audio section, but this is only apparent if you are lucky enough to have one of the few FM stations that really tries to set high-end audio standards. The overall sound is still excellent, and the ability to get FM, AM, and HD-radio for so little money makes this a truly exceptional value. AHC, review forthcoming Wadia 170 iTransport $379 wadia.com PoY 08 Wadia’s 170 iTransport is the first Apple-sanctioned iPod docking device that lets you The Absolute Sound September 2009 95 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS tap into the iPod’s digital output, bypassing the iPod’s compromised internal D/A converters and analog output stage. This digital output appears on a standard jack for connection to an outboard D/A converter, providing the convenience of the iPod with the sound quality of your outboard DAC. Reviewed by RH, Issue 186 POWER CONDITIONERS EQUIPMENT RACKS iTAS Equipment Racks Billy Bags Equipment Racks $300–$1200 (for Standard Series) billybags.com These sturdy, sensibly priced equipment racks lack state-ofthe-art features such as those found in, for example, the Grand Prix products, but are effective, highly functional, attractive, and can be ordered in custom configurations. Optional lead-shot loading and spikes elevate performance. The Pro-Series prices increase up to $3000. RH owns Billy Bags racks Sanus Natural Furniture Audio Racks $329 (four-shelf) to $379 (six-shelf) sanus.com Available in black, cherry, or maple, Sanus’ Natural Furniture racks are handsome and affordable. The rigid frame and ¼" glass shelves let your gear sound quite neutral and alive, while the open construction allows for good air flow and makes installation and hook-up a dream. WG Solid Tech Rack of Silence Stands and Accessories Pricing varies audioplusservices.com The aptly named Rack of Silence helps damp (or dissipate) equipment vibrations, thus fostering audibly quieter backgrounds and a heightened sense of resolution and detail. The core of the system is a sophisticated, extruded aluminum rack with skeletal, X-shaped equipment “shelves.” Complementing the rack is a broad range of optional vibration-fighting accessories such as damped suspension pods and the like. Though tricky to assemble, this system works exactly as advertized. Reviewed by CM, Issue 194 Symposium Acoustics Isis Equipment Stand Price depends on configuration symposiumusa.com The Symposium Acoustics Isis combines three different kinds of damping: mass, constrainedlayer, and (for lack of a better word) tectonic. Using heavy-duty steel shelves that are themselves damped with constrained-layer material and heavy-duty, segmented, aircraftgrade aluminum legs that are isolated from the shelves, from each other, and from the floor via Tellurium/copper spikefeet and Symposium’s patented rollerblock technology, the Isis eliminates all lateral and vertical motion induced by floorborne or airborne resonance. Its effectiveness is astonishing. JV Walker Audio Equipment Rack $4500–$7500 walkeraudio.com GE 03 A large (four-and-a-halffoot long) beautifully made equipment rack, constructed of three thick, oiled slabs of rock maple suspended between shotfilled tubes and balanced on Walker Audio’s huge Valid Point feet. Like all of Walker Audio’s tweaks, the Walker rack kills vibration without killing the life of the music. JV Power Conditioners Audience aR1p $495 audience-av.com A compact single-outlet power conditioner and isolation device, based on the massive twelve-outlet versions of which Audience is rightly proud. 96 September 2009 The Absolute Sound an area where far too many AC conditioners are inconvenient, promise more that they deliver, and are badly overpriced. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 188 Used with a CD player its enhancements in soundstaging and dimensionality and depth can be profound. With demanding high-current devices such as amplifiers, transients seemed a little soft and an audition is recommended. Reviewed by NG, Issue 179 Audience aR12 $4100 audience-av.com This expensive but extremely effective twelve-outlet conditioner delivered significant improvements in bass definition and depth, overall resolution, and soundstage depth. Buildquality is exemplary. Reviewed by Max Shepherd, Issue 162 PS Audio Duet, Quintet, PowerPlant Premier GE $295, $495, $2195 08 psaudio.com The PS Audio Duet, Quintet, and Power Plant Premier provide superb surge-protection at a wide range of prices. The PowerPlant Premier, however, goes much further. You may not hear a striking improvement using its output—which is capable of dealing with all but the largest possible Class A amps—but you’ll never have low-level noise; sensitive equipment like video projectors is likely to live longer; and you’ll know you’re getting the best your equipment can deliver. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 174 PS Audio Soloist $199 psaudio.com PoY 08 Finally, one of the best AC line filters and conditioners around at an affordable price that can fit into a wall socket and handle even the most demanding power amps. Not up to PS Audio’s top of the line AC supplies, but a real bargain in Running Springs Audio Dmitri $4495/$4995/$5995 runningspringsaudio.com The Dmitri not only confers the traditional benefits of line conditioning, but does so while actually increasing dynamic contrasts—the Achilles’ heel of most power conditioners. In addition to increasing timbral purity, soundstage transparency, and a sense of depth, the 67pound Dimitri reveals a system’s full measure of bottom-end extension, weight, and dynamic impact. A reference-quality product. Reviewed by RH, Issue 193 Shunyata Hydra-8 Reference V2/V-Ray Reference V2/ Hydra-2 GE 05 $2995/$4995/$495 shunyata.com PoY 06 When used as a complete system with the Hydra-8 on the front-end components and Hydra-2 on the power amps, along with Shunyata’s AC cords, the improvement in sound quality is nothing short of spectacular. The improvement in low-level resolution alone is worth the (hefty) price of admission. But the Shunyata system also renders a huge increase in soundstage focus, size, and depth, and midrange and treble liquidity. One of the two best AC-conditioning system RH has heard. Reviewed by RH in Issue 163 Synergistic PowerCell 10 SE $5000 synergisticresearch.com Power conditioners can be something of a mixed bag, but the Synergistic Power Cell did not appear to limit current. Instead, it offers even blacker backgrounds and seems to lower grit and distortion. As with all conditioners, however, auditioning the Synergistic in The Absolute Sound September 2009 97 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS POWER CONDITIONERS ACCESSORIES your own system is a must, as the quality of electricity varies markedly from home to home. Reviewed by JH, Issue 192 Tara Labs PM 2 AC Power Screen $495 (for two 15-amp sockets) taralabs.com A stout, well-made, relatively inexpensive two-outlet box that is the only AC-conditioning device that JV has tried that does not (even slightly) diminish dynamics, even with amps plugged into it. On the contrary, everything sounds “super-charged” through the Power Screens; transparency and resolution are also clearly increased along with dynamic contrasts. The only downside (if it is that): a slight darkness to the soundfield, due to increased bass weight and color, that is typical of Tara Labs. JV Accessories AcousTech Electronic Stylus Force Gauge $139 acoustechelectronics.com Getting the most out of any turntable requires an accurate vertical tracking force setting— and yes, kids, you can easily hear up and down changes as slight as a tenth of a gram. Not only is AcousTech’s new gauge a relative bargain; it is small, has a backlit display, is incredibly easy to use, measures weights from 0.001 to 5.000 grams at the height of an LP’s surface, and is said to be accurate to within +/-0.002 grams. WG Acoustic Room Systems (now part of Cinema Tech) GE $20,000–$50,000 03 acousticroomsystems.com PoY Money spent on real 02 acoustic treatments is, in RH’s experience, the most effective allocation of your hi-fi budget. RH has lived with different acoustic products, but none has been as effective as, nor blended into the décor like the Acoustic Room Systems package does. The ARS system greatly improves bass tautness and definition, allows the hi-fi system to better resolve spatial cues, and adds to the music’s sense of palpability and realism. Reviewed by RH, Issue 139 Aesthetix ABCD-1MC Cartridge Demagnetizer $199 musicalsurroundings.com can expand soundstage depth. There are lots of questionable acoustic products on the market, but Tube Traps are the real deal. RH AudioQuest BPW BindingPost Wrench $9.99 audioquest.com This battery-operated device sends a special signal through your moving-coil cartridge, removing stray magnetism in the coils. Used every two weeks or so, the ABCD-1 will restore tone colors and soundstage clarity. Issue 188 AudioQuest’s binding-post wrench, featuring durable metal socket-inserts, eliminates the need for a bulky socket set. This compact double-ended nut driver, small enough to slip into a shirt or pants pocket, fits 7/16" and 1/2" binding posts. Essential for tightening down speaker cables to speakers and amps. NG, Issue 188 Analogue Productions: The Ultimate Analogue Test LP $39.99 acousticsounds.com AudioQuest Anti-Static Record Brush $20 audioquest.com Amazingly well-conceived as well as manufactured to the highest standards, The Ultimate Analogue Test LP is the new reference in test discs. It’s loaded with useful test signals that are encoded with high precision, and the record is pressed on 180-gram virgin vinyl. Reviewed by RH, Issue 186 What’s the best way to keep clean records clean without attracting dust particles? One of our favorite methods is to use AudioQuest’s anti-static record brush, whose bristles are made of “over a million polished carbon fibers.” A swing-down brush guard doubles as a bristle cleaner to prevent dirt build-up. CM ASC Tube Traps $498–$2638 tubetrap.com Auralex Acoustics Studiofoam Wedges Price varies auralex.com Unless you have a professionally designed and treated room, Tube Traps from Acoustic Sciences Corporation are absolutely indispensable to improving your system’s sound. They are able to solve a wide range of acoustic problems with strategic placement and orientation. Boomy bass can be cured with a pair of 16" Full Rounds in the corners behind the loudspeakers. Placed along the sidewalls between you and the loudspeakers, Tube Traps kill unwanted sidewall reflections, prevent flutter echo, and aid in diffusion. A single Tube Trap in the center of the wall behind the loudspeakers 98 September 2009 The Absolute Sound If you’ve logged much time in home recording studios, odds are that you’ve already seen and heard Auralex Studiofoam Wedges in action. Studiofoam is highly absorptive, and therefore can be just the ticket for taming slap echoes or audible combfiltering effects that can result when listeners are seated too close to the back walls of their listening spaces. CM Avid Level 45: 45RPM Adapter and Bubble Level $100 musicdirect.com This two-piece kit combines a precision machined-steel 45-rpm adaptor with a high-quality bubble level. The level sits atop the 45rpm-adapter, which together weigh 180 grams—exactly the same as a high-quality LP for accurate leveling. Issue 188 A/V Room Service Ltd. Metu Acoustic Panels and Corner Traps Price depends on configuration (but affordable) avroomservice.com Although the set of Metus that came to JV—and that he now depends on—came in a particularly unattractive Fudgsicle brown, these wallhanging, cloth-faced, rectangular acoustic panels (mounted to wooden backboards) and cloth-faced corner traps can be precisely color-matched to your paint scheme or be made to look like framed art of any kind (from posters to paintings). Designed by Jim Varney, who did the acoustical treatment of Robert Harley’s room, they are the real deal—precisely calibrated room treatments that use a patent-pending adjustable diaphragmatic/ sound absorptive technology to reliably reduce all sorts of colorations—more effectively than any other wall-mounted room treatment JV has tried. JV, review forthcoming Blu-Tack Adhesive Putty $10 blutack.com The original acoustic putty and adhesive from Bostik of England that damps resonances and mechanically couples a compact speaker to the top plate of its stand. Sonically you’ll hear tighter bass and improved image. Considered “a flexible semi-liquid that behaves like a solid” it also offers a safety bonus by preventing a stand-mounted speaker from being inadvertently toppled. CM, Issue 188 The Absolute Sound September 2009 99 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS ACCESSORIES Caig Pro Gold G100L Treatment $21.99 caig.com Caig’s ProGold G100L has long been the go-to lubricant for cleaning, preserving, and conditioning all electrical connections. Packaged in a handy dispenser bottle with a little applicator-brush built into the caps, it can and should be used for any junction (short of an AC wall socket) where a metal connector (like the male RCA plugs of your interconnects) are plugged into metal socket (like the female RCA plugs of your preamp, amp, or CD player). JV, Issue 188 Cardas RCA Caps $49.99 (set of 12) cardas.com Pop these RCA shorting plugs into your preamplifier’s unused inputs and you’ll hear a blacker background, more micro-dynamic detail, and an overall cleaner sound. NG, Issue 188 Cen-tech SPL Meter $40 acousticsounds.com An indispensable and fun soundintensity meter for confirming channel balance (especially helpful for hi-res multichannel), adjusting subwoofers, checking peak settings, optimizing EQ settings, or just verifying that you’re endangering your hearing. With seven SPL ranges, A and C weightings, slow- and fastresponse peak measurements, and average noise levels. CM, Issue 188 Clearaudio Double Matrix Record Cleaner PoY $5200 07 musicalsurroundings.com effectively cutting in half the amount of time you spend cleaning your LPs, and it does it considerably more quietly than the Matrix, while also adding effective anti-static treatment to the formula. If you’re seriously into vinyl, the Double Matrix is unquestionably the record cleaner of choice. Reviewed by JV, Issue 180 Clearaudio Matrix Record Cleaner $3600 musicalsurroundings.com GE 03 Clearaudio’s Matrix record cleaner is the Porsche of record-cleaning machines. Built to a higher standard than many turntables, the Matrix provides bi-directional platter rotation, powerful two-level vacuum, and an adjustable brush. Reviewed by JV, Issue 142 Clearaudio Spirit Level $60 musicalsurroundings.com Turntables sound their best when they are level—something careful listeners will want to check at set-up time and verify periodically. (Remember: Furniture and floors sometimes settle a bit over time.) Use a good multi-axis spirit level such as this one from Clearaudio to keep your ’table on the level. CM, Issue 188 Clearaudio Strobo-disc and Strobe Light $60 and $180 musicalsurroundings.com Featuring grooves that create the additional stylus drag necessary to accurately measure your turntable’s speed—while at the same time doubling as a cartridge break-in device— Clearaudio’s Strobo-disc and Strobe Light are great tools for the serious vinyl junkie. HP’s Workshop, Issue 159 The Double Matrix not only does everything that the Matrix does, it does it to both sides of your records simultaneously, 100 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Composite Products CarbonFiber Cones $75 (3-Pack) Made from layers of carbonfiber cloth bonded into a solid with epoxy, the Composite Products Carbon-Fiber Cones are extremely stiff and well damped. Place a set under a component to reduce and damp vibrations. JM, Issue 188 Echo Busters $175 and up echobusters.com The cool thing about Echo Busters, as well as most other room treatment, is you don’t have to buy the whole shebang at once. SK recommends starting off with a couple of Bass Busters or maybe just a set of Corner Busters. The effect is dramatic and cumulative, and you can add on as your budget allows. Reviewed by SK, Issue 159 Feickert Adjust+ $350 feickert.com If you’ve ever wondered whether you’ve gotten your cartridge’s azimuth just right and thereby maximized channel separation, here’s a solution that doesn’t entail an oscilloscope or guesses by mirror. Dr. Feickert––he who makes that fabulous cartridge-alignment protractor––has come up with a nifty bit of software (PConly) that will tell you when azimuth is dead on (and all sorts of other useful things about your cartridge, turntable, and phonostage, including ’table speed). JV, Issue 188 Feickert Universal Protractor $250 feickert.com Feickert’s invaluable protractor includes a white disc with markings on each side—for Baerwald and Lofgren geometries and 50 and 60Hz strobe patterns—an impressively machined aluminum measuring device that turns accurately measuring stylus to pivot distances from hair-pulling frustration to child’s play, and a step-by-step instruction booklet that makes fine-tuning your cartridge’s geometry a remarkably easy procedure. Reviewed by WG, Issue 171 Furutech LP Flattener $1890 furutech.com Expensive, but worth it if you have a large LP collection. Just put a slightly warped LP into the Flattener and the gentle heating and pressing action restores an LP to perfect flatness. JH, review pending. Furutech deMag $1980 furutech.com What’s that you say, demagnetize vinyl—a plastic? Yes, it seems that the pigment added to the plastic contains small amounts of ferrous material that magnetizes vinyl LPs. A quick 20-second zap to each side of an LP results in audible improvements to noise floor, dynamic range, and perceived resolution. The same goes for optical media, including DVDs, and evidently cables and power cords, too. WG Gryphon Exorcist Demagnetizer $230 acousticsounds.com These nifty devices are designed to do the same thing—one system-wide, the other for phono cartridges—rid audio gear of magnetic build-up. The size of a remote control, the Exorcist hooks up to your preamp’s aux or line input, while you plug your arm leads into the Black Exorcist. Audible results include less glare and hash, tighter bass, and greater perceived detail and musical integration. WG Hannl Aragon $3995 eliteavdist.com Though pricey, this Germanmade LP cleaner has a small footprint, is relatively cool- Introducing the new theabsolutesound.com The premier destination for those interested in high end audio and music Updated and redesigned for easier browsing, sharing and shopping! New features include: • TAS editor’s blogs • More product reviews • The latest audio news • Expanded forums with TAS reviewers ... and more. Visit us now! www.theabsolutesound.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 101 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS ACCESSORIES looking, and features an infinitely variable-speed platter, which allows you to choose a faster speed for fluid application and scrubbing, and a very slow speed for the vacuum process, and a platter that rotates both directions, which is useful with LPs that need a thorough scrubbing. Reviewed by WG, Issue 177 Lyra SPT Stylus Cleaner $45 immediasound.com Mission accomplished. Puts the fluid where it belongs. Lyra’s formulation scrubs each precious stylus clean without globing on and ultimately reducing the compliance of the cantilever. A tiny angled brush is included. NG, Issue 188 MYE Sound Magneplanar Stands $515–$655 myesound.com No self-respecting Magnepan owner should be without them. It’s as simple as that. Grant van der Mye’s eponymously named and relatively inexpensive stands drastically improve the sound of any Magnepan by reducing vibration induced, primarily, by bass drivers that torque the frames of these wonderful planar loudspeakers. Bass appears to extend down another octave. JHb, review pending Nordost Eco 3 Spray $40 (eight-ounce bottle nordost.com Designed to eliminate the build-up of static charges on cables and interconnects, this stuff works equally well on equipment racks, CDs, DVDs, and turntable platters. Use when installing new cables or re-squirt every few weeks. The sound is noticeably better. WG, Issue 188 Marigo White 3mm Tuning Dots $35 (set of 12) marigoaudio.com Precision Audio Cable Elevators Plus $160 (set of eight); $20 each musicdirect.com These tiny adhesive, constrainedlayer resonance-control “dots” provide an effective bit of damping to tubes or signal connectors that may see airborne or floorborne vibration, even if isolated on stands. Also useful on the headshells of tonearms or, judiciously applied, on the top of phono cartridges. JV, Issue 188 Cable Elevators are porcelain cradles designed to lift cables and interconnects off the floor, shielding them from vibration. The salubrious effect they can have on just about every aspect of sound is hard to believe (though, like tiptoes, they can also thin tone colors out a bit). Reviewed by JV, Issue 142 Mobile Fidelity Rice Inner Sleeves $20 (50-pack) mofi.com RPG Diffusor Systems B.A.D. (Binary Amplitude Diffsorber) Panels Price varies rpginc.com A precious collection of LPs is only as good as its scratch-free surfaces. Offered for decades, Mobile Fidelity’s familiar rice paper-style inner sleeves are renowned for their anti-static properties that avoid drawing dust and grit into the delicate grooves. They remain the archival sleeves to beat. NG, Issue 188 RPG’s B.A.D. panels are thin absorptive diffuser panels that can help tame problem room acoustics without quashing dynamics or swallowing midrange and high-frequency details. The design of B.A.D. panels is deceptively simple, but their effects can be remarkable. 102 September 2009 The Absolute Sound In rooms treated with B.A.D. panels, speakers often exhibit lower coloration, more focused imaging, and deeper soundstages. CM, Issue 188 Sanus SF26 Steel Foundation Speaker Stands $170/pr. sanus.com Sanus’ thoughtfully designed and beautifully executed SF series speaker stands do everything you could want a good set of stands to do, and at a price that makes sense. Strong, rigid, and resonance-free, they include provisions for installing sand or lead-shot damping, and are easy to assemble. Reviewed by CM, AVgM, Issue 1 Shakti Electro-Magnetic Stabilizer Stone $199 shakti.com Ben Piazza’s Shakti Stones employ “proprietary noise reduction circuitry to absorb and dissipate electromagnetic interference (EMI) and radio frequency interference (RFI).” In other words, nobody’s quite sure how they work, but work they do when placed over the transformers of amps, preamps, and other electronics, reducing noise and enriching timbre. JV, Issue 188 Shakti Hallographs $999/pr. shakti.com Master of the inexplicable, Shakti’s Ben Piazza has followed up on his magic “Shakti stones” with yet another impossibleto-explain-but-effective-asclaimed item, the Hallographs. With direct-radiating or omni speakers, these large, rotatable, free-standing, tuning-forkshaped items work some kind of voodoo when placed in the corners of a room (behind the speakers), masking chaotic wall reflections and “clarifying” the soundfield (just as Shakti says they do). JV, Issue 188 Shelter Carbon Fiber Cartridge Screws $190 (8mm x 2mm in sets of two); $200(10mm) elusivedisc.com Precision is the name of the game when it comes to cartridge setup. The carbon fiber cartridge screws from Shelter are not only low in resonance but the rigid, precision threading means it less likely to strip a headshell or cartridge. Cheap insurance for that extra special rig. Includes two polycarbonate nuts. CM, Issue 188 PoY Shunyata Dark Field 08 Cable Elevators $129 (4-Pack) or $295 for a set of 12 shunyata.com Most people agree that elevating interconnects, cables, and power cords off the floor (and away from vibration and each other) is a good idea, but Shunyata argues that using an electrical insulator to do this creates a relative static charge differential between the cable and floor. When an electrical signal is sent through the cable, the signal can become distorted or inter-modulated by this static charge. The materials used in Shunyata’s elevators prevent this static buildup. The net result is an audibly cleaner signal. JV, Issue 188 Shure SFG-2 Stylus Force Gauge $20 shure.com Although ultimately not accurate as the best digital gauges, the classic “teetertotter” Shure is simple to use, cheap, and does the trick very nicely. WG, Issue 188 Stillpoints Vibration Control Cones (3-Pack) $300 When placed under components these sturdy ball-bearing equipped cones, which actually use two layers of ball-bearings—and a large ceramic bearing and a second tier of balls inside the cone The Absolute Sound September 2009 103 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS ACCESSORIES that the ceramic bearing sits on—convert vertical motion into horizontal motion and resonant energy into heat. CM, Issue 188 the chassis. The Sinks are exceptionally effective with non-suspended turntables. PS, Issue 188 Symposium Acoustics Fat Padz $119 symposiumusa.com Kind of like Rollerblock Jr.’s in a single unit, Symposium’s Fat Padz employ constrainedlayer damping to turn resonant energy into heat. Ideal for supporting lightweight equipment like preamps and CD players. JV, Issue 188 Symposium Acoustics Rollerblock Jr. $225 (set of 4) symposiumusa.com A set of Rollerblock Jr. gives you four top and bottom units and four tungsten-steel ball-bearings, which are then combined to make “Double Stacked” isolator/coupler sandwiches. Every top and bottom block is constructed of black-anodized, aircraftalloy aluminum with a special cup in each into which the tungsten-steel ball-bearing is inserted. Ingeniously combing tectonic and constrained-layer damping, the Rollerblocks are, when placed under even heavy components, among the most highly effective resonancecontrol devices on the market. JV, Issue 188 Tributaries T12 power strip $120 tributariescable.com The T12 is the perfect power manager for the low current demands of a nest of transformers and peripherals. Equipped with three rows of four outlets, most rotate 90 degrees so that plugs can lie flat along the floor. Meanwhile, LEDs indicate operation, grounding, and protection status. Offering plenty of surge suppression and noise filtering for AC power as well as signalline protection for telecomm, network, and cable, it’s a bargain for its segment. Various cords included. Reviewed by NG, Issue 186 VPI 16.5 Record Cleaner Bundle w/Fluids, Brushes and Sleeves $550 vpiindustries.com Walker Audio Silver Speaker Jumpers $250 (set of four conductors walkeraudio.com All vinyl lovers need a recordcleaning machine, and there’s no greater “bang for the buck” in cleaners than VPI’s classic 16.5. Simple to use and highly effective, the 16.5 produces quieter surfaces from even heavily soiled LPs. The Bundle adds two bottles of Mobile Fidelity cleaning fluid, a Mobile Fidelity Record Brush, and 100 inner sleeves for just $10 more than the 16.5. JM, Issue 188 These 6" solid silver conductors (with ¼" solid silver spades) are perfect for two-piece speakers systems that require a jumper between a bass module and a mid/treble “head” unit. JV VPI Typhoon Record Cleaner $2000 vpiindustries.com A good record cleaner is a vital tool for any good record collection. The Typhoon is the best combination of price, convenience, and effective cleaning AHC has yet found. Noise levels have been reduced since the early production runs, fluid control is excellent, operation is quick and reliable, and it is a pleasure to use. Reviewed by AHC, Issue 184 UltraBit Platinum Disc Treatment $65 ultrabitplatinum.com Walker Audio Prelude Quartet Record Cleaning System $185 walkeraudio.com A spritz of UltraBit Platinum on a CD renders a surprising increase in smoothness, resolution, and soundstage size. Reviewed by RH, Issue 184 There are many excellent record-cleaning solutions out there, but this one, developed by analog guru Lloyd Walker, is superb. Designed to work in conjunction with most record-cleaning machines, the four-step Prelude system (which involves the manual application of two enzyme-based cleaning solutions and two ultra-pure rinses, each followed by machine vacuuming) really does reveal details that have gone unheard beneath layers of dust and wear. A bit timeconsuming, but no machineapplied cleaning solutions can compare. JV, Issue 188 Townshend Seismic Sinks $400–$900 (depending on weight capacity) townshendaudio.com Vibrapods $5.99 each vibrapod.com Townshend Seismic Sinks are air-bladder-suspended isolation platforms, available in several sizes and weights to accommodate a wide variety of components. Setup is straightforward and easy. Because the Sinks act as filters (around 2–4Hz), they isolate far better than cones, which anchor components solidly but in so doing allow vibrations to be transmitted directly to Vibrapods are small, flexible vinyl pucks that can transform a system. They’re numbered by their weight-bearing loads: Put them under speakers and electronics and hear bass extension and smoother highs. At four for $25, who says great tweaks have to be expensive? Just out, Vibrapod Cones—use them as standalone footers or combine with Vibrapods to get even more out of your system. Issue 188 104 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Walker Audio Valid Points $525 walkeraudio.com Valid Points, Walker’s massive version of tiptoes, are sensationally effective under most components, particularly when used with Walker Resonance Control discs, which, themselves, can have a salubrious effect on components under or on top of which they are placed. JV Xtreme AV Quicksilver Contact Enhancer $90 xtremecables.com This 100% silver contact enhancer has been cryogenically treated to produce the optimum conductive surfaces for audio signal connections. Works on RCA jacks, tube sockets, AC cords, and cartridge pins. Comes with a complete kit of cleaning tools. Issue 188 Zerodust Stylus Cleaner $69 musicdirect.com Not a fluid or brush-based stylus cleaner, the Zerodust uses a polymer bubble that gathers stylus dust and debris onto its ultra-soft surface. A winning alternative for those concerned with overusing liquid cleaners that can leave residues and build up over time. Zerodust can be cleaned with tap water and a magnifier is included. CM, Issue 188 The Absolute Sound September 2009 105 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS BOOKS Books The Complete Guide to HighEnd Audio, Third Edition Robert Harley Acapella Publishing, 640 pp., $34.95 (paper), $44.95 (cloth) hifibooks.com The most complete, up-to-date, and useful guide to the high end you can buy, filled with information about how audio components work, how they should be set up, how they can be optimized after setup that is indispensable to neophyte and veteran audiophiles alike. JV Home Theater for Everyone, Revised Second Edition Robert Harley Acapella Publishing, 272 pp., $19.95 hifibooks.com Like its audio-only companion piece, The Complete Guide, Home Theater for Everyone is an up-todate, encyclopedic compendium of essential information about home theater components, setup, and tweaking. Don’t set up a home theater without it! JV Introductory Guide to HighPerformance Audio Systems Robert Harley Acapella Publishing, 240 pp., $19.95 hifibooks.com The Introductory Guide does for the novice what The Complete Guide does for the more experienced audiophile: provides an entirely lucid handbook of genuinely useful information about stereo/ multichannel gear and setup. No one explains technical matters to the layman better than our Mr. Harley. Reviewed by JV, Issue 172 The Master Handbook of Acoustics, Fourth Edition F. Alton Everest McGraw-Hill/TAB, 592 pp., $39.95 This classic book, updated over the years, is a crash course 106 September 2009 The Absolute Sound in how sound behaves in a room and how to treat rooms to improve sound quality. It’s not audiophile-oriented, but explains the basic physics that audiophiles need to know when choosing or treating listening rooms. RH Mastering Audio: The Art and the Science Bob Katz Focal Press, 319 pp., $39.95 Although written for professional mastering engineers, Mastering Audio: The Art and the Science contains a wealth of information of interest to the audiophile. If you want to know what goes on behind the scenes in recreating the music you enjoy, and learn more about digital audio, this comprehensive, insightful, and accessible book is without peer. RH McIntosh ”For the love of music” Ken Kessler McIntosh Laboratory Inc., 315 pp., $150 This profusely illustrated and carefully researched book on the celebrated audio company is lively and informative and just plain fun to read. It is primarily a social history, but the social history is irresistible, and the book gives a feel for the early decades of high fidelity. REG Music, Sound, and Technology John Eargle Springer, 368 pp., $114.95 Meant primarily for college students, Eargle’s book is what it claims to be—a classic guide to musical acoustics. If you’re looking for the best resource on hi-fi systems, buy Robert Harley’s Complete Guide. If you’re looking for a book on how the various instruments make the sounds they make and what those sounds comprise, The NPR Listener’s Encyclopedia of Classical Music Ted Libbey Workman, 979 pp., $19.95 Quad—The Closest Approach Ken Kessler International Audio Group, 215 pp., $80 U.K. audio writer Ken Kessler has documented the history, products, and contributions to Sound Bites: 50 Years of Hi-Fi News Ken Kessler and Steve Harris IPC Media, London, 224 pp., £14.95 (U.S. availability: MusicDirect or amazon.com) While Hi-Fi News at fifty is the occasion for this book, it’s no self-congratulatory piece of puffery. After a long chapter on “pre history,” i.e., telescoping audio in the first half of the last century, it’s structured as a loose, anecdotal history of audio, centering principally on the men who made the medium from the beginning of stereo to the present. Reviewed by PS, Issue 162 TAS Addendum We inadvertently left these three award-winning products off our master list. Our apologies to their manufacturers for the mistake. — Ed. Paradigm Signature Reference S1 Loudspeaker $1498 paradigm.com This stand-mounted, sealedbox, two-way speaker just doesn’t understand how small it is, delivering a big, robust, and dynamic sound. An exceptionally neutral tonal balance coupled with pinpoint imaging make the S1 the king of sub-$1500 mini-monitors. Reviewed by SS, Issue 184 Simaudio Moon i-1 Integrated Amplifier $1500 simaudio.com Another great integrated amp from Simaudio, the entry-level i-1 offers excellent large-scale dynamics, rhythmic liveliness, transient speed, and overall musicality. Extremely robust build-quality and a hefty power supply allow this 50Wpc amp (8 ohms) to double its output into 4 ohms. One of the purest and most transparent integrateds in its class. Reviewed by WG, Issue 185 Simaudio Moon i-1 CD Player $1500 simaudio.com The companion to the i-1 integrated, this CD player boasts amazing build-quality for the money, along with a very low noise floor, a lack of glaze and hash, outstanding dynamics and rhythmic flow, and, like the i-l integrated, a musicality that’s rare at this price. Reviewed by WG, Issue 185 The Absolute Sound September 2009 107 BOOKS TAS contributor Ted Libbey has written a must-buy for the classical music lover—from the novice to the knowledgeable. Written in a friendly yet informed style, this book is not only chock-full of information it has a very cool interactive feature (via the Naxos Web site) that allows you to hear recorded examples while you’re reading. WG audio of one of the seminal high-end companies. The book contains interviews with Quad founder Peter Walker and his son Ross, reprints of old ads, Walker’s original papers on loudspeaker and amplifier design, and other bits of interest to Quad fans. RH TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS harmonically, dynamically, and temporally, Eargle’s is the standard text. JV Equipment Report King of the Midgets? Spendor SA1 Mini-Monitor Steven Stone F or over 40 years Spendor has produced audiophilegrade loudspeakers. The new SA1 represents its latest thinking on small-footprint sealed-box monitors. Spendor has plenty of competition in this crowded category—I can’t think of many speaker companies that don’t make at least one mini-monitor. So how do the SA1’s stack up against all the competition? Splendiforously! Built the Same, But Different At first glance the Spendor SA1 speakers don’t seem dissimilar from scores of other diminutive wooden boxes stuffed with a pair of drivers and a crossover, but inside they are very different. The SA1 uses a SEAS 22mm “wide surround hybrid” synthetic-silk dome tweeter that allows for a longer throw with less distortion and more linear response at its excursion limits than a conventional silk dome tweeter. The new Spendor 15cm (6") diameter ep38 polymer cone midrange/bass driver sports a magnesiumalloy chassis, advanced surround material, and a largeexcursion motor system. It is assembled entirely by hand at Spendor’s East Sussex factory specifically for the SA1. According to Spendor’s owner Philip Swift, “The 15cm drive unit has a flat frequency response up to almost 10kHz. So we are able to cross that speaker over at a high frequency (4.8kHz). We don’t have the crossover down at the usual 2kHz, which is generally the worst area of operation for the tweeter.” The SA1’s crossover uses Spendor’s own precisiontapped inductors that are mounted on circuit boards with gold through-hole plating for better conductivity. Philip Swift believes that Spendor’s inductors are clearly superior to other types. “With the circuit topology we use in our crossovers, having the facility to design the inductors like this gives us tremendous control over the way we shape the frequency response of the crossover network. Using an analog crossover, as we do, you can bend or shape the frequency response in a very elegant way.” Spendor employs a second-order 12dB/octave slope on its midrange-woofer and a third-order 18dB/octave slope on the tweeter crossovers. To keep the two drivers in phase the leads on the tweeter are inverted. Spendor employs a special methodology to mount its drivers to the cabinets, which its calls “dynamic damping.” 108 September 2009 The Absolute Sound The Absolute Sound September 2009 109 EQUIPMENT REPORT - Spendor SA1 Mini-Monitor With dynamic damping a rigid visco-elastic damping material is clamped between the drive unit chassis and the cabinet to dissipate micro-vibration. Any energy flowing into the cabinet from the drivers is turned into heat by this special material. Silver-plated pure copper wire with halogen-free dielectric and gold conductors are used for all the internal wiring. Unlike many dynamic-driver speakers which employ a double pair of connectors to allow for bi-wiring, the SA1 uses only a single pair of WBT five-way binding posts, flush-mounted on the back of the speakers. Spendor doesn’t offer bi-wiring on the SA1 because it feels that it’s better to use one run of the best speaker cable you can afford rather than two runs of a lesser cable for the same total investment. Also the SA1’s two drivers have been balanced so precisely that using two different cables in a bi-wiring setup could actually degrade the overall sound quality. While the SA1’s drivers and crossover include substantial amounts of proprietary technology, the speaker’s cabinet ranks as its most distinctive feature. The vast majority of speakers, regardless of size or type, rely on some form of mass damping to reduce internal resonances, but Spendor employs a different approach, which it calls “thin-wall damped panel design.” Rigidly braced, the cabinet is constructed with three different panel thicknesses. Each panel has a specific resonant characteristic, and their different natural resonances combine evenly to dissipate vibrations. According to Philip Swift, “‘If you make a cabinet four inches thick, what you’re going to do is push the coloration down to very low frequencies, but you are still going to hear it. Even if you do push it right down to the tens of Hertz, you are still going to get second and third harmonics of that. So getting rid of it, that’s the answer!” Spendor believes that the even dissipation of cabinet resonances through its thin-walled design is more efficient and effective than other methodologies. The SA1’s exterior finish is as meticulous as its internal parts. Spendor offers book-matched real-wood veneers in either gloss zebrano, piano black, or satin wenge. My review samples were gloss zebrano. This finish is not for those whose interior decorating schemes favor conservative-looking speakers. The gloss finish is thick and shiny and the wood is flamboyantly grained, not unlike the wood equivalent of a corduroy jacket. The speaker grilles utilize a magnetic attachment system with magnets that stick to the metal screws securing the drivers, so when the grilles are removed no attachment hardware is visible. The Sound of Spendor SA1’s I listened to the Spendor SA1 speakers in two radically different environments. The first system was in my computer desktop, which puts the speakers in the near-field, only two feet from my ears. The second system was room-based where the speakers were seven-and-a-half feet from my primary listening position. In both systems I used subwoofers to augment the SA1’s bass response. (Other details of my review systems are listed in the associated equipment section.) When I first began listening to the Spendor SA1’s I thought they sounded slightly tight and lean. Since I had been told that they would need some serious break-in time to sound optimal I was not overly concerned about their lack of immediate star power. According to Philip Swift, “The actual break-in period for the SA1 depends to a large extent on how loud and long you play 110 September 2009 The Absolute Sound the speakers. If you have the opportunity to let loose for many hours with a sensibly powerful amplifier and a broad selection of dynamic, wide-frequency-range program the speakers can be sounding good within a day or two. But if you play more modestly and less frequently it can take as long as 2-3 weeks for the loudspeakers to reach optimum performance. Another factor is temperature, if your loudspeakers have been recently been shipped or stored in low temperatures they may sound a bit ‘flat’ for the first few playing hours.” After approximately 100 hours of break-in I began listening in earnest. The first thing that impressed me about the Spendor SA1s was their musically personable nature. By this I mean that these speakers have a low fatigue factor similar to the Harbeth PSE2E speakers. This non-fatiguing character makes it easy to listen at higher volumes in a nearfield environment for long periods of time. But unlike the Harbeths, which sound as if they have a built-in soft-compression circuit that reduces the differences between double and triple fortissimo passages, the Spendors show no signs of compression. They are more akin to the Paradigm S1 and ATC SCM7 speakers, which both preserve high-level SPECS & PRICING Enclosure type: Sealed Drive units: HF, 22mm widesurround dome with fluid cooling; LF/MF, 150mm (6in.) ep38 polymer cone Frequency response: 75Hz– 20kHz +/-3dB anechoic on reference axis Frequency range: -6dB at 65Hz anechoic Dispersion: Within 3dB of response on reference axis Horizontal: Over 40° arc (+/-20°) Vertical: Over 20° arc ( +/-10°) Sensitivity: 85dB for 1W @ 1m Impedance: 8 ohms nominal (6.3 ohms minimum) Crossover frequency: 4.8kHz Power handling: 125 watts unclipped program Dimensions: 12" x 6.5" x 7.5" Weight: 12 lbs. Price: $2195 per pair Associated Equipment Desktop System EAD 8000 Pro CD/DVD player and transport, MacPro Dual core computer with i-Tunes 7.61, Devilsound USB Dac, High Resolution Technologies MusicStreamer+, Bel Canto Dac 3, Reference Line Preeminence One B passive controller, Bel Canto S-300 stereo amplifier, Accuphase P-300 power amplifier, Modified Dyna St-70 amplifier, Earthquake Supernova mk IV 10 subwoofer, PS Audio Quintet, AudioQuest CV 4.2 speaker cable, AudioQuest Colorado interconnect Room System CEC TL-2 CD transport, Oppo BDP-83 Blu-Ray/Universal transport, Sony BPS-300 Blu Ray Player, Apple TV, Sonos Z-90, Lexicon MC12B HD pre/pro, Bel Canto M-1000 power amplifiers, two JL Labs Fathom F112 subwoofers, two Genesis 2/12 subwoofers, Sound Anchor single column 24” speaker stands, PS Audio Quartet and Duet AC devices, Synergistic Research Designer’s Reference interconnects and speaker cables Comment on this article on the Forum at avguide.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 111 EQUIPMENT REPORT - Spendor SA1 Mini-Monitor dynamic differences. Compared with the Paradigm S1 speakers the Spendors do not have quite as much headroom before they begin to sound stressed, but the Paradigms have a greater ability to play at high volumes without signs of stress than any small monitor I’ve encountered. This is as good a place as any to state the obvious—small speakers are designed for small rooms. The Spendor SA1 is no exception. The smaller your listening room, the more likely you will find the SA1 to your liking. Personally I preferred the SA1’s in my nearfield desktop system as opposed to my mid-sized room system. Part of that preference stems from the Spendor’s relatively low 85dB sensitivity. If your music demands 90dB peaks at listening position, a nearfield placement is far more likely to deliver these SPLs without stressing the speakers or the power amplifier driving them. Also the proximity effect of nearfield placement reduces lower midrange and upper-bass deficiencies that are almost inevitable when you ask a small box speaker with smalldiameter drivers to reproduce music with a wide dynamic range. Sir Charles Mackerras and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra’s recording of Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutti [Telarc] is about as dynamic a commercial recording as you’ll find. On my desktop the SA1’s had no trouble conquering this recording’s dynamic demands, but in a mid-field situation the orchestra’s fortissimos and the soprano duets don’t have quite the same dynamic authority, due in large part to the speakers’ limited air-moving capabilities in the lower midrange and upper bass. Another readily apparent fact is that small box speakers image well. But not all small-footprint speakers image equally well. The Spendor SA1’s are among the best at disappearing completely. Even on my desktop they do a surprising complete vanishing act that outpoints comparably sized speakers such as the ATC SCM7s. Compared to the ATCs the front of the Spendors soundstage begins farther back behind the speakers’ front grilles. Also the Spendors are slightly more three-dimensional with phase-coherent recordings. Coupled with my highly modified Dyna Stereo 70 the SA1s created an eerily fleshed out threedimensional picture of an entire soundstage. On my own live concert recordings each row of musicians could be easily located and even the back wall occupied a firm and exact location in the soundstage. Besides having excellent image specificity the SA1’s create a larger listening window than many small monitors. Minor changes in your listening position shouldn’t create any image shifts, and with the Spendor SA1’s they don’t. The Spendors allowed me greater freedom of movement at my desktop than even the much smaller-footprint Role Kayak speakers. This was especially surprising since the Roles had been the reigning champs at producing the most wiggle room in my desktop system. Some audiophiles feel that a soft dome tweeter, while it may be smooth and musical, gives up a certain amount of resolution and acuity to metal or ribbon drivers. The SA1’s resolution of low-level detail ranks with small monitors that use more exotic materials. Compared to the Paradigm S1, which has a titanium tweeter, the Spendor SA1 displayed an equal level of detail and musical information. Also the Spendor’s top end had a similar amount of air and openness. The midrange is where most of the music is, and the SA1’s 112 September 2009 The Absolute Sound do a wonderful job of getting that midrange right. Whether it’s Willie Nelson’s beery baritone or Todd Rundgren’s reedy tenor the SA1’s capture each vocalist’s unique harmonic signature with complete veracity. Female vocalists also retain all their individuality. I’m a huge Tori Amos fan. On her Past The Mission EP CD Amos performs a live version of “The Waitress.” The SA1’s preserve every aspect of her sometimes less than subtle lyrics and delivery: “And I believe in peace, BITCH!” I mentioned earlier that I used a subwoofer with the SA1’s. Actually I used several subwoofers in my room-based system— two for each channel. Since the SA1 has a sealed cabinet with no bass-enhancing ports or vents to increase its low-frequency output, if you want to get anything below 80Hz (the specifications state that the speaker is down 3dB at 75Hz) you’re going to have to mate it with a subwoofer. The good news is since it doesn’t have any ports or vents there are no group-delay issues or bass humps that might prevent the SA1 from mating seamlessly with a sub. Only the Spendor’s low efficiency of 85dB could present any problem. That’s because you will need to set your subwoofer’s input settings higher than with more efficient speakers. Depending on the subwoofer, you might detect some audible hum, since subwoofers are prone to a 120Hz hum when their input controls are turned up. But when you get the blend right, which shouldn’t be too tough, the SA1’s will do a more than serviceable job delivering the leading edge of a bass instrument while the subs deliver the body and fundamentals. When speakers are on my computer desktop I often rest my fingers on their surfaces to see how much the cabinets vibrate. Due to Spendor’s “thin-wall damped panel design” the SA1’s cabinet sides and top vibrate more than any mini-monitor I’ve had in my home. But unlike cheap plastic computer speakers where cabinet vibrations have a noticeably negative effect on the speaker’s performance, the SA1’s cabinet vibrations don’t seem to have any influence on the speaker’s ability to image or resolve low-level details. I can only assume that Spendor’s unconventional cabinet design works just as its designers intended. King of the Midgets? I’ve read too many reviews where pricey mini-monitors were crowned as the best. I can’t in good conscience claim that coronet for the Spendor SA1. Not that it doesn’t deserve a title, since it combines a compelling set of attributes and has few deficiencies, but it’s not my place to bestow crowns. Due to its not insubstantial price of $2195 a pair the Spendor SA1 has a lot of competition for your attention. But for a small listening room the SA1 may well prove to be a far more musically rewarding choice than the vast majority of larger, more physically imposing transducers. If you are assembling a high-end nearfield computer desktop system, the Spendor SA1 deserves to be among your top-five must-audition options. I have yet to experience any speaker whose sonic characteristics are better suited to the demands of extended intimate listening. In a desktop environment the SA1 ranks as a grand champion, and if not worthy of a crown, it has certainly earned membership in my personal mini-monitor pantheon. TAS The Absolute Sound September 2009 113 Equipment Report Vincent Audio V-60 Integrated Amplifier Real-World Sonics Neil Gader I ’m not an ideologue on the issue of solid-state versus vacuum tubes. No allegiances whatsoever. But I recognize that tube components possess a special appeal—particularly to audiophiles who crave greater involvement in the sport. Charting tube life, rebiasing, swapping output tubes from one former Eastern Bloc country or another are big parts of the color and enthusiasm users bring to high-end audio. The truth is, the Vincent V-60 is not that kind of tubed amp. Even Vincent admits that it’s been designed for reliability and longevity. It doesn’t ask to be coddled and it ain’t finicky. You simply turn it on and it goes. In a word, my kind of integrated amplifier. Visually the V-60 is unique in the Vincent lineup. Rather than being housed in the familiar enclosed box that defines most high-end electronics, the V-60 looks almost soaring and architectural with polished vertical columns rising from its steeland-aluminum-clad chassis, a transparent and illuminated acrylic front panel, and a pagoda-inspired top plate—a virtual shrine 114 September 2009 The Absolute Sound to the golden age of tube power. In order to replace or check tubes, you have to remove four burly aluminum knobs at each corner of the heavily vented top panel (each knob has an ultrathin nylon washer to protect the brushed-metal surface). The V-60 outputs 60Wpc thanks to eight Russian-made 6CA7 power tubes. These are versions of the classic EL-34 pentode but with greater power reserves, according to Vincent Audio. The 6CA7s are augmented by a pair of 6CG7 while the preamp stage uses a pair of 6922s—again all Russian-made. The output transformers and the toroidal power transformer are robust—isolated within a lined and shielded casing. A unique, hands-free, fully automated biasing system maintains optimal operating voltages and current control, and is constantly compensating for the age of each tube. There are four selectable inputs along with four- and eight-ohm speaker taps. The binding posts and tube sockets are plated in gold. A small aluminum-clad remote control handles volume and mute functions. The Absolute Sound September 2009 115 EQUIPMENT REPORT - Vincent Audio V-60 Integrated Amplifier For many, tubes and transistors still represent competing versions of reality—the former lush and romantic, the latter cold and analytical. Although these views have been largely discredited by current designs, a shred of truth remains. The V-60, however, presents no such quandary in this regard. Except for the heat factor which is, oy, very real, the V-60 is not, in the textbook sense, immediately recognizable as a vacuum tube integrated amp. I found no exaggerated frequency humps, dips, or imbalances that could redefine a familiar piece of music. Its tonal balance does lean toward a darker richer character in the midrange, but this counts as a plus for me. The amp has the requisite bloom in the lower mids but it’s not an unreserved romantic. The treble is extended and unstressed. Its resolution of the decay of bass information is superior, as is its individuation of notes. In order to glean the most from the music’s wide dynamic envelope in the lower octaves the user will need to show some sensitivity to speaker-matching, but that’s to be expected. There’s a sense of harmonic information being lightly rolled off in comparison to a high-caliber solid-state amp, but this is mostly in head-tohead comparisons and is quickly factored in and forgotten. In transient behavior, the amp is a bit laid-back—Bill Cunliffe’s grand piano on Live at Bernie’s [Groove Note] was neither as tight nor as aggressive on attacks, as if the felt hammers of his instrument were a bit thicker. Sonically a couple of key things resonated with me immediately. The first is the V-60’s midrange musicality. Its timbre and inner detail held me transfixed in my seat. I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard Elton John’s “Indian Sunset” (SACD and LP), but the distinctions between the loose acoustic bass and tight electric bass were never as well-defined as they were through the Vincent. And on Madman Across The Water, the amp showed a willowy delicacy retrieving the gentle splash of a ride cymbal on the iconic title track. Similarly during Jennifer Warnes’ duet with Max Carl on “Somewhere, Somebody” from the new Cisco remastering of Warnes’ The Hunter, Carl’s vocal—set back and slightly in the shadow of Warnes’ lead—had more convincing presence; even at its lower volume level, it became a virtual physical object, replete with weight and dimension. The midrange, from the tiniest interior detail to the most extroverted dynamics, is authoritative, substantial, and almost Technicolored in its saturation. It captures acoustic timbres, harmonics, and textures in a way that is nothing less than breathtaking. Anne-Sophie Mutter’s violin on the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto [DG SACD] was sweetly aggressive with high resolution of Mutter’s well-rosined bow—aspects necessary to the accurate experience of this instrument. The low-level legato lines were so fluidly laced together they became exemplars of the concept of continuousness. The second key aspect of the V-60’s sound was the quality of the soundstage it created. It was not just a broadly dimensional stage, it was also virtually unbroken—there were no hotspots or dead zones. Rather, the stage was one continuous platform. But it went beyond that. The Vincent transformed the soundstage into a more immersive, semi-wrap-around arena. Instrumentalists and singers didn’t stand so much in isolation from the venue; they inhabited it. It created a more organic, integrated relationship between musicians and the acoustic of the venue—a quality that distinguished it from my solid-state rig’s propensity to separate 116 September 2009 The Absolute Sound images in a more clinical and, frankly, graceless manner. Yet for the V-60, there was an occasional eccentricity. On soprano Anna Netrebko’s most extended high notes throughout Sempre Libera [DG], the V-60 seemed to thrust even more air and harmonic energy into the hall. This was an occasion where the hall did not seem as specifically connected to the voice, an overlaid coloration that made me long for the more rigid precision of a solid-state amp, even if the trade-off was a bit more hardhearted. So, while I’m convinced of the V-60 treble competence, it’s still not quite the ne plus ultra in this region. Generally however, pitting the V-60 against solid-state revealed more similarities than differences. During “Alone Together” from Something Cool [Telarc], a ruthlessly revealing track with just acoustic bass and Tierney Sutton’s playful vocal, there’s no protective blanket of complex instrumentation and sophisticated mixing to cover up flaws. While my solid-state reference possessed the edge in sheer, off-the-line transient speed—that spring-loaded right now quality—from both bass and vocalist, the Vincent V-60 defined the air of the recording venue differently. That air was thicker, as if more humid and slightly more enveloping. With solid-state, Sutton’s vocal was presented with more heavily drawn image boundaries. The V-60 softens these edges. Both permit great extension on the standup bass, but the V-60 has a real ripeness that to me speaks more authentically—and this in spite of the additional dynamic slam and control of the solid-state gear, where every bass note is almost too perfectly defined. The less rigid interpretation of the V-60 somehow seems more akin to the real world in comparison. In the final analysis, performance trumps topology and types of output devices. The Vincent is the rare kind of integrated amp—a tube amp, no less—that even the most unshakable solid-state fan will recognize as something musically very special. I did. Whichever side of the argument you stand on, once you experience the Vincent, the most strongly held convictions begin to waver. The V-60 is a tube amp that even a solid-state fan could love. TAS SPECS & PRICING Power Output: 60Wpc Inputs: Four RCA Outputs: One RCA (rec out) Dimensions: 17.7" x 8.4" x 16.5" Weight: 75 lbs. Price: $4995 WS Distributing (U.S. Distributor) 3427 Kraft SE Grand Rapids, Michigan 49512 (866) 984-0677 wsdistributing.com vincent-tac.de Associated Equipment Sota Cosmos Series III turntable; SME V tonearm; Clearaudio Maestro Wood; JR Transrotor Phono II; Esoteric X-05; Pass Labs INT-150; Sonics Amerigo, ATC SCM20-2, PMC DBIi; Tara Labs RSC2 Air, Synergistic Tesla Apex, Nordost Baldur; Synergistic Tesla, Wireworld Silver Electra & Kimber Palladian power cords Comment on this article on the Forum at avguide.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 117 Equipment Report Odyssey Audio Khartago Stereo Amplifier Good Enough Jonathan Valin F or the past six months I’ve been using the superb $40k Soulution 710 stereo and $115k 700 monoblock solidstate amplifiers from Switzerland in my system—the latter the same amp with which Magico triumphantly debuted its M5 speakers at CES this past January. I’ll be reviewing the Soulution electronics in an upcoming issue, but I can already tell you they’ll get a rave. I’ve never heard any amplifier, tube or solid-state, as low in noise and high in transparency as these Swiss numbers. With a suitably transparent speaker like the MartinLogan CLX or the Magico M5 and a suitably transparent front end like the Walker Black Diamond or the AAS Gabriel/Da Vinci (both fitted out with the Da Vinci Grandezza cartridge), it’s as if the electronics aren’t in the system. And their disappearing act makes the disappearing act of the front end and the back end that much more complete. That’s what transparency of this order buys you in an amplifier or preamplifier—less of the physical and electronic presence of all of your gear, more of the presence of the music, the musicians, and (sigh) the recording and mastering engineers. Why am I talking about the Soulution amplifiers in a review of Odyssey gear? Because I heard about both from solid-stateamp connoisseur Alon Wolf of Magico. I wasn’t a bit surprised when he recommended the Soulution 700s—they cost a fortune and had a helluva reputation for excellence. But I was surprised when he suggested that I also give a listen to a little amp called the Odyssey Khartago. First of all, I’d never heard of Odyssey, though, as it turns out, the company’s been around for a decade, and second…well, I’ll get to that in a moment. “I’ve been using the Khartago in the factory for years,” said he, “to test loudspeakers. It isn’t a Soulution 700, but it’s…good 118 September 2009 The Absolute Sound enough.” Good enough for the Wolfman is good enough for me, thought I, and promptly called Klaus Bunge of Odyssey, who happens to be located a scant two hours away in picturesque Indianapolis, Indiana. A week or two later Klaus, a big bearded bear of a man, drove down to Cincy with a Khartago and a pair of Stratos monoblocks in hand—both hands, actually. (Though I won’t have the space to talk specifically about the Strati, you can take it for granted that everything I say about the Khartago goes double for Odyssey’s monoblocks.) Bunge has been importing German hi-fi into the United States for better than twenty years. Indeed, throughout the eighties he almost single-handedly put the German electronics company Symphonic Line on the map. In the late nineties, he decided to offer a more “cost-effective” line of amps and preamps in addition to his pricey imports. Somehow he managed to talk the folks at Symphonic Line into supplying him with the same circuits it used in its amps, which Klaus then builds, stuffs, tweaks, sticks in handsomely finished custom-made anodized-aluminum boxes, and sells factory-direct. (All this work is done in the good ol’ U.S. of A.) The Khartago, for instance, has specs that are nearly identical—as they should be, considering they use virtually the same boards—to those of the celebrated Symphonic Line RG-1 Mk IV. Both output 115Wpc into 8 ohms; both have a bandwidth that extends out to 400kHz; both have high damping factors, exceptional slew rates, and oodles of current. The only thing they don’t share is price. The Symphonic Line RG-1 Mk IV is currently $6800; the Odyssey Khartago costs $799. Yep, you’re reading that right: $799. That was the second reason I was surprised by Alon Wolf ’s suggestion. When a guy with his champagne taste recommends a beer-budget amplifier like this The Absolute Sound September 2009 119 EQUIPMENT REPORT - Odyssey Audio Khartago Stereo Amplifier one, you tend to pay attention. Apparently, eliminating the distributor and retailer and selling factory-direct pays some pretty handsome dividends to Odyssey’s customers. (See my interview with Klaus for details.) Of course, the version of the Khartago that Klaus brought me didn’t cost $799. Since it had a better Plitron transformer, an extra bit of power-supply capacitance, and superior parts—three options among many (including Nichicon Muse caps, Vishay/ Dale resistors, extra WIMA metal-film caps, custom colors) that Bunge offers, along with his standard twenty-year transferable warranty—it cost a whopping $995. You would think that switching from the $115k Soulution 700 monoblocks to the $995 Khartago with what is probably the highest-resolution speaker I’ve had in my home, the $89k Magico M5, would result in a tremendous falling-off, sonically. With amps in the Odyssey’s price range, you have every right to expect decent sound, but you don’t expect Soulution-level refinement. There will be noise; there will be grain; there will be soundstage constriction, timbral anomalies, dynamic and SPL limits, less detail, less everything. Not with the Khartago. Here there was none of the usual peppery solid-state grain (and I mean none), no added brightness and coarseness in the upper mids, no added spikiness on hard transients (the kind that turns a Martin acoustic guitar into a National Steel guitar), no transistor darkness in the treble (indeed, the Khartago has an ARC-like touch of light and bloom on top), no constriction of soundstage width (although I did get a bit less soundstage depth), no sense of listening through a scrim. Nope, what the Odyssey Khartago sounded like, for all the world and in direct comparisons, was a somewhat-less-finely-resolving, somewhat-less-transparent-to-sources, somewhat-less-low-innoise-and-coloration, somewhat-less-well-controlled-in-the-bass, somewhat-less-energetic-on-top, somewhat-less-deep-and-widein-soundstaging Soulution 700. In overall tonal balance, the two amps were surprisingly similar—which is to say almost deadcenter neutral with, in the Khartago’s case, a bit more tube-like warmth and roundedness. By the way, when I say “somewhat less,” I mean a little not a lot. It’s not as if you won’t hear plenty of fresh detail through the Khartago; you just won’t hear it in the superabundance of the incomparable Soulution 700. If you want a concrete measure of the difference between the two amps (other than that one is 115 times more expensive), listen to Ricky Lee Jones’ fabulously moody, muttery, whispery, sometimes-hard-to-decipher cover of The Left Banke’s great “Baroque ’n’ roll” anthem “Walk Away Renee” from Girl At Her Volcano [Warner]. With the Khartago the catchy refrain is clear up until the third line, where the amp grows momentarily tongue-tied. What you hear (without straining to hear) is: “Just walk away Renee/You won’t see me follow you back home/The empty sidewalks dum-dum-DUM-dum-dum the same/You’re not to blame.” Through the Soulution (and, I should add, only through the Soulution in my experience) you hear the whole quatrain with crystal clarity every time Ricky Lee sings it: “Just walk away Renee/You won’t see me follow you back home/The empty sidewalks on my block are not the same/ You’re not to blame.” Or take the Steve Hoffman reissue of Joni Mitchell’s Blue. With the Soulution gear, as I’ve noted several times before, the 120 September 2009 The Absolute Sound overdub of Joni singing backup to her own lead on “Carey” and other numbers is unmistakably potted in. It sounds exactly like what it is—a different spot of space and time cameo’d into the soundstage. With the Khartago, the artificiality of this bit of engineering is a bit less obvious (as, by the way, it was meant to be). Although you still hear the overdub as an overdub, the effect doesn’t stand out quite as nakedly as it does through the Soulution 710 or 700. These differences in resolution and articulation aside, the Odyssey and Soulution amps are fundamentally more alike than different. Put on any well-recorded disc—say, Holly Cole’s Tom Waits’ tribute album Temptation [Metro Blue]—and listen to SPECS & PRICING Power: 115Wpc RMS @ 8 ohms Bandwidth: 2Hz–400kHz Current: 40 amps Distortion: <0.04% THD Damping factor: >500 continuous damping factor Input impedance: >22kOhms Inputs: One pair RCA Weight: 30 lbs. Dimensions: 18" x 18.5" x 4" Price: $799 ($995 as supplied) Odyssey Audio Orders: e-mail to odav@ odysseyaudio.com, or call (317) 299-5578 odysseyaudio.com JV’s Reference System Loudspeakers: Magico M5, MartinLogan CLX Linestage preamps: Audio Research Reference 3, Audio Space Reference 2, and Soulution 720 Phonostage preamps: Audio Research Reference 2, Lamm Industries LP-2 Deluxe, Audio Tekne TEA-2000 Power amplifiers: Audio Research Reference 610T, MBL 9011, Lamm ML-2, Soulution 700 Analog source: Walker Audio Proscenium Black Diamond record player, AAS Gabriel/ Da Vinci turntable with DaVinci Grandezza and Nobile tonearms Phono cartridges: Air Tight PC-1 Supreme, Clearaudio Goldfinger v2, Koetsu Onyx Platinum, DaVinci Grandezza Digital source: Soulution 740, dCS Scarlatti with U-Clock, ARC Reference CD8 Cable and interconnect: Tara Labs “Zero” Gold interconnect, Tara Labs “Omega” Gold speaker cable, Tara Labs “The One” Cobalt power cords, Synergistic Research Absolute Reference speakers cables and interconnects, Audio Tekne Litz wire cable and interconnect Accessories: Shakti Hallographs (6), A/V Room Services Metu acoustic panels and corner traps, ASC Tube Traps, Symposium Isis equipment stand, Symposium Ultra equipment platforms, Symposium Rollerblocks, Symposium Fat Padz, Walker Prologue Reference equipment stand, Walker Prologue amp stands, Shunyata Research Hydra V-Ray power distributor and Anaconda Helix Alpha/ VX power cables, Tara Labs PM 2 AC Power Screens, Shunyata Research Dark Field Cable Elevators, Walker Valid Points and Resonance Control discs, Winds Arm Load meter, Clearaudio Double Matrix record cleaner, HiFi-Tuning silver/gold fuses Comment on this article on the Forum at avguide.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 121 EQUIPMENT REPORT - Odyssey Audio Khartago Stereo Amplifier the same song, like her great cover of “Invitation to the Blues,” on both amps and be amazed at how similar they make Cole’s voice, Aaron Davis’ powerful piano, David Piltch’s big acoustic bass (admittedly, a bit tauter on the Soulution amps), and the light accents of Dougie Bowne’s drumkit sound in timbre, texture, and dynamic. Even performance details—like the characteristic way Cole drops her voice in pitch to “comment” ironically on lyrics she has just delivered in a sweeter, higher, softer, more childlike voice (as, for instance, in “Little Boy Blue”)—are reproduced clearly by the Khartago, though not as clearly as they are by the Soulution, which practically hands you the script and stage directions from which Cole, who like all fine singers is also an excellent actor, is working. Yeah, the 700 and 710 are slightly, but nonetheless audibly and unmistakably, more neutral, lower in noise and color, and higher in resolution and transparencyto-sources than the Khartago—as well, they should be. (The Soulution amps also, as noted, have better grip in the bass, more clarity and power on top, and better staging.) For a lucky few, these advantages will be decisive. For the rest of us, here is an under-$1000 amp that sounds so much more like a $115,000 amp than any cheap Class AB solid-state amp I know of (and I’ve heard and reviewed a few) that it is downright astonishing. I’m not saying you should run out and buy one of these things instead of a Soulution 710 or 700 if you own or are planning to purchase Magico M5s or Wilson MAXX 3s or Rockport Arraki (although, if you’re pinching pennies on the rest of your system to leverage a pair of pricey speakers, you could do plenty worse than the Khartago). What I am saying is that the Odyssey amp gives you more of the taste of the high-priced spread than I thought possible for $995 (or anywhere near that price). And since the Khartago works into loads as low as 2 ohms, it mates up with virtually anything—not just Magico M5s. But don’t take my word for it. Try it for yourself. Odyssey offers the Khartago (and all its products) with a 30-day, no-questionsasked, money-back return policy. There is no “restocking” fee. If all that isn’t good news, then I’m fresh out of headlines. TAS 122 September 2009 The Absolute Sound JV Chats with Klaus Bunge of Odyssey Audio Tell us about the development of the Khartago. All of the different Odyssey models are based on the same singular design—a design from Symphonic Line, which by itself dates back to 1986. The Khartago is pretty much based on what was then a $4200 Symphonic Line stereo amp, the Stratos monos on an $8400 Symphonic Line mono amp. Both designs have been constantly tweaked and tuned, maturing for over two decades. Time is the real secret to our success here. How do you build your amps? When the boards and the parts are ready, we hand-populate and hand-solder every single board in our shop. Then we go through a five-part QC process, including substantial listening to each and every product. There are no bad apples or fluctuations in manufacturing-quality or parts-quality here. For various reasons, including humanitarian ones, we try to be as U.S.-made as possible. For instance, all of our face- and back-plates are aircraft-aluminum billet, CNC-machined here in Indy. I personally hand-brush all the metal. Then they go to the anodizer, also here in Indy, and finally to the laser engraver, also in Indy. I am very proud of the fact that after twenty years we are still unique. There is not another outfit that has the same factory-direct model with a true high-end design that has matured for 23 years, that has the same price structure as ours, and that offers 100% hand-made-in-the-U.S products. How do you keep up with demand? We have been back-ordered for at least 2–3 weeks since December of 2000. By not having units on the shelves, we essentially build amps to order. This gives me the chance to talk to every single customer, to see what he/she likes and is looking for, and get a detailed list of associated gear and room environs. In that way we are able to customize any amp for the prospective buyer. Not just the biasing, where we adjust the amp somewhat to suit either a bright or dark speaker, but actually customize to exact systems and rooms. How do you do it all at such a low price? When I started Odyssey I was looking to make a living, not a fortune. I honestly wanted to offer absolute bang for the buck with massive performance and massive, heavy, machined cases. Reviews weren’t important to me. I wanted a customer who was so blown away by the quality of what he bought that he couldn’t keep quiet and had to chatter about it nonstop. That was my goal and my business plan, and (thanks in part to the Internet) it worked. For a decade now, word of mouth has given us over 3000 customers. We have sold in excess of 5000 amplifiers. Plus my hopes for happy customers have been met. The loyalty of our guys is truly amazing. Money isn’t everything, after all. I come from a true blue-collar Volkswagen factory-worker background. You know, the first in a large family to get the Abitur (highest high school diploma in the German tripartite system), the first to go to the University, etc. With this background, and being from Germany, social justice and human decency have always been more important to me than making millions. I have three Masters degrees and an unfinished Ph.D.—none of which I used in starting this business. Ah, well.... The Absolute Sound September 2009 123 by J 124 September 2009 The Absolute Sound peak ” Louds er usic eM o Ac a n n iV e im Hannon ustics “Th The Absolute Sound September 2009 125 L arge, full-range, multi-driver loudspeaker systems can be thrilling and a lot of fun, yet in my experience, they frequently suffer from a lack of coherence between at least some of their drivers. My former Infinity Beta and RS1B speaker systems, with their separate woofer towers, generated plenty of goosebumps, yet their lack of coherence ultimately destroyed the illusion of a live performance for me. Modifications to the external crossovers, cabinets, and drivers helped, but not enough to keep me from parting with them. Indeed, getting woofers or subwoofers which plumb the depths to mate seamlessly with smaller quicker drivers is a major design challenge. Full-range electrostatics, as well as some highly regarded two-way dynamic systems, solve the coherence problem at the expense of bottom-end extension and weight, and most limit dynamic output. I’ve typically accepted these trade-offs and voted in favor of coherence over goosebumps. However, as subwoofer advocates can attest, that bottom octave not only gives the performance a solid foundation and dynamic impact, but additional spatial cues which help soundstaging and musical realism. When I heard Vienna Acoustics’ new “The Music” loudspeaker for the first time at CES 2008, I was mightily impressed that here was a full-range, multi-driver speaker system that provided plenty of goosebumps without sacrificing coherence, plus it also had an extraordinarily expansive and deep soundstage. Having lived with The Music for many months, and then again for several more after it returned from an appearance at a trade show, my appreciation for this brilliant loudspeaker has grown on many levels. The Music occupies the uppermost rung in Vienna Acoustics’ new Klimt Series of loudspeakers, named for the Viennese artist, Gustav Klimt. The connection between art and music is intentional, as The Music advances the art of loudspeaker design, while also being quite an artistic statement, in both physical appearance and performance, staying true to “the music” and, in many respects, preserving the illusion of attending a live concert. It is a beautifully finished speaker, with a relatively small footprint that does not dominate the listening or living room, but also breaks new ground for Vienna Acoustics, propelling the company with great velocity into the reference loudspeaker ranks. Its remarkable flat, concentric, Spider-Cone midrange driver with a coincident silk dome tweeter is a stunning technical achievement (see sidebar), providing The Music (and presumably other speakers in the Klimt Series) with an absolutely breathtaking soundstage and the core of a level of coherence difficult to match by any fullrange, multi-driver system. The Music is thrilling, dynamic, eminently musical, and truly full-range, with deep-bass extension and weight, as well as highs that go out to the stratosphere. In my experience, if a transducer can reproduce the human voice coherently over its entire range, from lyric soprano to bass, limitations elsewhere in the frequency spectrum can be more easily tolerated. Full-range electrostatic speakers from SoundLab, Quad, and MartinLogan pass this vocal coherence test with flying colors, and so does The Music—it is very close to “being of one cloth.” What makes The Music different from most fine multidriver systems is that voices come from a single point source in a phase-coherent 126 September 2009 The Absolute Sound time plane that is devoid of a crossover throughout this critical range. The Vienna Acoustics’ flat, concentric midrange driver alone covers an amazing seven octaves of music, which closely approximates the bandwidth of the human voice. It is skillfully coupled with a handcrafted silk dome tweeter at its center that extends beyond 20kHz. This remarkable coincident planar midrange/tweeter array, housed in a separate, enclosed cabinet that Vienna Acoustics calls the “Music Center,” is a major sonic breakthrough. Indeed, these Vienna Acoustics speakers certainly have an engaging, almost irresistible way with both male and female voices. I love to listen to vocal recordings to test loudspeakers, because it’s so easy to detect coherence problems and frequency anomalies. To help aid in this evaluation, I listened to several vocalists, including: Holly Cole on ”I Can See Clearly Now,” Peggy Lee on her signature tune “Fever” from The Best of Peggy Lee [Capitol], Mirella Freni on French and Italian Opera [EMI], Ella Fitzgerald on Let No Man Write My Vienna Acoustics “The Music” Loudspeaker Epitaph [Verve/Classic Records], Nick Drake’s Pink Moon [Universal Japan], James Taylor on the recent Sweet Baby James reissue [Warner Bros.], as well as several operas including Verdi’s Aida [Decca] and Puccini’s La Bohème [ London]. On each and every recording, I noted that the voices were precisely focused and continuous across their respective ranges, without any chestiness or bloat in the upper ranges of male vocals, or excess sibilance on female ones. Better still, voices had a musical realism and natural tonal balance that avoided being either too clinical or too warm. Mirella Freni’s and Ella Fitzgerald’s voices were “to die for,” beautifully portrayed with no stridency even during wide dynamic swings, and both Holly Cole’s and Peggy Lee’s had an engaging openness, clarity, and sense of life. On the Aida recording, both male and female soloists were distinct while still being nicely integrated with the whole, and the layering of massed voices with the full orchestra was stunning. Yet, making the most of its superb coincident midrange/tweeter array doesn’t begin to tell this loudspeaker’s whole story. Many promising hybrid designs have been undone by the mating of a ’stat or some exotic wide-bandwidth driver with dynamic woofers that just can’t keep up with it, impinging on the purity of the midrange and/ or changing the timbre of instruments as the sound moves from one type of driver to another. However, the transition from the deep bass to the midrange in The Music was also quite seamless—far better that I have been able to achieve over decades of trying to match subwoofers with either ’stats or mini-monitors. Paul Tortelier’s cello on the Brahms Double Concerto [EMI/Testament], Ray Brown’s string bass on Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson [Verve], and Joe Mondragon’s bass fiddle on Peggy Lee’s “Fever” were first-rate and eerily realistic, maintaining timbral coherence throughout their ranges (and in the Brahms from the highest notes of the violin to the lowest of the cello) with wonderful transient quickness. Indeed, the overall speed of its bass was matched by the amazing transient speed of The Music throughout its entire range, giving the speaker tremendous rhythmic drive and a sense of “aliveness.” Reaching down even further, the low bass notes on Hans Zimmer’s scores on the soundtrack recordings for Black Hawk Down and Gladiator [Decca], had weight, dynamic punch, and control, producing a spaciousness that was awe-inspiring, while also validating the speaker’s rated 22Hz low-frequency extension. Even more stunning than The Music’s remarkable coherence was its enormous, focused, deep, and layered soundstage with well recorded source material like Miklós Rózsa’s score to Ben Hur [Decca Phase Four], Gil Evans’ Out of the Blue [Impulse/Alto], and Mozart’s Requiem [Deutsche Grammophon/Speakers Corner]. Performers were precisely arrayed across the stage, giving the music a wonderful sense of spaciousness. Instruments like woodwinds floated in space and were stable as they descended the scale and moved back up again. Mass voices had an engaging layered depth that one experiences in a live performance and were literally wall-towall on the Rózsa. With The Music, I was able to “see” the entire stage, from left-toright and front-to-back. This level of soundstaging and imaging performance is what one would predict with a coincident driver array approximating a perfect point source, and The Music’s soundstaging is as good as it gets from the plane of the speakers to the back wall. In contrast to many fine loudspeakers, the soundstage is not truncated at the back of the stage, nor is there a narrow sweet spot where only one person can experience this spectacular imaging. Like other top models featuring coincident driver arrays, most notably from TAD and KEF, The Music accommodates and encourages a broad range of listening positions, like a great concert hall. Soundstaging is even quite respectable while one is standing, which you’re likely to do, as the rhythmic drive and snap of The Music often make listeners want to get up and dance. Another outstanding sonic attribute of The Music was its ability to realistically reproduce the leading edge of transients. Rim-shots, cymbal crashes, strummed guitars, plucked stringed instruments, and double-and-triple tongued brass had lightning quickness without overhang. I felt as if some tympani strikes on power orchestral music might have knocked me down had I been standing and certainly The Absolute Sound September 2009 127 Vienna Acoustics’ Revolutionary Driver— The Ideal Realized? Imagine a dynamic loudspeaker employing a revolutionary flat midrange driver that covers the entire range of the human voice and works seamlessly with a handcrafted, coincident silk dome tweeter without producing any objectionable frequency anomalies. What you’d have is a time-accurate and phase-coherent point source covering the range where most music lives, resulting in a presentation with truth of timbre, an incredibly broad and deep soundstage, and an ultra-wide “sweet zone.” It certainly sounds too good to be true, but Peter Gansterer and his team at Vienna Acoustics have achieved it with their Klimt Series loudspeakers, and the results are stunning! Driver arrays that replace the dust cap of the midrange cone with a tweeter and align the centers of both units coincidently have been around for decades. Perhaps the best known is the Uni-Q tweeter/midrange array from KEF, now in its tenth generation, according to the KEF Web site. Two speakers utilizing coincident driver arrays, the KEF Model 207/2 and TAD Reference One, have been highly praised recently in these pages by AHC, and I have been impressed by their respective performances, along with that of the TAD Compact Reference One Monitor, at trade-shows. Along with Vienna Acoustics’ Klimt series, these concentric-array speakers share a lot of compelling sonic attributes, most notably in projecting an expansive soundstage with subtle spatial cues across a wide listening area, in time alignment, in enhanced coherence, and in better matching of directivity, when compared to their more traditional, “separated” driver counterparts. The heart of Vienna Acoustics’ remarkable The Music loudspeaker is a patented 7" flat concentric midrange driver that is both an engineering and sonic breakthrough. This is not just marketing speak, but a major achievement, aided by advances in materials science and the skillful application of computerized Finite Element Analysis (a numerical modeling technique using calculus to obtain approximate solutions to vibration systems, and typically used to solve complex elasticity and structural-analysis problems). Combined with its first-order crossover, for greater phase coherency, this flat midrange with coincident tweeter is housed in a separate sealed enclosure, which not only helps to extend the midrange driver’s range but completely decouples it from the bass cabinet to preserve clarity and natural musical timbre. Moreover, it can be swiveled both horizontally and vertically via an ingenious pivoting mechanism, allowing minute adjustments for both rake and toe-in. The ability to aim this top cabinet separately from its lower one, housing three nine-inch bass drivers and a Murata super-tweeter, gives The Music a lot 128 September September 2009 2009 The TheAbsolute AbsoluteSound Sound of flexibility, helping to lock-in the soundstage and achieve better tonal balance and coherence. While mounting a tweeter coincidently within the midrange driver produces numerous sonic benefits, it does present other design problems that need to be overcome. With the tweeter placed at the throat of the cone, time alignment suffers and horn loading results, which can produce “cupped-hands” highs or squawks. Another problem is that the addition of the tweeter to the midrange driver increases its overall mass, which can affect transient quickness. Over time, designers of coincident arrays have used lighter materials for both the midrange and tweeter drivers; they have also shortened the depth of the midrange cone and flattened its surround. However, unless the midrange driver is completely flat, phase distortion occurs, as the output of the cone pumps the highs unevenly at the listener, resulting in a somewhat ragged on-axis frequency response. While a crossover can correct the irregularities in frequency response, it also alters the character and natural launch of the sound, thus affecting the purity of the midrange. So why haven’t designers of coincident midrange/ tweeter arrays just flattened out the midrange driver to eliminate these somewhat deleterious cone effects? The primary reason is that the conical shape of most conventional drivers provides the stiffness needed to generate sufficient output and frequency response; flat drivers are, by comparison, too soft and pliable. The cone also acts as a wave-guide for the coincident tweeter. However, Peter Gansterer saw the design challenges associated with a flat midrange “cone” as opportunities. Indeed, some would suggest that he has been evolving his reinforced-cone driver technology towards this goal since the introduction of his first Musi speaker in 1991. To stiffen its flat midrange driver, he used FEA to determine where to place its Spider-Cone web—essentially a lightweight net to reinforce the driver and increase its stiffness. He also employed Vienna Acoustics’ proprietary X3P “self-quieting” driver material, which provides soft inner damping but adds glass fibers in the molding process, for even more rigidity without increased mass. Adding a “self-quieting” silk dome coincident tweeter ensured that acoustic energy would be effectively dissipated across the entire surface of the array. Voilà, problems solved! Well, not so fast. Peter and his team spent several years honing at least five successive pre-production models trying to get everything right, even changing seemingly small related materials elements like glues to improve the sound. With such a sophisticated driver, there were also considerable production problems Vienna Acoustics “The Music” Loudspeaker that had to be solved, but eventually these were too overcome, and the flat midrange/tweeter array became a reality. Because of the extended lowfrequency response achieved with the flat midrange unit, Gansterer was able to use a relatively low crossover point (approximately 100Hz) between it and the three new 9" Spider-Cone woofers. Thus, he was also able to avoid a crossover throughout the entire practical range of the human voice. Like the flat midrange driver (sans some glass), these low mass, but incredibly stiff, bass drivers are composed of a similar, yet stronger, X3P material, and benefit from a similar lightweight reinforcing web, developed and positioned on the underside of the drivers using FEA. While all three woofers work in parallel, the first has its own chamber within the bass cabinet, and its primary job is to match the performance of the flat midrange driver. The other two woofers, which are ported out the back of the speaker, add bass weight and reach down below the 20Hz range. This design approach—utilizing a wide bandwidth, flat midrange/coincident tweeter array, first-order crossovers, Spider-Cone technology, and very similar low-mass, self-quieting driver materials—helps give The Music its outstanding coherence, soundstaging, clarity, transient quickness, and timbral accuracy. Add to this a Murata supertweeter, and The Music enjoys seemingly unlimited high-frequency extension and a more life-like presence. JH provided plenty of goosebumps. On the Gill Evans recording, the three trombones had that initial “ping,” “blat,” and “spit” that made them feel as if they were in the room. In addition to its reference-quality soundstaging and superb coherence and transient quickness, The Music delivered the sonic goods in many other areas. It extracted micro-fine layers of inner detail, like Martha Argerich’s fingernails clicking on the ivories, Oscar Peterson talking to himself and singing along while playing, audience whispers on live recordings, and Xuefei Yang’s finger movements on the neck of her classical guitar. Its ability to accurately replicate the natural timbre of instruments and voices was also uncanny. This Vienna Acoustics flagship was equally at home with all types of music, from small-scale, intimate works to power orchestral, big band jazz music, and electronica. It convincingly conveyed the weight, dynamic range, tonal balance and power of the piano, as well as its ability to seduce with a gorgeous singing tone. The formidable strengths of this remarkable speaker were even more evident when compared to a live performance. During the review period, I had the considerable good fortune to be given tickets to the best seats in the house at a San Francisco Symphony performance of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas, arguably this country’s greatest conductor today. I listened to the famous Solti Decca recording on The Music, both prior to and right after the concert, and subsequently using more powerful electronics in an even larger listening room. Whereas the live performance was a musical “peak experience,” the speakers were able to replicate so many of the attributes of the live performance that I was shocked—most notably the natural timbre of instruments and voices, along with the The Music is priced in an increasingly competitive segment of the market, yet it also compares favorably with reference speakers costing far more width, depth, and height of the entire soundstage. The Music accurately reproduced the top end shimmer of the violins, along with their “feathery” delicacy and bite. It handled all the complex interactions among choruses, orchestra, and soloists without getting confused. The mallet strikes against the tympani were well preserved and nearly as thrilling as in life. The soprano soloist and the piccolo cut through the mass of performers in the recording, much as they did in the live performance. While the speakers could hardly be expected to move the amount of air these hundreds of voices and instruments generated during the live performance, particularly the pressure one feels against the breastbone on fortissimos, The Music conveyed the large dynamic swings of the Symphony of a Thousand (well, in this case, about 400) much better than I expected. In the larger listening room, with far beefier amplifiers, the gap between the recorded and live performance was closed still further, most notably improving the sense of scale, drama, and ease, as well as adding a cushion of air behind the massed strings. As in the live performance, the sound through The Music was big, bold, dynamic, and supremely musical, with plenty of goosebump moments, as when the sudden chime-strikes sent shivers down my spine. Given its superlative performance across the board, it was difficult to find fault with The Music. This speaker was like a chameleon—minor flaws I thought were in The Music were ameliorated by changes in electronics, listening room, or recordings. Although it was quite revealing, and did not mask problems elsewhere in the system, The Music sounded marvelous with a wide variety of recordings, not just a treasured few. Admittedly, I was aware of more surface noise on some of my more well-worn analog recordings, but I also heard a lot more of what was buried deep in their groves. With its Murata super-tweeter, The Music has seemingly unlimited upperend extension and air but also more lifelike presence. It is less warm than what The Absolute Sound September 2009 129 Vienna Acoustics “The Music” Loudspeaker 130 September 2009 The Absolute Sound SPECS & PRICING Type: 3-way loudspeaker system employing integrated sub-woofers plus super-tweeter Frequency Response: 22Hz—100kHz Sensitivity: 91 dB Impedance: 4 ohms Power Requirement: 50W minimum, 500W maximum Driver Complement: One midrange/treble coincident driver (7" Vienna Acoustic Flat-Spider-Cone with 1" vented neodymium-magnet silk dome); one Murata 0.5" super-tweeter; three 9" Vienna Acoustics spidercone bass drivers Dimensions: 10.75" x 50.98" x 24.80" Weight: 180 lbs. each Price: $27,000 IMPORTER INFORMATION SUMIKO 2431 Fifth Street Berkeley, California 94710 (510) 234-0182 sumikoaudio.net Associated Equipment Clearaudio Anniversary turntable with Helius Ruby tonearm and Benz Ebony H cartridge; Pro-Ject Perspex with Sumiko Celebration II cartridge; ARC PH7 phonostage and REF 3 preamplifier; MFA Venusian preamp (Frankland modified); Pathos INPOL2 and PrimaLuna DiaLogue Two integrated amplifiers; Pass Labs X600 amplifiers; Pathos Endorphin CD player; REL Studio III subwoofer; Nordost Valhalla, Audioquest King Cobra, Virtual Dynamics and Goertz cables; etc. Comment on this article on the Forum at avguide.com might be characterized as Vienna Acoustics’ house sound, but its neutral tonal balance is more like the real thing. Lastly, while the speakers seemed to just disappear, I was occasionally reminded I was listening to a box enclosure. A few caveats are also in order. With The Music’s ingenious dual-pivoting mechanism for its top enclosure, you can really lock in the soundstage and achieve a neutral tonal balance. However, don’t think you can plop this loudspeaker down where you’ve placed others in your listening room and extract all the performance this loudspeaker is capable of producing. A dealer trained in Sumiko’s technique of loudspeaker placement, where the bass from the left speaker is optimized first, is invaluable here. In my listening room, the speakers were pulled farther forward and apart than what one would expect using the “rule of thirds.” The top modules were pointed right at my ears, whereas the bottom cabinet, housing the woofers and Murata super-tweeter, were directed at my shoulders. Also, don’t judge these speakers until the flat midrange driver with its coincident soft dome tweeter has had considerable time to break in. Until then it will sound a bit too thin with a slight plastic coloration in the upper midrange, but given time to settle down, The Music begins to bloom. With its relatively high sensitivity (91dB) and 4-ohm impedance, the system can be powered to great effect by lower-powered amplifiers. I used the stellar 45-watt per channel Pathos Inpol2 integrated amplifier for most of my listening, and it was a wonderful match. Certainly, in a room larger than my 22' by 16' space, I’d go for more amplifier power. Driven by the Pass Labs X600 amplifiers in a big room, the speakers were really able to breathe, the soundstage was even more expansive, and the sense of scale and dynamic range increased. The Music is priced in an increasingly competitive segment of the market, yet it also compares favorably with reference speakers costing far more. If you feel you should have to spend more on a reference speaker, I might suggest adding a REL Studio III subwoofer (with a cross-over point at 22Hz so you don’t impinge on The Music’s coherence) for even more concussive impact and a greater sense of the hall from the plane of the speakers to the listening position. Given how musically satisfying The Music is by itself, this might appear to be wretched excess, but the overall performance of this Vienna Acoustics/REL combo is even more amazing. Vienna Acoustics’ The Music loudspeaker system is aptly named, because it is so true to the music. With its extended, flat midrange driver with coincident tweeter, it pushes the performance envelope on multiple fronts. Here’s a thrilling full-range loudspeaker of reference quality that supplies plenty of goosebumps, but also has ’stat-like coherence, superb time and phase accuracy, and breathtaking soundstaging. It is an accurate, yet musical speaker with fast transients, precise layered imaging, and articulate, extended bass. You may have noted that I frequently used the phrase, “just like in a live performance,” when describing the sonic prowess of this Vienna Acoustics flagship loudspeaker. And that’s just it. The Music compares surprisingly well to a live performance, and that’s very high praise. TAS The Absolute Sound September 2009 131 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS I n this edition of Editor’s Choice, I am up to something different. First, I am listing the reference equipment I use that I consider good enough to be a reference in anyone’s system. Many of these components you’ve seen mentioned in past Workshops (for example, the Magneplanar 20.1s), and so some of the comments on the long-standing gear will be brief. I have omitted equipment we keep around as backup, for example, the remarkable Tom Evans Groove phonostage, solid-state and worthy of inclusion here, and some of the cabling, AC cords, and other exotica that I will deal with later. Going a bit further, I have expanded on the accessories, which can, in themselves, make or break a high-end assemblage. And in a separate category, I am listing the components that are being evaluated as this issue went to press. Some may not make the cut. The list is not conclusive. I have kept a couple of secrets, including several that have turned my head around and caused re-assessments of the standing references—there are wonders afoot out there. Cartridges & Arms Clearaudio Goldfinger Version Two moving-coil cartridge. I have come to see that there is more to this cartridge than I suspected, as you will learn in the next issue. Let’s just say, for now, it is less colored and more revealing (in the best sense) than I thought originally. [Golden Ears, HP’s Workshop, Issue 182.] Price: $10,000. musicalsurroundings.com to the absolute. Beautifully built and worth its price, especially because it gives you two other recording curves in addition to the standard American RIAA— curves that will be a revelation on some European issues, and early Columbia discs in the U.S. You haven’t heard Bernstein and Bruno Walter until you hear their recordings through the Columbia setting on the Zanden. [See Review, Issue 184.] Price: $19,625. zanden-usa.com Miyabi Lab/47 Black. The old reliable. Superior groove tracing and first-class sonic reproduction. Be careful though about the arm in which you mount it. With some combinations, its solid bottom-octave performance can become dramatically emphatic (some do like it that way). Best used with the Triplanar VII pickup arm. Price: $4400. www.sakurasystems.com. Triplanar VII Price: $4750. triplanar.com Phonostages Zanden Model 1200. Dynamically alive, and faithful McIntosh 2300. I’ve included this because of the excellence of this full-feature preamplifier’s moving-coil and moving-magnet phonostages. [Note price information below.] Turntables and Turntable Systems Clearaudio Statement with Statement TT-1 StraightLine tracking arm and Goldfinger Version Two moving-coil cartridge. If ever there were a state-ofthe-art turntable, this be it. [See Golden Ears, HP’s Workshop, Issue 183.] Price: $150,000. musicalsurroundings.com 132 September 2009 The Absolute Sound VPI The Classic with JMW 10.5i Memorial Arm. [See Golden Ears, HP’s Workshop. Issue 193.] Price: $2500. (Additional features can drive the price up, e.g., the stainless-steel version of the 10.5i, which is sonically superior to the standard issue: $200 more.) vpiindustries.com CD Players Edge Reference Signature 1.1 battery-operated CD player. Review in progress. I’ve listened enough to this player to say that maybe you need isolation from the AC power lines to get the best sound out of the digital medium. Price: $15,000. edge-electronics.com Meitner TSD deck and DAC-2. Designer Ed Meitner says he has removed all jitter from CD playback, and since jitter remains the yet unconquered and primary digital distortion, on this unit you’ll hear the highs with a decided difference, not to mention the rest of the frequency spectrum. [See Golden Ears, HP’s Workshop, Issue 193.] Price: TSD drive, $ll,000; DAC-2 converter, $9599. emmlabs.com Miyabi Pi/Tracer player. Improved. (See reviews, HP’s Workshop, Issue 178; of the original, Issue 164.) Cranky and klutzy in operation, but a sweetheart in sound, especially in the difficult top octaves. Price: $28,000 (with one power supply, $2000 more with the extra one). sakurasystems.com Preamplifiers McIntosh 2300. Given the craftsmanship of its design and finish, its combination of a linestage, moving-magnet and moving-coil phonostages, and the sound, this is a best buy. Period. [See Golden Ears, HP’s workshop. Issue 193.] Price: $6000. mcintoshlabs.com Linestages conrad-johnson ART III. The Anniversary Reference Triode design was a limited edition product from the company. It has been, I am informed to my sorrow (for all of you who may not get to hear its tubed The Absolute Sound September 2009 133 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS wonders), discontinued. I would say it is well worth searching out on today’s lively used-gear market. Not only is it solid in construction, but in the time it has been here, it has worked flawlessly, and about how many tubed products can you say that? [See Review, Issue 173.] Price: $25,000. Owners of the first two generations of the ART may have factory upgrades to the III level. conrad-johnson.com Basic Amplifiers McIntosh 2301. Review in progress. 300-watt monoblocks, with eight KT-88 tubes per side, and the legendary Mc transformers, and, of course, built with a vengeance, so great is the attention to detail. They sure don’t sound like anyone else’s tubed electronics. [See Golden Ears, HP’s Workshop. Issue 193.] Price: $22,000 the pair. mcintoshlabs.com Bryston 28B. The best- sounding transistorized amp from Bryston ever, and with 1000 watts per channel, dynamic headroom to spare, not to mention considerable neutrality and little character of its own. [See Review, Issue 189.] Price: $16,000 the pair. bryston.com Burmester 911 Mk III. If it’s the last word in uncolored high-definition solid-state amplification you want, this Burmester, which can also be used as a monoblock with a simple flick of the switch, is among the world’s best. So colorless and free of any “character,” it is hard to fault. Makes a superb bass amp as well. Price: $29,995. burmester.de Edge GAV-65 multichannel amplifier. Used in HP’s multichannel 5.1 SACD playback system with 134 September 2009 The Absolute Sound six 500-watt modules. Also available in 250- and 1000-watt (!) modules. Price: $14,970. edgeamps.com. Price: $8000, basic finishes (red-cherry & American maple); others more expensive. reference3a.com. Speaker Systems Scaena 1.4/v.2. A classic. As Magneplanar 20.1. it happens, a quite recent and major improvement in the Room 3 reference system has shown that the Scaenas are capable of even greater retrieval of subtleties than I had thought. [See review, Issue 192. Golden Ears, HP’s Workshop, Issue 193.] Price: $12.500 the pair. magnepan.com Price: $99,600. scaena.com Reference 3a Grand Veena–U (as in upgraded). A subtle yet audible improvement over the speakers I reviewed in Issue 184. The originals were an artistic triumph, letting virtually all of the music through intact, and with great coherence. That coherence now borders on the sublime. Updated review in progress. In a class by itself. Interconnects and speaker wires Nordost Odin. A triumph, and very much audibly better than the company’s vaunted Valhallas. (Updated look in progress). Prices: Interconnects: $14,000, first meter the pair; $2000 each additional half-meter pair (keep in mind they don’t sell halfmeters all by themselves). Speaker cables: $19,999, first meter pair, $3000 each additional half-meter pair. nordost.com Accessories The Elations are a decided improvement over the earlier Emotions, which were more colored. The Elations are also extended at both frequency extremes, though in the vital and all important midrange, the Emotions were true to the music, and given the stratospheric pricing of their nearest competition (guess who?), a best buy. The Elations are sweeter, in the sense that music is, and I’d say they are on the same level as the Nordost Valhallas, perhaps better for the music lover. The Valhallas are closer in character to a great transistor amp, while the Elations are more like an airy wide-bandwidth, low-distortion tube amp. Each of these accessories is, in my estimation, as important a part of a good system as any of the components listed above—if not, in some cases, more so. Each will make a quite audible improvement in any high-resolution system. Briefly here, I will try to explain how they affect the sound. Prices begin at: $6000 the first meter for interconnects, $1200 each additional; $6600 first meter for speaker cables, $500 each additional. kubala-sosna.com Audience aR-12T power conditioner. It is, sonically, like the difference between a regular DVD and a high-definition one, like the best Blu-rays or any of the Toshiba HDs, so great is the increase in clarity. The T stands for the Teflon caps that lifted the regular Audience conditioner into the realm of the rare. [See review, Issue 186; also Golden Ears, HP’s Workshop. Issue 182.] Price: $8000. audience-av.com Stillpoint Spider Component Stand revised. Place this sort of spread-eagled-like device of double bars under any amp and you’re going to hear an extension of the top octaves and a significant increase in the linearity, purity, and articulation of the midbass and lower lows. This is a newer version of the first Spider, and to these ears, audibly better. Have also had a brief listen to the company’s isolation platforms and found my jaw nearly unhinged, so great was the overall improvement. Price: $995 (four-bars edition). stillpoints.usa L’Art du son CD cleaner. I’ve mentioned this many a time in the past. All CDs will benefit from its use. I believe the laser light reading the grooves smears a bit when confronted with a regular CD (which usually has far from immaculately clean surfaces). I think the use of a CD cleaner is indispensable. L’Art is not inexpensive. Its competitors, the Clarity and the Optrix, are far more reasonable in price, but they sound a bit brighter and more hi-fi-ish than the musically smooth L’Art. [See review, Issue 154.] Price: $45 (for 750 ml). eliteavdist.com VPI HW-27 Typhoon recordcleaning machine. If you don’t want to go for the Clearaudio Double Matrix, which can clean both sides of a record at once (it is not, in my opinion, as well-built as most Clearaudio products, though it does create a cleaner sound than any other such device in my experience and costs a bunch, bunch, bunch), then the less-expensive VPI will do the job quite nicely, thank you. (You can always give the disc an extra cleaning if you’re compulsive.) Price: $2000. vpiindustries.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 135 TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS Kubala-Sosna Elation 136 September 2009 The Absolute Sound TAS 2009 EDITORS’ CHOICE AWARDS Under Evaluation T hese are among the more promising components that I now have at hand. That does not mean that I will be reviewing all of them, only the best or most striking of the bunch. A word of explanation is in order here. Some quite high-priced gear has come through these doors in recent months, and did not strike me as being exceptional, particularly in relation to cost. What I am looking for at any price level is a component with outstandingly musical qualities, reflecting honorably on the absolute. (You may note the exceptional VPI table, The Classic, that company’s best in more than one aspect and, at the price, a steal.) And so, to wit: Soundsmith Sussurro movingiron phonograph cartridge. It’s been years since I’ve taken a serious listen to the higher-output varieties of moving-magnet cartridges. At first listen, the Sussurro sounds likes a moving-coil design. Thus I am impressed, so impressed that I’ve ordered some other of the higher-output cartridges to see if, given technological advances, they are worth a further look. (FYI: The McIntosh 2300 preamplifier has a moving-magnet input stage, which includes adjustable capacitance, a necessity to cartridges of this sort.) Aesthetix Callisto and Io linestage and phonostage. (with two power supplies for each unit). A significant improvement over the earlier units, and far quieter. Much more to come on these within a few issues. Edge Signature Reference 1.1 (battery-operated) linestage. Promising, promising. But I have withheld judgment since, as it turned out, our unit was damaged in shipment. (That did not interfere with its sonic performance, but rather its mechanical operation.) Zanden 3000 linestage. Being broken in at present. conrad-johnson TEA1 phonostage. This unit comes in three versions. The one I have sells for $7000. There is also a $10,000 and a $5000 version of this basic design. I will, in the review, get to the differences. (I hope that the 100-hour break-in my unit required is not true of future production runs.) Ortofon PW moving-coil cartridge. Not yet mounted. Nordost Quantum. For the moment, and to whet your curiosity, let’s call it the mystery box. You may write to me at hpsaudiomall@ aol.com subscribe now. In order to ensure prompt arrival of your copy of hi-fi+, it is safest to take out a subscription. This lasts for a year (8 issues) and means that your magazine is delivered to your doorstep immediately it is published. No more fruitless journeys in search of audio enlightenment, and no more worries about missing an issue. visit our website: www.hifiplus.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 137 Music New Blues for the 21st Century: Will a Queen Arise? David McGee Bessie Smith, the original Queen of the Blues As this piece was being written came the sad news of Koko Taylor’s death in Chicago. Though beset by illness in her later years, The Queen of the Blues had rebounded in 2007 to release the most powerful album of her distinguished career, Old School, the music every bit as defiant and resolute as the album title. Per Thomas à Kempis, “How quickly the glory of the world passes away.” Who now, then, to assume the Queen’s vacated throne? There’s gonna be an argument, likely some filibustering as well, but the crown is probably Susan Tedeschi’s for the taking. However, Tedeschi’s emergence and success in 1995 has inspired a new generation of blues women, three in particular who seem poised to assume the throne one day, sooner, maybe, than later: flame-tressed Liz Mandeville (who has recorded three albums as Liz Mandeville Greeson, returning to her given name on her latest, Red Top), Christine Santelli (represented here by her new long player, Any Better Time), and the Blues Foundation’s 2008 Best New Artist Debut honoree, Gina Sicilia (cited for her independently released debut, Allow Me To Confess, now with a new CD out, Hey Sugar). Whether any of these artists are ever anointed as blues royalty, their approaches to the genre 138 September 2009 The Absolute Sound may well augur the appearance of a new kind of blues artist for the 21st Century, one steeped in blues but embracing country and folk as essential elements of their aesthetic. They also represent a new model for the blues artist, or to put a fine point on it, a new model for the rock press to mull over, because they are female and do not conform to the highbrow mainstream’s image of the blues artist as quintessentially poor, black, uneducated, bedeviled, and male. These women hail from middle-class families, are college grads (Mandeville has a BA in Music from Columbia College in Chicago; Sicilia a BA in journalism from Temple University; Santelli a BS in psychology and a Master’s in Education from the State University of New York at Plattsburgh), and don’t seem especially bedeviled, although their songs do reveal them to be, when cut, bleeders of the first rank. Mandeville, who resides in Koko’s home base of Chicago, embraces old school blues with a rock edge, courtesy of her consummate, tasty guitar work lending a brittle or, as the occasion demands, lyrical edge to her songs, and (also Koko-style) can really take it out on a man who’s done her wrong (check out her seething “Dog No More” for proof positive) or, conversely, and in no uncertain terms, invite a good man to partake of unbound pleasures (Red Top includes a salacious double entendre beauty called “Spanky Butt,” in which she outright coos to be whupped on her backside). She uses a horn section at times, a B3, congas, and sings in a reedy, emotive alto, not unlike the young Koko, in fact. Over the course of four albums she’s also become a pretty good producer, too, as evidenced by Red Top’s bright, sizzling sound, which has the roomy fire of a live recording but the sonic depth of a good studio effort, which it is. But Mandeville, Santelli, and Sicilia share the trait of having their musical identities shaped by more than urban and/or rural blues. All born in the last half of the 20th Century (in Sicilia’s case, the last half of the last half), the wide range of roots music they’ve absorbed has informed their blues, much as the early rock ’n’ rollers created something fresh out of country, blues, and gospel. What could be said of Messrs. Berry, Perkins, Presley, et al., is surely true of Mlles. Mandeville, Santelli and Sicilia. Consider: “In high school, my friends were all into the neo-folk thing,” Mandeville says in her online bio. “We’d get together and jam on Lightnin Hopkins, Lead Belly, Leonard Cohen; the first song I learned to play was Mississippi John Hurt’s ‘Sugar Babe.’ I didn’t realize there was a difference between folk and blues until I saw Luther Allison play in a little town in Wisconsin where I was studying theater and film at a state college.” “I started getting into the blues side of things when I was 12,” Santelli says. “Bessie Smith was the first thing I ever listened to. Then I got into Etta James, I loved her voice, Koko Taylor, Brownie McGhee, John Lee Hooker—but then I gravitated to Bob Dylan, folk artists from the 60s. Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen. So I started out doing folk kind of stuff, then I went into electric blues in college, then found my way back to the acoustic songwriting later on.” Sicilia, at 24 the youngest of the triumvirate, and a professional performer for all of about two years now, honed her considerable vocal chops—and those are true wonders of nature in all their sturdy, big-voiced bravado and affecting, aching sensitivity—mostly in her bedroom, singing along in her high school years to and emulating Aretha Franklin, first and foremost, as well as “Etta James and a lot of great female singers—I tried to listen to every kind of music and tried to get better.” She certainly got better—a lot better from 2007 to 2009, in fact. Hey Sugar will knock your socks off with Sicilia’s bold belting of big band blues and tear-stained immersions in raw country. She wrote one beautiful, yearning, country hearttugger for the album, “What the Moon Couldn’t Do,” but her cover of Dolly Parton’s career-making “Coat of Many Colors” is nothing short of astonishing in the singer’s naked emotional vulnerability. She makes a personal statement of this legendary tune, which is rather like taking “I Walk the Line” away from Johnny Cash. Literate and rootsy, Santelli’s songs are more in the vein of short stories in their vivid third-person tales of various misfits, heartbreakers, and bad moons rising. Her hoarse, Joplinesque yawp is dramatically gripping, and she works her magic over a tight, basic, guitar-driven band but adds a big sky flavor to the music with accordions, celeste, pump organ, B3, pedal steel, violin—strings and keys that keep the music earthy and rural-flavored. On Any Better Time the songs betray her immersion not only in blues (“Good Day For a Hangin’”) but also in country (the album-ending hoedown, “On the Farm”), acoustic folk (the winsome “Brown Haired Girl”) and even 60s-style pop (“Butterfly”). Sicilia and Santelli share both a label (Vizztone) and a producer, Dave Gross. The former represents a big step up from the DIY route they had traveled; the latter crafts for both artists robust sonic palettes, more boisterous and rowdy in Sicilia’s case, more spare and atmospheric in Santelli’s, and keeps the mix hot and the instruments and voices in admirable balance, especially during quieter moments. Might a queen rise from this stable? Perhaps. What’s certain to ensue is more music of a higher caliber and broader vision, blues newly defined and refined for the 21st century by artists to the style born, and proudly female to boot. TAS Rock Music Reviews Recording of the Issue Music Sonics Richard Thompson: Walking on a Wire (1968–2009). Shout!Factory 11087 (four CDs). As the supporting cast shifts around Richard Thompson through the chronologically arranged four CDs of this new career-spanning anthology, the listener hears the central protagonist develop into one of the most fully realized artists from the baby-boom era. After 71 tracks—starting from the first album by the seminal British folk-rock band Fairport Convention and finishing with 2007’s brilliant Sweet Warrior—the case for Thompson as a peerless triple-threat musician (scorching guitarist, refined song craftsman, emotionally engaging singer) has been irrefutably established. Staunch fans of the 60-year-old London-born Thompson need little convincing on those scores; and few of them may need to add this compendium to their collections. But by plotting a steady course through Thompson’s catalog of releases, Walking on a Wire provides a superb introductory overview to those only familiar with a few “big” songs (“1952 Vincent Black Lighting,” “Wall of Death”) and cover versions by Bonnie Raitt, R.E.M., et al. More initiate-friendly than 1993’s threeCD Watching the Dark and 2007’s five-CD RT: The Life and Music of Richard Thompson, this compilation breaks little new ground. But it boasts a smooth flow and puts a magnifying glass to the transitions and connections between periods and projects. Hearing Fairport Convention’s “Sloth” lead into “Roll Over Vaughn Williams,” and “The Angels Took My Racehorse 140 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Away” segue into “The Great Valerio” (with then-wife Linda Thompson) illuminates the evolutionary quicksteps of Thompson’s early career. A handful of live tracks (“Beat the Retreat,” “From Galway to Graceland,” “Persuasion” [with son Teddy Thompson], “Hard on Me,” The Who’s “A Legal Matter,” etc.) show off Thompson’s jaw-dropping acoustic and electric solos that tend to be more economically compressed in the studio. A few off-mainstream additions (including the main title theme from the documentary Grizzly Man and three songs from the overlooked factory-lifethemed Industry CD with bassist Danny Thompson) exhibit Thompson’s breadth as a composer. And a 60-page booklet, with new notes by biographer Patrick Humphries, fleshes out the context. Notably untapped are recordings with the Bunch (1972), French Frith Kaiser Thompson (1987, 1990), the GPs (1991), Philip Pickett (1998), and 2005’s Front Parlour Ballads, but it’s hard to fault the decision to highlight Thompson’s greatest albums: the Richard and Linda classics I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight and Shoot Out the Lights and the solo-era Rumour and Sigh and Mirror Blue. Thompson writes and sings predominantly about love—less like a classic confessional singer-songwriter than a playwright who creates characters and scenes through which to probe tragicomic, bittersweet, and perverse nuances of romance. The results, influenced by everything from Scottish ballads and Fats Waller to Buddy Holly and Jerry Lee Lewis, include songs that hold up to the best in folk and rock of the past 50 years: “Dimming of the Day,” “A Heart Needs a Home,” “Shoot Out the Lights,” “Tear Stained Letter,” “She Twists the Knife Again,” “Valerie,” “Waltzing’s for Dreamers,” “Beeswing.” The sonics on Walking on a Wire vary but steadily improve over the course of the set, reflecting technological advances and Thompson’s ability to work with the later producers to achieve a more realistic, detailed, and airier sound in the studio. Music Sonics Wilco: Wilco (The Album). Nonesuch 516608. A most stunning moment on Wilco (The Album) comes just four cuts in as the Chicago sextet launches into the pulsating, Krautrock horror show of “Bull Black Nova.” “Blood in the sink/Blood in the trunk,” a guilt-ravaged Jeff Tweedy wails over incessant, stabbing synths and a typhoon of distorted guitar. “This can’t be undone/Can’t be outrun.” This is the kind of thrill expected when Tweedy revamped Wilco’s lineup back in 2004, bringing on the likes of guitar virtuoso Nels Cline. But though the crew quickly evolved into a live monster (documented on the excellent concert album Kicking Television), it proved unable to translate that energy to the studio on 2007’s pretty-but-sleepy Sky Blue Sky. Unfortunately, “Bull Black Nova” turns out to be the oddball on an album populated by breezy, lovelorn ballads. Yes, the songcraft remains impeccable— tunes like “One Wing,” “Everlasting” and “You and I” are almost achingly gorgeous—and the sonics are impressive throughout (dig the sighs of pedal-steel haunting “Deeper Down”), but there’s a lingering sense we’ve already heard much of this before. The same can’t be said of the joyously goofy “Wilco (The Song),” three minutes of feel-good guitar and sunny, self-help sloganeering: “Wilco will love you, baby.” Andy Downing Derk Richardson Further Listening: Richard Thompson: Live from Austin TX; Various: Beat the Retreat: Songs by Richard Thompson Further Listening: Andrew Bird: Noble Beast; Neu!: Neu! Absolute knowledge. Each issue of The Absolute Sound is packed with expert recommendations, in-depth equipment reviews, product comparisons, and advice for enjoying your home-entertainment system. Whether you’re looking for a new CD player, integrated amplifier, turntable, preamplifier, power amplifier, or speakers, our experts uncover the best products for the money in every price range! $24 for 1 year (10 issues) Send me a subscription to The Absolute Sound where I’ll get all of the above and I’ll receive 10 issues for $24–and save $69.90 (64%) off the cover price. • Offer good in US only Savings based on annual cover price of $93.90. • For Canada US$25 (includes GST). • Foreign US$60. Prepaid in US finds only. PAYMENT ENCLOSED CHARGE MY VISA BILL ME MC AMEX CARD NO. SIGNATURE NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP EMAIL Mail your order to: The Absolute Sound, PO BOX 629, Mt Morris, IL 61054 Or call 1-386-246-0144. (815)-734-5833 (outside the US) EXP Rock Music Reviews Music Sonics Music Sonics Music Sonics Rhonda Vincent: Destination Life. Rounder 0623. Jennifer Warnes: The Hunter. Cisco 7063 (LP). Where to begin enumerating the many virtues of Rhonda Vincent’s anxiously awaited new album? The songwriting is strictly top shelf, and shows Vincent herself growing as a writer, too, especially on the album-opening lover’s lament, “Last Time Loving You”—a winsome reflection curiously done at a barnburning pace, which provides a splendid introductory exhibit of transcendent banjo playing by Aaron McDaris, late of the Grascals, new to Vincent’s Rage quartet. Vincent’s singing is arguably better than ever, especially in the Alison Krausslike vulnerability she summons in the backwoods country strains of Pete Goble’s loping tearjerker, “I Can Make Him Whisper I Love You.” (Again, McDaris’s banjo playing, restrained and evocative, is a marvel.) With McDaris on board, the Rage has raised its own high standard, fashioning stimulating to-and-fro dialogues on the fast-paced tunes, offering tight ensemble work and keening vocal harmonies on the aching ballads. Vincent goes for the vivid sound she favors on stage, with warm voices and close-miked instruments sharing equal ground in the soundscape, but all well defined and engaged in a spirited conversation throughout the dozen cuts. As both a musical and a human experience, Destination Life is nothing short of enthralling. DM Sometimes artists are typecast by their own success. For songbird Jennifer Warnes, that success arrived as a pair of mid1980’s duets—the mega-hits “Up Where We Belong” with Joe Cocker and “(I’ve Had) The Time of My Life” with Bill Medley. Whether it was that association or Warnes’ famous independent streak, she never attained more than an insider’s popularity while other, lesser singers prospered. The Hunter was Warnes’ neglected follow-up to her acclaimed 1986 release Famous Blue Raincoat. A superbly balanced collection of urban tales of love, loss, and longing, songs like “Way Down Deep,” Donald Fagin’s “Big Noise, New York” (he sings backup), and the sexy, predatory vibe of the title track still click, aptly abetted by such crack studio musicians as drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, percussionists Lenny Castro and Roscoe Beck, and bassist Jorge Calderson. Remastered by Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering, the sonics are luscious. Warnes has always had an audiophile’s ear and was hands-on with this effort—one of the last from now-defunct Cisco Records. It soars effortlessly, restoring warmth and delicacy, and easily besting the earth-bound but otherwise excellent CD. It’s an example of both an artist in full charge of her powers, and analog at its very best. Neil Gader Singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester has mellowed since the early 70s when the Robbie Robertson protégé emerged with a mix of Southern-rock vitality and country gentleman charm. His first studio album in nine years finds Winchester maturing as a songwriter and performer, delivering some of his best stuff to date—not bad for a fellow whose work has been covered by everyone from Joan Baez to Elvis Costello to Jimmy Buffet. On this very nicely recorded disc he’s backed by an ace country band that includes such seasoned players as lap-steel guitarist Jerry Douglas and acoustic guitarist Russ Barenberg as well as newcomers Guthrie Trapp (mandolin) and Andy Leftwich (fiddle). Winchester’s duet with the young vocalist Claire Lynch, on the splendid cover of Ann Lucas’ whimsical “Loose Talk,” is about as good as country gets. It’s one of three covers, but this filling station also offers nine new originals from the man Bob Dylan called one of the finest songwriters of his generation. Musically, the originals range from pop (“O What a Thrill”) to country-rock (“Wear Me Out”) to Western swing (“It’s a Shame About Him”) to sweet-but-wry sentiment (“Bless Your Foolish Heart”), all of them custom-made for Winchester’s easy-going front-porch style and endearing tenor crooning. Greg Cahill Further Listening: Valerie Smith & Becky Buller: Here’s A Little Song; New Coon Creek Girls: Our Point of View Further Listening: Linda Ronstadt: Simple Dreams; Joni Mitchell: Court and Spark Further Listening: Jesse Winchester: Live from Mountain Stage: Jesse Winchester; Levon Helm: Electric Dirt 142 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Jesse Winchester: Love Filling Station. Appleseed 1116. TAS goes digital for only $19.95/yr. Subscribe to the digital edition of The Absolute Sound for only $14.95 delivered directly to your inbox. Go to www.nextnewsstand.com to get your copy today! Whether you’re looking for a new CD player, integrated amplifier, turntable, preamplifier, power amplifier, or speakers, our experts uncover the best products for the money in every price range! SUBSCRIBE NOW www.nextnewsstand.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 143 Classical Music Reviews Recording of the Issue Music Sonics Dvorák: Symphony No. 9, New World. Istvan Kertesz, Vienna Philharmonic. Music Sonics Falla: The Three Cornered Hat. Ernest Ansermet, Suisse Romande. Music Sonics Mozart: Piano Concertos No. 20 and No. 27. Clifford Curzon, piano; Benjamin Britten, English Chamber Orchestra. Esoteric LP and hybrid SACD (all three) Highly praised for its superb digital playback equipment, Esoteric of Japan, the high-end division of TEAC, is reissuing a small number of classic Decca titles on hybrid SACD and limited-edition 200-gram vinyl. The project was overseen by Esoteric’s president, Motoaki Ohmachi, using Esoteric’s D-0IVU D/A converter, G-ORb Master Clock Generator, and MEXCEL cables. The vinyl editions were handled by Japan’s JVC Mastering Center, and only 1000 LPs will be released worldwide. Interestingly, Ohmachi and the JVC remastering engineer agreed— after “extensive testing and listening sessions”—that the best-sounding source for the vinyl editions was the same DSD masters used to create the SACDs. The lacquers were cut on custombuilt Neumann machines specially made to Esoteric’s specifications, with no filtering or other equalization. Each 200gram platter is pressed directly from the 144 September 2009 The Absolute Sound “mother” mold created by the master lacquer, which limits the number of copies and also eliminates two stages from the pressing process. If you’re thinking that the efforts noted above sound like an expensive undertaking, you’re right. And by necessity these are especially pricey discs. The Esoteric hybrid SACDs sell for $60 a pop, while the LPs command $80 per platter (good thing these aren’t 2-disc 45rpm editions!). Musically, it’s hard to argue with Esoteric’s choices. Two of these titles, the Falla and Dvorák, both from 1961, are famously excellent, great sounding performances, and while the Mozart concertos, recorded in 1970, may not have quite the same pedigree, they are nevertheless very good sounding recordings of lovingly played masterpieces. Just 32 when he conducted this first of several New World recordings, Kertesz and the Vienna Philharmonic put on a fiery show in his Decca debut. Recorded in the famed Sofiensaal, the sound here is stunningly good. The soundstage essentially wipes away speaker boundaries, with tremendous orchestral width, depth, and instrumental focus. The sound is warm, velvety-textured, and lively. Falla’s score for The Three Cornered Hat was commissioned by Diaghilev for the Ballet Russes, and Ansermet’s reading, with its prancing Iberian rhythms, Moorish themes, and percussive punctuation, has long been an audiophile favorite. Esoteric’s superb editions bring out the recording’s exceptional air, dimensionality, rich textures, and explosive dynamic accents. While the recording doesn’t quite match the level of the others the Curzon/ Britten interpretations of these great Mozart concertos are absolutely beautiful and deservedly prized. The difference between the formats on each of these is what you might expect— the SACDs are brilliantly clean, quiet, and slightly tonally cooler than the LPs, which have a slightly thicker, warmer, more lush presentation. Supporters of either format will not be disappointed. Wayne Garcia Further Listening: Stravinsky: Petrushka (Ansermet); Bartók: Bluebeard’s Castle (Kertesz) Music Sonics Wagner: Lohengrin. Semyon Bychkov, Cologne Philharmonie. Profil PH09004 (3 hybrid multichannel SACDs). There are already two excellent complete Ring cycles available on SACD and this new Lohengrin, recorded at the Cologne Philharmonie after a pair of concert performances, is also a winner. Conductor Semyon Bychkov understands that Lohengrin is a work firmly in the high Romantic operatic tradition, rather than a ground-breaking piece like the Ring, Tristan, and Parsifal. He leads with dramatic thrust and lyricism; the opening Prelude is ethereal, but one always feels a metric pulse. The Cologne WDR Symphony Orchestra has a robust ensemble sound and the chorus has been well prepared. Taking on the title role with assurance and resonant voice is the South African heldentenor Johann Botha; Adrianne Pieczonka gives an affecting portrayal of Elsa. The baddies, Falk Struckmann (Telramund) and Petra Lang (Ortrud), are also experienced Wagnerians, and Kwangchul Youn’s King Henry has the necessary moral authority. Multichannel recording technique is aptly employed for the famous Wedding March, at first distantly placed behind, then arriving in front, then receding. Vocal/instrumental balances have a natural concert hall character. Andrew Quint Further Listening: Wagner: Der Ring des Nibelungen (Fisch) (SACD); Wagner: Arias. (Heppner) (SACD) ve i s u Excl Only” “Members Club ’s GOLDEN CLUB GOLDEN CLUB GOLDEN EAR EAR CLUB • BONUS INCENTIVES ON RETAIL PURCHASES •• •• Special offers •• •• Bonus content and previews •• •• INTERACT WITH the TAS editorial team •• •• Special events . . . and more •• • Find out more at www.golden-ear-club.com The Absolute Sound September 2009 145 Classical Music Reviews Music Sonics Music Sonics Mozart and Grieg: Two-Pianos Pieces. Dena Piano Duo. 2L 57 (music-only Blu-ray disc + SACD). Bruckner: Symphony No. 5. Benjamin Zander, Philharmonia Orchestra. Telarc 60706 (2 hybrid multichannel SACDs). Those who fret over SACD’s future as a high-resolution multichannel format will want to hear the Norwegian label 2L’s latest music-only Blu-ray offering. The Dena Piano Duo—Heidi Görtz and her former student, Tina Margareta Nilssen— present a program of satisfying symmetry. They open with Mozart’s Sonata in D Major for Two Pianos, K. 448. The players render the piece with an alluring songfulness and transparency. On the other end of the recital is Edvard Grieg’s Old Norwegian Melody with Variations, Op. 51. Grieg subjects a folk song theme to 14 variations, some intentionally composed in the style of other composers including Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, Saint-Saëns, and Mussorgsky. The works ends majestically but the two players never resort to pounding. In the middle is Grieg’s arrangement of Mozart’s Fantasia in C minor, K.475. The Scandinavian composer, and the Dena Duo, obviously respect the original yet amplify the chromatic richness. 2L provides an SACD version of the program as well as a Blu-ray disc with 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio and LPCM stereo programs, the latter boasting 24-bit/192 kHz resolution. Multichannel provides an on-stage sonic perspective. AQ Benjamin Zander and the Philharmonia play Anton Bruckner’s majestic 1876 Fifth Symphony with complete understanding and sympathy in what is perhaps the best digital-era performance of the work. Tempos are a tad brisk (but never hurried), and the feeling more Schubertian, the overall mood lighter and more optimistic than in many traditional interpretations, though Zander makes his vision of the music both beautiful and entirely convincing. Telarc’s recording offers a huge dynamic range, wide and deep soundstage (especially in the multichannel presentation), detailed but blended textures, and tremendous authority—just what’s needed for Bruckner’s gigantic conception. At 68 minutes, Bruckner’s masterpiece fits on one disc. The second disc is taken up by Zander’s insightful commentary (illustrated with many musical examples) that illuminates both the shadowy corners and the grandiose architecture of this imposing Gothic cathedral of sound. Even Bruckner devotees will be surprised by how riveting Zander’s exposition can be. (Zander’s commentary discs accompanying his Mahler symphony recordings, as Jonathan Valin and I noted in our interview with him in Issue 159, are also superb.) Mark Lehman Further Listening: Divertimento (Trondheim Soloists); RimskyKorsakov: Piano duo arrangements (Pizarro/Panomariovaite) 146 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Further Listening: Mahler: Symphony No. 1 and No. 4 (Zander, Telarc) Music Sonics Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos. Boris Berman, Horacio Gutiérrez, piano; Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Neeme Järvi, conductor. Chandos 10522 (2 CDs). Prokofiev’s five piano concertos, along with Bartók’s three, are among the greatest concertos of the last century. They overflow with unforgettable tunes, dazzling pianism, inexhaustible invention, inimitable pungency, limitless brio. There are a multitude of recordings. If pressed for “best-evers” I’d say Graffman for the First Concerto, Browning for the Second and Fourth, Janis for the Third, and Richter for the Fifth. No set of all five is faultless, though Ashkenazy on London is certainly a contender, as is this Chandos with two different pianists— Boris Berman (in Concertos 1, 4, and 5) and Horacio Gutiérrez (in Concertos 2 and 3)—accompanied by the Royal Concertgebouw under Neeme Järvi. Recorded in the early 1990s, these are straight-ahead, no-nonsense readings in detailed and high-impact if just a touch glassy sonics. Berman is an adept but rather self-effacing performer; Gutiérrez, on the other hand, is a fiery and charismatic virtuoso. Indeed his rendering of the glorious and sweeping Second Concerto ranks among the best ever captured on disc, whether vinyl or polycarbonate: by itself reason enough to buy this bargain-priced set. ML Further Listening: Bartók: The Three Piano Concertos (Anda, DG); Koppel: Piano Concerto No. 3 (DaCapo) Introducing the new theabsolutesound.com The premier destination for those interested in high end audio and music Updated and redesigned for easier browsing, sharing and shopping! New features include: • TAS editor’s blogs • More product reviews • The latest audio news • Expanded forums with TAS reviewers ... and more. Visit us now! www.theabsolutesound.com Jazz Music Reviews Recording of the Issue Music Sonics Thelonious Monk: The Complete Thelonious Monk At The IT Club. Mosaic MRLP-3001 (four LPs). Thelonious Monk was a few days short of thirty when he made his first recordings as a leader in 1947, and made most of his greatest records during the following ten years. These include solo, trio, small group, and big band masterworks and feature collaborations with such icons as John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and Sonny Rollins. Monk then settled into a richly productive period that saw him plumbing the depths of the repertoire he had already defined for himself, making occasional additions to an enormously important body of original compositions, and finally enjoying a sustained period of steady employment and public acceptance. Naturally enough, this is the most heavily documented portion of his career, and the only part about which any significant difference of opinion lingers. No one is likely to argue that any of the records Monk made between 1959 and 1969 represent his greatest work; the question really is how far off an impossibly high standard these recordings are. Are we talking about a Picasso slipping into cruise control once his place in history was assured, or a Van Gogh, continuing to create at a high level right up to the end? In the quality of his own playing, Monk never flagged at all. On his own records he always played well, something that can’t be said for very many jazz musicians. So the question is more about his sidemen, and primarily about his regular quartet between 1959 and 1967, when Charlie Rouse was his tenor saxophonist. Before 148 September 2009 The Absolute Sound joining Monk, Rouse had for several years co-led an interesting group called Les Jazz Modes, but he adapted to the more astringent sound of Monk’s quartet admirably. No one will accuse Rouse of being on the level of Coltrane or Rollins, and he is a bit more limited than his predecessor in the group, Johnny Griffin, but Rouse’s acerbic tone, bop phrasing, and sharp attack suited his employer to the ground. On signing with Columbia records in 1962, Monk embarked on a series of consistently rewarding studio dates and live recordings. Among the best of these last were taped at the IT Club in Los Angeles over two nights in 1964, though they remained unreleased until 1982. Originally a two-LP set, the material was expanded to two CDs in 1998, and Mosaic Records has now issued everything that was recorded, including a few previously unheard items, in a deluxe four-LP boxed set. Mosaic’s high production values are in evidence everywhere, from the stateof-the-art remastering to superb 180gram pressings to insightful liner notes by Bob Blumenthal. Two things help this music stand out from other live work of the period; the inclusion of several tunes Monk performed but rarely, and the fact that it was among the first dates that featured bassist Larry Gales and drummer Ben Riley. Both Monk and Rouse sound happy, and inspired by this hard-swinging rhythm team, and it’s a treat to hear the newcomers handle approaches to the material that had become fairly standard for Monk and Rouse. After the first set or two, we also hear the principal soloists finding completely new things to say, as both do on “Nutty.” The inclusion of bass and drum solos on many of the tracks may be distracting for some listeners, but apart from that, you can’t go wrong with this release. Duck Baker Further Listening: Thelonious Monk: Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall; Thelonious Monk and Sonny Rollins Music Sonics Allen Toussaint: The Bright Mississippi. Nonesuch 480380. For over 40 years, composer, producer, arranger, and pianist Allen Toussaint has been a prime architect of New Orleans soul and R&B, working with Lee Dorsey, the Meters, Dr. John, and many others. Beyond bayou-bred idioms, his touch has graced pop recordings by the Pointer Sisters, Labelle, The Band, Paul Simon, Wings, Joe Cocker, and Elvis Costello. Toussaint’s solo discography, however, is sparse. In this, his first major solo album since the mid-1990s, he’s joined by guitarist Marc Ribot, clarinetist Don Byron, trumpeter Nicholas Payton, bassist David Piltch, and drummer Jay Bellerose. Saxophonist Joshua Redman and pianist Brad Mehldau appear in cameos. Led by Toussaint’s barrelhouse piano, the musicians go from the traditional “St. James Infirmary” and “Just a Closer Walk with Thee” through early jazz tunes by Sidney Bechet, Jelly Roll Morton, and Django Reinhardt to more modernist compositions by Thelonious Monk, Duke Ellington, and Leonard Feather. Despite Toussaint’s full-fisted approach to the keys there’s nothing rushed about his interpretations. His fluid exchanges with Payton, Ribot, Mehldau, and Redman and his lone vocal on “Long Long Journey” distill the project’s intimate elegance to its essence. Sonics balance clarity with resonance in a three-dimensional soundscape. DR Further Listening: Allen Toussaint: The River in Reverse; The AT Collection JL Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Sumiko . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 jlaudio.com sumikoaudio.net INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Kimber Kable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Symposium Acoustics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 kimber.com symposiumusa.com Acoustic Sounds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86, 87 Lamm Industries, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Synergistic Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 acousticsounds.com lammindustries.com synergisticresearch.com Atma-Sphere Music Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Laufer Teknik . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 Thiel Audio Products . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 atma-sphere.com lauferteknik.com thielaudio.com Audio Plus Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cover III Lominchay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Totem Acoustic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 cambridgeaudio.com lominchayaudio.com totemacoustic.com Audio Unlimited . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Magico . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Transparent Cable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 audiounlimiteddenver.com magico.net transparentcable.com Audio Vision San Francisco . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 Magnum Dynalab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 Upscale Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45, 105, 131 audiovisionsf.com magnumdynalab.com upscaleaudio.com AudioQuest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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Cover II, page 1 Pass Laboratories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 definitivetech.com/tas passlabs.com Edge Electronics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89 Precision Audio Video . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 edgeamp.com precisionav.com Electrocompaniet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Pure Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 electrocompaniet.com pureaudio.net Elusive Disc . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84, 106, 107, 136 Reno HiFi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 elusivedisc.com renohifi.com Enjoy the Music . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 Revel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 enjoythemusic.com revelspeakers.com Esoteric . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Rhino Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 teac.com/esoteric rhino.com Front Row Theater . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Rocky Mountain Audio Fest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 frontrowtheater.com audiofest.net Furutech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 Running Springs Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 furutech.com runningspringsaudio.com Goodwin’s High End . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Sanus Systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 goodwinshighend.com sanus.com GTT Audio and Video . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 Shunyata Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 gttgroup.com shunyata.com Hansen Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Simaudio Ltd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 hansenaudio.com simaudio.com Herron Audio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 Sound Organisation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 herronaudio.com soundorg.com Upcoming in ISSUE 196 • Special Speaker Issue! - Reviews of B&W, Epos, Acoustic Energy, Rega, Verity, Sonics, and Von Schweikert - Jonathan Valin on the Magico M5 - History of technology advancements in speaker design • Aesthetix Rhea Signature, Janus Signature, and Atlas—PLUS and interview with Aesthetix’ Jim White • Rotel’s affordable new integrated amplifier and CD player • Rega’s upscale Elicit integrated amplifier • DCS Puccini CD player with U-Clock Now on AVguide.com • Robert Harley’s controversial blog “The Best Stereo System I’ve Ever Heard” • Jonathan Valin’s illustrated travelogue on Japan’s premier audio artisans • Sennheiser HD800 headphones • Join the discussion of all things audio! The Absolute Sound September 2009 149 Jazz Music Reviews Music Sonics Music Sonics Music Sonics Freddie Hubbard: Without a Song: Live in Europe 1969. Blue Note 36957. Chick Corea and John McLaughlin: Five Peace Band Live. Concord Records CRE-31397. At the peak of his powers during the early 60s, when he recorded such Blue Note classics as Ready For Freddie and HubTones, and also featured prominently on Herbie Hancock’s Empyrean Isles and Eric Dolphy’s Out To Lunch, Freddie Hubbard was playing the trumpet like no one else on the planet. No one blew louder, faster, higher, and with more conviction than Hubbard at that time. By 1969, when these live concert recordings were made, he was still flying high, blowing brashly into the stratosphere with bold tones and ideas, swaggering as he swung. The ease with which Hubbard doubletimes a tempo and executes his signature dazzling runs is evident on the title track, the hard-charging “Blues by Five,” and on his spirited romp through Dizzy Gillespie’s “A Night in Tunisia,” which includes a breathtaking cadenza by the trumpeter. Elsewhere, Hubbard acquits himself with thoughtful lyricism and grace on ballads like “The Things We Did Last Summer” and “Body And Soul,” and treads into avant-garde territory on his own adventurous composition, “Space Track.” In short: an excellent outing by the late, legendary trumpeter and his stellar crew of pianist Roland Hanna, bassist Ron Carter, and the marvelous drummer Louis Hayes. Bill Milkowski A dream ensemble for fusion fans, the Five Peace Band brings together longtime colleagues Corea and McLaughlin, two venerable jazzmen who first played together in 1969 on Miles Davis’ groundbreaking In A Silent Way. Joining them on this live 2-CD set, culled from a 2008 European tour, is a crew of super sidemen in bassist Christian McBride, alto saxophonist Kenny Garrett, and drummer Vinnie Colaiuta. Colaiuta’s crisp, powerhouse percussion fuels McLaughlin’s exhilarating “Raju,” which also features virtuosic turns by Corea on Fender Rhodes electric piano. Corea’s “The Disguise” is an affecting vehicle for the band while his exploratory 27-minute opus “Hymn To Andromeda” gradually builds to a cathartic crescendo with some impassioned blowing by Garrett. McLaughlin, at age 67, shows that he’s lost none of the fire as he takes off with uncanny speed on his “New Blues, Old Bruise” and on “Senor C.S.,” his Latin-tinged tribute to Carlos Santana. Herbie Hancock, who played alongside Corea and McLaughlin on that same pivotal Miles session, appears as a special guest on a medley of “In A Silent Way/It’s About That Time.” After all the fireworks, the collection closes on an intimate note with an elegant duet of “Someday My Prince Will Come.” BM How cool is Cool Man Cool? Way cool, man. Especially on the expertly executed 60s and 70s hipster jazz that haunts the title track. But stylistically, the genre-leaping Geissman roams freely, even dishing up a Dixieland-style romp (“Minnie Lights Out”) with Van Dyke Parks on accordion and Charlie Bisharat on violin. That’s just a taste of an all-star guest roster that also features Chick Corea, Tom Scott, Jerry Hahn, Patrice Rushen, Chuck Mangione, Alex Acuna, and Russell Ferrante. Bandleader and guitarist Grant Geissman is equally adept at comping with fat jazz chords or teasing octavestyle licks a la Wes Montgomery. He can go funky, as he does on “Chicken Shack Jack” (featuring saxophonist Tom Scott) or hipster heavy, as he does on the bluesy “Too Cool for School,” or even slide on by the lounge, as he does on the kitschy “Tiki Time.” And Geissman is never shy about letting his stellar combo— especially flautist and saxophonist Brian Scanlon and organist Jim Cox—take the spotlight. Sonically, this is a great sounding disc with rumbling bass lines and an expansive soundstage that on the Spanish-flavored “Chuck and Chick” gives plenty of room for Chuck Mangione’s breathy flugelhorn, Chick Corea’s intricate piano runs, and Geissman’s acoustic flamenco-style guitar work. GC Further Listening: John McLaughlin: Floating Point (Abstract Logix); Return To Forever: Returns (Eagle) Further Listening: Grant Geissman: There and Back Again; Grant Geissman and Friends: Surf Update Further Listening: Freddie Hubbard: Breaking Point (Blue Note); Woody Shaw: Stepping Stones: Live at the Village Vanguard (Columbia) 150 September 2009 The Absolute Sound Grant Geissman: Cool Man Cool. Futurism 2054. Top Ten List Top Ten Rock Concert DVDs While albums are great, rock ’n’ roll is best seen live. Short of that, re-experiencing past performances or watching shows you missed on a well-done concert DVD can be the next best thing. While waiting for the 40th Anniversary edition of Woodstock to arrive, here are ten more to check out. captures the Stones at their 1969 peak, and the horrors of a free concert at the Altamont Speedway. 4. Led Zeppelin (Warner). Tracing performances from 1970 to 1979, this exceptionally 2. The Complete Monterey well done set was supervised by Pop Festival (Criterion). Jimmy Page, and it sizzles. The original and best 5. Neil Young & Crazy rock festival, beautifully documented, with unforgettable Horse: Rust Never Sleeps (Sanctuary). and exceptionally varied The weird and wonderful Neil performances. Young in performances that 3. Rolling Stones: Gimme could raise the dead (from a Shelter (Criterion). 1978 tour). This Maysles brothers’ film 1. Bob Dylan: The Other Side of the Mirror: Live at the Newport Folk Festival 1963-1965 (Columbia). Witness Dylan morph from awkward folkie to inspired songwriter to rock and roller. 6. The Last Waltz (MGM). Now on Blu-ray, Martin Scorsese’s 1978 documentary features The Band, and a rather talented bunch of friends, in a farewell concert. 7. The Who: The Kids Are Alright (Sanctuary). Recently remastered, this 1979 film uses archival and concert footage to show that these kids were more than “alright”! 8. Nirvana: Unplugged (Geffen). It took 15 years to appear on video, but this unedited performance of Nirvana’s Introducing the new theabsolutesound.com The premier destination for those interested in high end audio and music Updated and redesigned for easier browsing, sharing and shopping! remarkable set is not to be missed. 9. Leonard Cohen: Live in London (Sony). Illustrating my opening point, if you missed or couldn’t afford recent concerts, here he is—hallelujah! 10. Wilco Live: Ashes of American Flags (Nonesuch). Captured at five venues in 2008, Wilco live is an exceptional experience that keeps on getting better. —Wayne Garcia Classifieds Wanted usedcable.com We buy used cables. We sell used cables. Good advice. Hi Fi Stereo Gear, old/new, amps, preamps, turntables, speakers, tuners, tubes, parts. Quality Brands considered, working or not. 850 314 0321, Cell 850 543 7025, sonnysound@aol.com New features include: • TAS editor’s blogs • More product reviews • The latest audio news • Expanded forums with TAS reviewers ... and more. The Absolute Sound September 2009 151 Back Page Neil Gader 12 Questions for Charlie Randall, President, McIntosh Labs the Rochester Institute of Technology. That was a quarterly program where it’s school ten weeks, work ten weeks. You have to get a job in the field that you’re studying. I was fortunate enough to get into McIntosh Laboratories, which was only thirty miles from my hometown. So was your first high-end system an all-McIntosh system? It was and it was given to me by [renowned McIntosh designer] Sidney Cordeman. It was an MR74 tuner, a C26 preamp, and a 2155 power amplifier. It was my first taste of a real high-end audio system and, believe it or not, the only thing I’ve ever used from that point on was the home brand. What did you use for speakers? McIntosh XR250s, also given to me by Sidney. Where do you see our industry in the next ten years? That’s a great question. In the two-channel world, content is becoming more and more accessible from the Internet and components will need to adapt to this new reality. Traditionalists will continue to argue about which format is better—vinyl, CD, or digital content. And we will continue working to create high-quality products, including those that might seem old-fashioned but are still much sought-after by enthusiasts. Here’s an example: Ten years ago, very few people would have thought that turntables would still be in as high demand as they are today—but they are still prized by purists. Are you surprised at the resiliency of vinyl? As McIntosh celebrates its 60th anniversary, do you think it would have surprised Mac founders that tubes are still so popular today? Back when we did the original commemorative C22 and MC275 we found a lot of collectors and people who still desired vacuum tubes. Once we did that we started dabbling with more vacuum tubes until today tube components are some of our mainstay products. Is this all nostalgia-driven? I think it’s crossing over to a younger demographic as well. When you look at all the audio that’s available to youngsters for download, they’re discovering music they don’t hear everyday on [commercial] radio. That’s given new life to a wide variety of music. I look at that as an advantage. What ignited your passion for audio? We had an electronics program in our high school in Milford, Pennsylvania. At sixteen I had a passion for my first car, and at sixteen-and-a-quarter my first passion for car audio. When you’re a teenager, a car might as well be your house. I did my own car stereo and pretty soon all my friends knew that I could do it and later I kind of became the town installation-guy, even before car audio had really taken off. And you pursued audio in school? I went two years to a local community college that had a great electrical engineering program and then transferred to 152 September 2009 The Absolute Sound For my parents it was the only medium at the time. Everyone who enjoys music looks at it as an investment—not in terms of money but as a way to continue to support their vinyl collection. And part of it is due to the fact that some of the older original stuff has a character you don’t hear on CD or MP3 downloads, and some of it is just not out there to be downloaded. Do you spin vinyl? I do not. I grew up in the age where cassettes were popular and then hit the dawn of CDs. I’m not old enough to appreciate that part of it. As President of McIntosh, do you continue to keep a hand in the design side of things? All products that leave McIntosh have my input and approval before their release. They are a collaborative effort between sales and marketing, engineering, and myself. We rely heavily on customer feedback, as well. What do you do for fun? My oldest sister is a real-estate broker and we actually build log cabins. That’s my relaxation. I built my own house, a replica of a farmhouse. I actually grew up on a dairy farm. What still inspires you? I’ve been here 23 years, although honestly it feels more like ten. I’m still heavily involved in the product side of it, and it’s truly a family atmosphere. But when you see the consumer’s reaction, that’s the best part—it truly is. TAS