UHF Magazine
Transcription
UHF Magazine
No. 93 CAN $6.49 / US $7.69 CONVERTERS: An upgrade to our reference digital-to-analog converter, and a budget DAC that could be just what you need. REVIEWS: The newest current dumping amplifier from Quad, a new flagship turntable from Well Tempered, and two power filters. PLUS: A new, surprisingly affordable addition to our home cinema reference, feedback vs. feedforward, and a mammoth roundup of audio shows. RETURN LABELS ONLY OF UNDELIVERED COPIES TO: 270 rue Victoria, Longueuil, QC, Canada J4H 2J6 Printed in Canada SPRING 2013 Canadian Publication Sales Product Agreement No. 40065638 UHF’s Audiophile Boutique is a source of premium-grade products, all recommended by us, at special prices. Such as this Moon CD3.3X player, with Simaudio’s own transport, and a digital input, to use its DAC with other sources. Originally $3200, now factory-refurbished with five-year warranty, $1950. The Moon 250i integrated amplifier, originally $1800, factoryrefurbished for $1395. Quantities of all these products are limited, but new products will be added as we receive them. Simaudio’s terrific economy integrated was the i-1, originally $1700. Factoryrefurbished with five-year warranty, in stock for $1425. Great as the heart of a highgrade economy music system or a second system. We also have DACs, both the original 300D (still our reference) and the affordable 100D. You’ll also find phono preamplifiers, all at special prices. All of these products are recommended by UHF. www.audiophileboutique.com a division of UHF Magazine Nuts&Bolts Feedback and Feedforward34 by Paul Bergman Feedback in amplifiers is widely understood. Feedforward not so much. Issue No. 93 The Listening Room Quad Elite QSP Amplifier Nostalgic for Quad’s legendary current-dumping amps? They’ve never gone away. 36 The Well Tempered Versalex40 The most recent turntable from the maverick mind of Bill Firebaugh. Moon 300D v.244 It’s our reference digital-to-analog converter in an upgraded (and more expensive) version. We compare. An Affordable DAC48 A digital-to-analog converter at a lower price, from BRIK. Two Power Filters50 From GutWire and Kingsound, solutions to your power problems. Radar For Your Turntable 53 These two devices from Speednic tell you how fast your turntable is going Cover story: The economy DAC from Brik, and the new and improved version of Simaudio’s Moon 300D, both running from USB. Samsung’s Tube Boombox 54 If you associate Samsung with oversized phones and high-grade TV sets, lend an ear to this! Features A Tale of Three Shows 16 by Gerard Rejskind and Albert Simon A whirlwind of news and observations from Vegas, Toronto and Montreal. Audio Then and Now As we enter our 31st year, we look back at some product reviews that have stuck in our memories. 26 The Magic of the Violin63 by Reine Lessard One of the orchestra’s oldest instruments remains a firm favorite. Software Reviews70 by Steve Bourke, Albert Simon and Gerard Rejskind Departments Cinema Onkyo’s Home-Cinema Solution If you want to save money by using a receiver for a high-end home cinema system, check out the Onkyo TX-NR709. Software 30 Feedback7 Free Advice 9 Gossip & News 78 State of the Art 82 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 3 UHF Magazine No. 93 was published in May, 2013. All contents are copyright 2013 by Broadcast Canada. They may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without written permission from the publisher. EDITORIAL & SUBSCRIPTION OFFICE: Broadcast Canada 270 rue Victoria LONGUEUIL, Québec, Canada J4H 2J6 Tel.: (450) 651-5720 E-mail: uhfmail@uhfmag.com World Wide Web: www.uhfmag.com PUBLISHER & EDITOR: Gerard Rejskind EDITORIAL: Paul Bergman, Steve Bourke, Toby Earp, Reine Lessard, Kathe Lieber, Albert Simon PRODUCT PHOTOGRAPHY: Albert Simon ADVERTISING SALES: Gerard Rejskind (450) 651-5720 CANADA/US NEWSSTAND DISTRIBUTION: Disticor Magazine Distribution Services 695 Westney Rd., Suite 14, AJAX, ON L1S 6M9 Tel.: (905) 619-6565 SINGLE COPY PRICE: $6.49 in Canada, $7.69 (US) in the United States, $15 (CAN) elsewhere, including air mail. In Canada sales taxes are extra. Electronic edition: C$4..00 plus applicable taxes SUBSCRIPTION RATES: CANADA: USA: ELSEWHERE (air mail): ELECTRONIC EDITION: $62.50 for 13 issues* US$75 for 13 issues CAN$118 for 13 issues C$40, 13 issues* *Applicable taxes extra PRE-PRESS SERVICES: Transcontinental PRINTING: Interglobe-Beauce E-EDITION: www.uhfmag.com/maggie.html FILED WITH The National Library of Canada and la Bibliothèque Nationale du Québec. ISSN 0847-1851 Canadian Publications Mail Sales Product No. 0611387 UHF invites contributions. Though all reasonable care will be taken of materials submitted, we cannot be responsible for their damage or loss, however caused. Materials will be returned only if a stamped self-addressed envelope is provided. It is advisable to query before submitting. Ultra High Fidelity Magazine is completely independent of all companies in the electronics industry, as are all of its contributors, unless explicitly specified otherwise. 4 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine Editorial Getting UHF distributed You possibly learned about it on our blog: our long-time newsstand distributor, Stonehouse Publications, a division of Transmedia, has closed its doors. It happened without warning. Some publishers actually shipped magazines to them and discovered there was nobody home. Ugly! It was ugly for another reason too. Stonehouse was late, late, late with its payments. When it closed, it took tens of thousands of dollars of our money with it. The magazine business is tough enough today, even if we’re getting everything that is due us. However, it’s only money. We’re in this for love, but don’t tell that to our new newsstand distributor, Disticor. The age of the DAC Unless you’re a new reader leafing through your first issue, you’ll know that it stands for digital-to-analog converter. For many years, the DAC was just an internal module, tucked into a dark corner of your CD player. Though the CD will be around for a while, the CD player is dying. Today, it’s just one of a number of digital sources, which may include your computer’s hard drive, or even a dedicated computer. That means you’re likely to be shopping for a standalone DAC. Several are reviewed in this issue. Expect to hear a lot more on this. But I’ve often said that product reviews are by no means the most important part of UHF. We’ll also be writing extensively about how to choose one, and what to do with it. We’re here to help. Smart robbers It hasn’t happened for many years, and we do take precautions, but if someone really, really wants to get into your place, they will. Our headquarters were broken into while we were off covering TAVES, the Toronto show. All it took was violence, plus intelligence. Except they came up short on the second one. They went for the easy stuff: a shelftop stereo system that was perhaps worth $100, and three of four beers that were in a fridge. Then they got ambitious, going for our Samsung plasma TV. They ripped all the wires out, but unlocking the stand requires an IQ superior to one’s shoe size. They did run off with the TV’s remote, ignoring the far more valuable universal remote. Of course, we know that most burglars don’t turn to crime because they weren’t making enough money in nuclear fusion. We remember the robber who stuck up a bank while wearing his hockey sweater…with his name in huge letters on his back. Then there was the blackmailer who knew enough to use a public phone to deliver his threat…but didn’t know it was a poor idea to pay for the call with a credit card. Sounds as though one or the other of those guys got parole. DOG EARS ARE CUTE, EXCEPT… …on magazine pages. You don’t like dog-eared magazines either, right? Yet it’s the expensive copy that’s likely to be tattered, torn, and… yes, dog-eared. We mean the newsstand copy. Why? Where do copies sit around unprotected? At the newsstand. Where do other people leaf through them before you arrive, with remains of lunch on their fingers? At the newsstand. Where do they stick on little labels you can’t peel off? Our subscribers, on the other hand, get pristine copies protected in plastic, with the address label pasted on t h e plastic itself, not the cover. We know what you really want is a perfect copy, and the fact that you subscribed and paid a little less doesn’t mean you’ll settle for less. If you need one more reason to sign up, there’s the fact that with a subscription you qualify for a discount on one or all three of our much-praised books on hi-fi (see the offer on the other side of this page). One more thing. Some newsstands run out of UHF four days after the copies arrive. Have you missed copies? SAVE EVEN MORE WITH MAGGIE’S ELECTRONIC EDITION! So what’s our advice? Well, sure! Read it on your computer, iPad, etc. It looks just like JUST SUBSCRIBE the printed version. Just C$40/13 issues, worldwide! www.uhfmag.com/maggie.html ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY, 270 rue Victoria, LONGUEUIL, Qué., Canada J4H 2J6 Tel.: (450) 651-5720 FAX: (450) 651-3383 VIA THE INTERNET: www.uhfmag.com/Subscription.html FOR 13 ISSUES: $62.50 (Canada), US$75 (USA), C$118 (elsewhere, including air mail costs). For six issues, it’s C$31.25 (Canada), US$37.50 (USA), C$59 (elsewhere). In Canada, add applicable sales tax (15% in QC, 13% in ON, NF, NB, NS, PEI, 5% in other provinces). You may pay by VISA or MasterCard: include card number, expiry date and signature. You must include your correct postal or zip code. You may order on a plain sheet of paper, provided you include all the information. Choose to begin with the current issue or the issue after that. Back issues are available separately. Choose your options: 13 issues 6 issues start with issue 93 (this one), or issue 94 (the next one) VISA/MC NO ______________________________________ EXP. DATE__________________ SIGNATURE ___________________________________ NAME__________________________________ADDRESS______________________________________________APT__________ CITY_____________________PROV/STATE________COUNTRY__________________POSTAL CODE___________________ Much, much more to read… This is our original book, which has been read by thousands of audiophiles, both beginners and advanced. It’s still relevant to much of what you want to accomplish. It’s a practical manual for the discovery and exploration of high fidelity, which will make reading other books easier. Includes in-depth coverage of how the hardware works, including tubes, “alternative” loudspeakers, subwoofers, crossover networks, biamplification. It explains why, not just how. It has full instructions for aligning a tone arm, and a gauge is included. A complete audio lexicon makes this book indispensable. And it can cost as little as $9.95 in the US and Canada (see the coupon). This long-running best seller includes these topics: the basics of amplifiers, preamplifiers, CD players, turntables and loudspeakers. How they work, how to choose, what to expect. The history of hi-fi. How to compare equipment that’s not in the same store. What accessories work, and which ones are scams. How to tell a good connector from a rotten one. How to set up a home theatre system that will also play music (hint: don’t do any of the things the other magazines advise). How to plan for your dream system even if your accountant says you can’t afford it. A valuable volume with 224 pages of essential information for the beginner or advanced audiophile! At last, all of Gerard Rejskind’s State of the Art columns from the first 60 issues of UHF. With a new introduction to each column, 258 pages in all. Check below to get your copy! Five dollars off any or each of these three books if you subscribe or renew at the same time The UHF Guide costs $14.95 (in Canada plus 5% GST, or 13% in ON, NB, NS, NL, PEI), US$19.95 (USA), C$25 (elsewhere). The World of High Fidelity costs $21.95 (in Canada plus 5% GST, or 13% in ON, NB, NS, NL, PEI), US$21.95 (USA) or C$30 (elsewhere). State of the Art costs just $18.95 (in Canada, plus 5% GST, or 13% in ON, PEI, NS, NL), US$18.95 (USA) C$32 (elsewhere). Just check off the books you want, then fill in the ordering information on the other side of this page. You can also order online at www.uhfmag.com/Books.html Take $5 off any or each of those prices if you subscribe or extend a subscription at the same time expert judge of the “true” value of audio equipment, these publications helped the consumer seeking high performance for their money make an “informed” decision about which product they should 270 rue Victoria buy. In doing so, audio publications Longueuil, Québec, Canada J4H 2J6 quickly became the axle in the wheel of uhfmail@uhfmag.com the audio industry. If one followed the reviews of a particular publication, one This is a difficult e-mail to write but Thanks for showing me the future could then put different manufacturers also a happy one, as it not only confirms three years ago. and brands into a hierarchy of quality what I long suspected but what you Nick Lakoumentas and performance. showed me using your iPhone at the NEW YORK, NY This pattern is not just true of audio Montreal hi-fi show a few years ago. equipment but other consumer goods as At the time I remained unconvinced We were just as shocked as you are, Nick. well, such as cars, watches, beer, clothof the merits of computer audio. My We still are. ing, handbags and soft drinks. Certainly system consists of a VPI Mk III table brand names speak volumes about perwith an SME IV tone arm and Shure V15 Will you be reviewing the Audio- sonal identity within the subculture of MK V cartridge, a YBA CD1a player, quest DragonFly? audiophiles. Linn Ikemi CD player, Nakamichi Consider: when two audiophiles Dan Marois CD player, Rega Fono, Linn Majik GATINEAU, QC meet, the first thing that they often do integrated amplifier, and a pair of Linn is talk about what stereo equipment they Kan II speakers. This year I got married We’re certainly looking at the Dragonfly, have. In doing so, they are positionto my American sweetheart, moved to Dan. There is an explosion of new digital- ing themselves into a respective social NYC to be with my new bride, and along to-analog converters at all prices, and we’re hierarchy based on the products they with me came my equipment, 1000-plus building up a list of new ones we want to have decided to purchase, and how vinyl records and close to 4000 CDs. try. By its price and its size, the Dragonfly they and others view the significance of Thankfully she was welcoming and is an eyecatcher. the product brand. For example, “I’m didn’t demand a divorce when she saw all a serious listener because I have these those boxes, but on seeing a copy of UHF I’m writing to address the changing brands but I can tell that you are a more she asked if it was possible to digitize our nature of audio review publications such serious listener because you have these music. as yours in the wake of the Internet more desirable brands.” The key point I resisted because most of my col- revolution. One of the new capabilities here, however, is it was the audio review lection consists of classical and opera, that the Internet provides is the ability magazines which determined the desirand I wanted the liner notes and libretti for audiophiles to communicate with ability of the brands, thus making the close at hand. I also love the physical other audiophiles though forums in desirability more universal and hieraraspect of it all. Fast forward to this past cyberspace. I contend that has marked chical among audio enthusiasts. weekend, one MacBook Pro, Stello U3, a revolution in how consumers of highThe Internet changed this, and it is Moon 300D DAC, BIS cables and even priced and (occasionally) high-perfor- a change for the better. At first, daring an optical cable for the aging YBA. mance audio equipment make decisions. entrepreneurs used the growing reliI plugged ever y t hing toget her, I would first like to outline from where ance on Web-based communications downloading the Remote app for the we have changed, and I believe that once to market whole publications. But the iPad, and sat down to listen. First the that is understood it will be obvious why orientation of these publications was YBA through the Moon. The sound was Internet audio forums are a change for basically the same. Audio “expert” much improved, bringing the machine the best. opinion was used as an endorsement into the 21st century. Then the MacBook In the past, it was almost the exclu- of products that the consuming public Pro and Stello. Shocked! I had no idea sive role of audio magazines to promote was encouraged to buy. You may ask it was going to be this good. My Ikemi “high-end” audio equipment. Manu- yourself how many times you have had and YBA were bested by a computer! facturers certainly promote their own the experience of purchasing an audio I think this whole process is democ- products, as do dealers, but ultimately component that was highly reviewed ratizing. By that I mean that no longer neither group is viewed by consumers as that just seemed, well…average at best? are we beholden to CD drives and their “objective” in their evaluations of these Then, if one looks closer at the audio limited shelf life. Imagine paying for a products because of their obvious finan- publication that rated the component Krell, Naim or Linn only to find that cial incentive to sell you their products. in question, it is not surprising to find some third-party supplier like Philips This is where audio review magazines that many of the manufacturers and has decided to stop manufacturing the or the audio press found an important distributors buying advertising space laser assembly. niche. By taking on the role of the in the publication also seem to be get- Feedback ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 7 King Sound KS-010 Current Smoother No hum normally associated with heavy coils. A complex array of wiring circuit cancels noise and interference, providing excellent isolation and stable power without transient delays, phase errors or current limiting. Six isolated outlets and a cryogenically treated, high-purity double-shielded OCC copper AC cable, and perfect-contact copper plug. The KS -010 improves image stability, contrast and picture clarity of video components. Audio components will have significantly better refined sound, better defined spatial images, finer detail and well-controlled bass. (519) 749-1565 www.divertech.com divergent@divertech.com ting positive reviews. In fact, one major publication in the US has an explicit policy of only reviewing equipment from manufactures that advertise in the magazine. Outside of UHF Magazine, to your credit, I have never read a bad review of an audio component. It seems to be an industry where the vast majority of the products are rated above average, which, if you stop to think about it, is statistically impossible! Now for the light at the end of this dark tunnel and for the value of audio reviews 2.0: the great thing about audio consumers going online en masse is that now consumers, rather than “expert reviewers,” are writing reviews of equipment. I for one have personally found these reviews much more truthful and valuable. While there are many limitations to consumer reviews such as personal biases, lack of reviewer experience, knowledge, access to related comparison products, etc., there is at least one revolutionary advantage: consumer reviews are not (yet) funded by the audio industry! In fact, consumer reviews are an opportunity for the consumers of 8 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine audio products to break the monopoly (or, more accurately, oligopoly) that audio review magazines previously had on influencing audio consumer decisions. Moreover, some consumers have a far superior technical knowledge of electronics and have actually dissected popular audio designs, and in many cases exposed the gross discrepancy between the cost that the manufacturer charges for the component and the relative cost that it would take someone to build the same product. I have noticed that UHF is now 30 years old. That is an amazingly long time to be in a business as fickle as this. I also sincerely commend you on a publication that I have followed for a long time and, admittedly, was my gateway drug into this hobby. However, not just in the last 30 years but even within the last 10 years, the audio review publishing world has changed dramatically. I have also noticed that while UHF was very quick to go online, it is still a top-down publication that gives readers very little room to communicate their own appraisals of their equipment with other audiophiles. While I value the Free Advice and cherish the musical artist backgrounds, I believe that the sun is setting on the monopoly of the role of the expert reviewer and on top-down audio review publishing. A grass-roots movement of consumer-toconsumer communications is happening in audio, as it is elsewhere, and I wonder howGET or even UHF plans to work THEwhether COMPLETE VERSION! withYou’ll it as we go forward. have noticed that this free Rick Meyers version of UHF Magazine BURLINGTON, ON is not quite complete. But you can get the complete version We don’tfrom regardMaggie the “dramatic for $4. changes” in audioClick reviewing here, as and rosily away as you wedo, go!Rick. In any field, from audio to automobiles to politics, nothing is more easily available than opinions, and that has been true for years. Check sites like homeaudioadvice.com or epinions.com for some frightening examples. Or Facebook. There is of course no product so awful that it doesn’t have fans on the Internet, and no product so thoroughly excellent that it won’t draw criticism from people who insist it “suks.” We think this explosion of opinions, some of them from people with an axe to grind, makes choosing more difficult, not easier. Although we review equipment because readers expect an audio magazine to do that, we have long considered that the reviews are the least valuable part of UHF. The accompanying articles (yes, including Free Advice) are what set us apart from most other audio magazines, and certainly from the online review sites. It’s true that we have never set up a reader discussion group, but there’s a reason for it. Unless we spend a lot of time we don’t have policing it, a discussion group will turn into a jungle. Check the comments over at engadget.com, or at a major newspaper like the Globe and Mail. Though we have a pretty good fan base, some individuals have actually set up blogs just so they can flame us. It gets nasty out there, and we would rather the people with anger management issues pay for their own bandwidth. Something else we have never done is pick up easy money by having Google ads on our site. We’ve looked into it, because Google calls us regularly, but a lot of the resulting ads we’ve checked are downright fraudulent. If we have a mission, it’s to warn you off stuff like that. I purchased a Mephisto II CD player from Pierre Lurné in 2004. Recently I advertised it for sale, and sold it to a person in Torino, Italy. As voltage is different in Europe, I opened the Mephisto’s separate power supply and there was a sliding switch to change over to 230 V/50 Hz. The manual never mentioned this. I did not change the installed fuse. My customer has blown the fuse, replaced it and thinks he has also blown a capacitor. As you know, Audiomecca has closed. Would you have a hotline number for them, or contact suggestions? Ed King QUALICUM BEACH, BC Our contacts don’t seem to work, Ed. Pierre was interviewed in TNT Audio as recently as 2011, but the last Web site address we have for him takes us to a Russian spa. We wonder how the Italian purchaser knows a capacitor has blown. If it has, that is probably unrelated to the blowing of the fuse. If he knows which capacitor is damaged (if it’s blackened, say), a competent audio technician should be able to replace it even without a schematic. “sound card.” Don’t buy a sound card from Asus, or from any other computer company. Don’t buy a sound card at all. To explain why we say this, consider what a “sound card” actually is. It is a DAC — a digital270 rue Victoria to-analog converter — something that Longueuil, Québec, Canada J4H 2J6 a high-end audio dealer (including our own Audiophile Store) could sell you for uhfmail@uhfmag.com hundreds of dollars, if not thousands. It Over the years I have much ben- a volume control. is also an ADC — an analog-to-digital efited from your advice and many If you have someone available who converter — which, logically, should of my components and accessories knows how to work on Linns, you might cost every bit as much. Audio cards cost have been purchased (some from your inquire what level of improvement you a piddly fraction of these prices. It’s not store) after input from your magazine. can obtain for how much of your wealth. because computer makers are so much So thanks! You don’t say what Grado cartridge you smarter or less greedy than audio people, I have been listening to a lot of LPs have, but it’s possible that you should be but because they know beans about again lately and am interested in upgrad- looking at the cartridge and the phono audio. To add insult to whatever else ing my older system. I was perusing your preamp as areas of attention. Whatever they’re doing to you, the sound card is store and intrigued by the recommended your choice, it makes sense to take as placed inside the computer case, possibly cartridges and preamps for example, but large a leap as possible. Small upgrades the most audio-hostile environment you not at all sure which component should are expensive, and they often lead to can imagine. We suppose placing it next be upgraded first, or perhaps more heartburn. to the core of a nuclear reactor might be importantly, provide the “best bang for worse. the buck” on my system. On the analog I have recently upgraded my HeyWe wish audio stores carried audio side I start with an almost original LP12 brook TT2 turntable and purchased interfaces, and we would ourselves, (upgraded chassis) with original SME V a Pro-ject USB-V Phono box to hook but the people who make them cater tone arm and Grado cartridge, down to the Heybrook up to my HP desktop to musicians, and they regard us with a Pro-Ject SE preamp, then down to a computer. I downloaded Audacity as my undisguised hostility. What you need fairly new Audio Research power amp. audio editor. All is well? No, not even is an outboard audio interface, probably What single item would you recommend close. connecting via USB, from a company to upgrade to provide most improvement The recorded music has an annoy- catering to musicians. That might Likely erroneously, I tend to go ing background hiss that is not present include Edirol (a division of Roland, for the quick-fix items I can change when playing the Heybrook through of synthetizer fame), Apogee, Focuseasily myself, like upgrade to one of the the phono-box directly. Based on a few rite, Alesis, etc. If you haven’t already Simaudio preamps in your store, rather hours of searching the Web for answers, guessed, this class of gear will come not than tone arms, cartridges and the like, it appears should replace the Where Ido the questions for sound from computer dealers but from stores which would probably require me findcard in my computer (still the original our famous Free Advice section come from? catering to musicians. It will work with ing someone I trust to set up properly sound card). I saw a highly-rated sound commonly available software, including Our readers send them to us at uhfmail@uhfmag.com. (not easy any more). card from Asus called Xonar Essence Audacity. The questions, and our answers, Jeff Burrowes STX and ST. I was wondering whether If you’re willing to splurge on big may appear on line, in the magazine, or both. CALGARY, AB there We are don’t any other options you could hard drives (plus hard drives that can reply by mail, suggest. I would prefer to spend more serve for backups) you may even want to and we don’t give it for free Jeff, it’s possible your Linn can be on my stereo before spending a few record at higher resolution: 24 bits and if you request that your question not be made public. upgraded further at reasonable cost (an hundred on my computer. I am not a 96 kHz or 88.2 kHz sampling rate. After We do ask for your name and city. expression not often associated with hi-tech computer person, however I do all, your source, an LP, has (theoretiAsk away! Linn, to be frank), but finding an arm like tablet control of all my music from cally) an infinite sampling rate. beyond the very good SME V is an my couch, which is why I am digitizing expensive project, and that’s not where my albums (plus it will be less expensive I have a VTL Ultimate Preamp that you should be looking. than purchasing new CDs and yield, requires a fair amount of maintenance. But we’re puzzled. Unless we’re hopefully, better sound). It is still fully operational, but requires missing something, your Pro-Ject SE is Peter DeCordova a number of parts to be replaced. a phono preamp, also called a phono secMISSISSAUGA, ON The switches and attenuators are tion, intended to feed a preamplifier or going. Also, when I purchased it used integrated amplifier. You can’t actually Your project is perfectly sound, Peter, about eight years ago from someone be feeding a power amplifier directly, but there is one item in your letter that in the US, the border thugs actually because if you were, you would not have rings alarm bells for us. That is the item opened the preamp and loosened many Free Advice GET FREE ADVICE! ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 9 Advice Feedback Free also lets dust in. The preamp includes three attenuators (left, right and master volume) and two source switches for the left and right channels. If they merely require cleaning, which would not be surprising, any competent service technician can do it, and the fact that this is a tube preamplifier is not important. If they suffer from wear, you will need service from a VTL service centre. In that case we suggest contacting VTL and asking for a recommendation. The company may elect to do the service itself. Capacitors are a different matter. The VTL Ultimate was not known for easy serviceability, and changing them may be difficult, unduly expensive, or even impossible. Good quality capacitors probably have a shelf life of at least three decades, but heat degrades them faster, and your preamplifier would run at least warm. Still, since you say that you are happy with the preamp’s performance, we would put off a complete rebuild until it is needed. Which might be never. But are you saying that customs authorities opened the unit and loosened parts? If so, they must not be overburdened with work! We’d guess that can be fixed easily by whoever cleans the working parts. You may get off cheap. components. This also could use some careful reconstruction as well. There is a local audio shop I have dealt with in the past for various purchases, but not for repairs of this nature. I am not sure if they can do tube repairs. I am wondering if there is anyone you may suggest in Canada who would specialize in repairs and upgrades of tube preamps, mainly switches, attenuators and capacitors. Can you offer any other advice on what I should be asking for in terms of replac10 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine ing parts for longevity and cost-effective improvements in sound? I am actually quite happy with the performance of this preamp, so I do not feel the need to perform massive upgrades. Wilson Tam EDMONTON, AB It’s not certain that the attenuators and switches actually need replacement, Wilson. The top plate on your preamplifier is ventilated, as it must be to dissipate the heat of tubes, and what lets heat out I have an old Talisman Alchemist A cartridge (circa early 80’s) installed in a Grace 707 arm on an older Linn LP12 turntable. I also have a Revolver turntable (circa 1985) with a 2008 Clearaudio Classic cartridge on it. (I bought the LP12 recently to replace the Revolver — planning to do the upgrades soon). I am using a Copland CTA-405 integrated with Energy Reference Connoisseur speakers (circa 1988). My question is whether you would expect the music to sound better if I replaced the Talisman cartridge with the Clearaudio on the LP12. I believe the sound from the LP12 should be better (tighter bass, more defined midrange, clearer highs). The Revolver sounded better, but that may have been due to the newer cartridge. I’m hoping that a new cartridge on the LP12 should allow it to exceed the performance of the Revolver. I am asking before taking the table to a dealer to have the Clearaudio cartridge Dave, the tightness of the bass and the clarity of the highs are much influenced by vertical tracking angle, which is in turn determined by tone arm height. Too low an arm will give you loose bass and muddy highs. Too high an arm will give you thin bass and shrill highs. Either extreme will muddy up the focus on a good recording. We would look for a new cartridge, one with a line contact stylus. That will give you lower distortion and less noise, as well as enhanced dynamics. Of course, any cartridge must be set up properly. I recently installed new KT88 output tubes into my Dynankit Mark III amplifier. One of the tubes, which is not defective, produces a mechanical noise, a hum. What can I do to reduce this mechanical noise? Walter C. Labys MORGANTOWN, WV Actually, Walter, we think the KT88 is defective. If the elements are not tightly secured, they can vibrate. The culprit in your case is probably the cathode, since it is heated, in most amplifiers, by AC. It can’t be fixed, since you can’t get at the innards of the tube without breaking the vacuum seal, and so the only solution, if the hum is loud enough to be objectionable, is to change it. This is, I think, only the second time I’ve written in the 20 years I’ve been reading your wonderful magazine. I was fascinated — well, captivated is more like it — by your review of the Stello U3 (UHF No. 92). I have been using a Mac Mini as a music server for about eight months, and I grew so discouraged that I took it out of the system. I had optimized it with Pure Music, used the best Toslink interconnect I could find, an all-glass one from Wireworld, with results that were always pleasant but never fully musical or dynamic. The plain fact was that CDs from my disc spinner very often sounded better than the same music, even hi-res versions, played from the Mini. And signal from both goes through a Naim nDAC, a very good one indeed. I suspect the problem is noise from the ugly little internal power supply in the Mini. Earlier versions had an external power module — no prize, but probably much better than this internal version. The symptoms were very consistent with a bad power supply: loss of dynamics, a certain veiling at all frequencies. Your friend’s $300 used Mini may well be better. I wonder if you think the U3 would somehow buffer or defeat this problem. I would love to hear what you’re hearing (and surprised that you hear it straight out of iTunes, without using Pure Music). I guess what I would like is some assurance that I can go ahead and order one with some certainty of success. Don Braid CALGARY, AB ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 11 Advice Feedback Free installed, as I don’t think I can adjust it correctly. Alternatively, do you think the Clearaudio is worth it? Would I be better off just buying a new cartridge (perhaps one of the Goldrings from the audio store)? Dave Rose EDMONTON, AB Advice Feedback Free speakers represent a reasonable choice. I note that the Episodes are more efficient, at 91 dB versus 88 dB for the Sonograms, but are slightly more expensive. Is there anything else I should consider in assessing these two speakers, given my large constraint of being unable to audition them? Barry Ward COQUITLAM, BC Your letter is thought-provoking, Don, because it brings up something we hadn’t thought of. You’re right: the Mac mini now has an internal power supply, which means it is closer to the computer’s works. We may get a chance to experiment with different versions of the mini, and we think this may be an ongoing project as we learn more. For the moment we can tell you this. In our Omega reference system the dedicated computer is an aging MacBook Pro, which is running from a battery plugged into a charger. However, we also pull in music over Wi-Fi from a distant Mac Pro, which of course has an internal power supply. The quality is indistinguishable. That is to say, if we listen to the same music residing on the local and the remote computer, there is no audible change. Both sound better than the original CD on our Linn Unidisk. I just read your review of the Stello U3 and am contemplating a purchase. Have you reviewed AES/EBU cables in any of your issues, as I’d like to know if there is any reason for using them over coaxial? (The Stello has an AES/ EBU output.) John Clarke BURNABY, BC We’ve tried it, and it works very well, 12 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine John, though we didn’t have exactly the same cables in coax and AES/EBU form, and so we couldn’t compare directly (we may possibly do so). The benefit may be indirect. The digital cable carries some very high frequency traffic, and you don’t want this stuff to leak into the analog part of the chain. The balanced cable has an advantage on that score. Barry, either speaker would be an upgrade over your Paradigms, which were not truly reference speakers despite their name. We praised the Sonogram to the skies when it first appeared because of its startlingly low price, but that price has since soared. Your Linn amplifier has limited muscle, and it will be much more at ease with the higher efficiency and the simplified crossover of the Reference 3a. That would be our choice. Should I use the 100 ohm setting or the 470 ohm setting with a 0.8 mV BenzMicro M cartridge? I bought a couple of Moon 310LP’s from you last year and would appreciate your advice when you have a moment. David Ebertt DRAYTON, ON THEtoCOMPLETE I am GET looking upgrade myVERSION! speakhaveReference noticed that this free Looking over the Benz-Micro spec ers from You’ll Paradigm to either version of UHF Magazine sheet, we would expect that the 470 Reference 3A Episodes or Gershman is not quite complete. But you canohm setting would be right. The 100 Sonogram speakers. Unfortunately, get thehas complete neither company a dealerversion in the ohm setting, which is fine for most MC Vancouver areafrom where Maggie I could foraudition $4. cartridges, would probably be too low. these speakers. ClickI here, did have andthe away chance we go! to listen to the Sonograms several years ago Just wondering if you have had a when they were first introduced. They chance to look at TVs since UHF No. 89. have since been upgraded, I understand. I know new high definition will be here My amp is a Linn LK140 with the in March. I’m looking to buy now but companion preamp, the Linn Kollector, not a smart TV or 3D. Could you give both of which I have had for a number me a recommendation? of years. I also have the Linn Genki Terry Iuvancigh CD player and plan to add a DAC in THUNDER BAY, ON the future. I use Navigator All-Cu interconnects and my speaker cables Terry, if you mean the so-called 4K are Wireworld Atlantis with Milty gold sets, their problem is that not only is connection bananas. I have the Inouye there no 4K source available, but none synergistic power line conditioner and is even proposed. The new sets will Stingray power bar with upgraded power therefore have to upsample. We’ve seen cords. I have a rather large listening room side-by-side comparisons that appeared that could be characterized as “bright” in to show that upsampling Blu-ray to 4K terms of its sound characteristics. resolution provides a dramatic improve My question is whether these two ment. What we actually noticed was that the standard 1080p set provided for comparison looked just awful, and had clearly been sabotaged. For the moment, we recommend a plasma TV from a major manufacturer, such as Samsung or Panasonic. I have a pair of the original Quad II tube monoblocks as well as the accompanying preamp. The monoblocks work well, but the preamp is a bit flaky, plus it falls seriously short of supporting most of today’s sources. Which reasonably-priced preamp should I consider pairing with the Quads? Which speakers should I consider? I would prefer bookshelf models or similar size with stands, due to lack of space. I owned a pair of Quad ESL-57’s that worked beautifully with the amps, but space and WAF forced me to sell. The sources will be mostly Apple/ Mac products. Andreja Bozovic TORONTO, ON I have recently been lucky enough to inherit a large collection of LPs to add to my own, and need more shelf space. The obvious thing to do is to rip all my CDs so I can replace the shelves with some 2000 CDs on them with shelves Get UHF from Maggie on your desktop or iPad anywhere in the world! Advice Feedback Free Your monoblocks, which are still sold in slightly more powerful versions, were very good, and if they show no signs of failure you should certainly hang on to them. The preamplifier of the same era was not nearly as good, and if it is acting up we agree that you should have it put to sleep. When it comes to a new preamplifier, we can’t be sure what you would call a reasonable price. We very much like the Copland CTA-305, which is in our Alpha reference system. It uses tubes, and even includes a very good phono section. If you don’t already have a good quality digital-to-analog converter to go with your Mac-based source, you might look at the Eximus DP1, which was on the cover of UHF No. 92, and is both a preamp and a DAC. You could also look at the Benchmark DAC1 HDR, which was in the previous issue. As for speakers, you’ll need something efficient, because your Quad amps have limited muscle. We suppose that, if the Wife Acceptance Factor nixed the Quads, the replacement speakers will need to be small, but they can’t be TOO small, because very small speakers are not known for efficiency. The possible choices are many, and might include Reference 3a, Harbeth, KEF, and a number of others. An issue of UHF anywhere you live for C$4.00 Subscribing for as little as C$20 (tax in Canada only) www.uhfmag.com/maggie.html ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 13 Advice Feedback Free for LPs. So I have taken an older MacBook Pro (with built-in optical drive) and connected it to an OWC RAID 5 array with 3 TB of usable space (it has four 1 TB drives, but half is used for the redundancy of the RAID 5, allowing for one drive to fail and be replaced with no data loss. This leaves 3 TB for the iTunes library, which should be plenty with Apple Lossless encoding). I have set iTunes to keep a library on this disk. Sound output is set to go through a Musical Fidelity V-DAC MkII connected to my preamp. I can even control it with a remote app on my iPhone. I have a few dozen SACDs and a handful of DVD-A’s. I know I can play them on my Ayre C5xe, and use the preamp’s tape output to go through a Griffin iMic and record them from analog using Final Vinyl, then divide the resulting files into tracks and manually place them in iTunes. Is there a more elegant way of doing this part without a trip into the analog domain? Christopher Moss TATAMAGOUCHE, NS Probably not, though our answer may change. Utilities exist for converting DSD (the recording format of SACD) into the more familiar pulse-code modulation, and some of the newest converters can actually read DSD. For the moment 14 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine with friends in the large living room with a cathedral ceiling and hardwood floors. But to make the sound room better, I will need a new CD player, as I have a large CD collection to go with my more modest vinyl records. The downstairs room is quite big, but it has wall to wall carpets and an eight-foot ceiling, so it won’t be nearly as bright as my previous living room. So here’s what I have: a Rotel CD-1072 (HDCD) with a Musical Fidelity X-10 v3 DAC, a Music Hall 5.1 turntable with a Denon 103 cartridge; a Musical Fidelity A-3.2 dual mono integrated amp. The latest addition will be the B&W CM-9 speakers. How much do I need to spend (and cost is important in these pre-retirement days) for a really good CD player that can play SACDs and HDCD discs? Or should I just keep the Rotel in the that does not result in a straight-through audiophile system (it doesn’t do SACD, high-grade playback system for SACD. though) and just spend $300 or so on a Which could mean, for the nonce, decent CD player for the upstairs living taking that trip through the analog room? domain. However, we do not recomMost of the new stuff I am buying is mend using the Griffin iMic, an essential vinyl, but there are some well-recorded product when it first came out, but CDs and SACDs I might get if I had a primitive by modern standards. We really sweet CD player. But it seems like think you should get a modern analog- I am going to have to spend well over to-digital converter like the ones found $1000 to improve on the Rotel with the in music stores and far superior to what MF DAC, right? I’m not very computer went before. For that matter, we do not savvy, so I don’t think some kind of recommend that you transfer high- music server would work. resolution We remember recordings whensuch a number as those of competitors of Keepwould up the great work. If it weren’t put onand lineDVD-Audio only only theinto cover forthe youtable guys,ofI would have never gotten SACD theimage CD’s and 16-bit/44.1 kHz resolution. contents. Go for 24 back into vinyl! Just wish I hadn’t sold We bitswould and 96tell kHz them as athat minimum. you don’t If your go fishing all my without albums bait. in 1983! DAC Sure, can’t we live deal from withwhat thoseyou files spend without through our site and Alan Podsadowski downsampling, the pages of our your print next issue. one will. But you could spend days COQUITLAM, BC But if you have reading onlymaterial a few offor these free. We discs, think whythat’s not keep the only them way around we can and convince On you theofother the hand, Alan, if so many play them from yourUHF Ayre?difference, That’s what music lovers had not sold their collecto adopt the new digital “miracle,” of we’re whydoing. you might want to trust us with thetions future of your few of us would have the fabulous LP music or home theatre system. collections we’ve built up over the years. WeWe have are readers in theonprocess every continent of sellingexcept Antarctica. our home Most and downsizing. But I have You’ve probably noticed that only of them discovered us on line. found a new place afford high-end specialty stores still have CD They readthat a lotwill of our freeme material. my own downstairs And then man-cave, they joined i.e. aus. players at all. Over the past three years dedicated sound room, so I am going to we haven’t recommended buying a CD be moving everything around, leaving player, because there is a better way to the basic home theatre system upstairs, play CDs, and you can probably guess and making my downstairs room the what that is. Yes, loading them into a audiophile heaven. Upstairs I will still computer. occasionally play some CDs while You did specif y that you’re not making dinner or briefly hanging out computer savvy, though setting up a WHY A FREE ISSUE computer, either dedicated or remote, to act as a music server is not rocket science. Several companies make standalone servers for those who don’t want to get their hands dirty with bits and bytes. On the other hand, a single computer could handle both your “man cave” and your upstairs system. Just add two devices, such as Apple Airport Express, with an iPad, iPod touch or iPhone as a remote. You do need a certain level of familiarity with computers to do the initial setup, we admit, but once the computer is properly configured, it is not much more complex than a typical CD player. Standalone servers cost more, and of course they don’t all sound alike. A rule of thumb: don’t buy one that has an internal hard drive. Drives are a commodity, now made essentially by only two companies, and no high end audio company can sell you one at an advantageous price. Yes, an antenna will pull in highdefinition TV, providing the set has a digital tuner, which pretty much all sets built in the past eight years have. It will even give better resolution than cable. Inouye’s Web site has disappeared, and even so the company had been inactive for many years. Since the circuit was proprietary, it will be difficult for anyone Feedback Advice Free Regarding your Super Antenna, do I understand correctly that it can be used to pull high-definition digital TV signal off air to a HD capable TV without any additional converter? I think I remember that you used to sell the Inouye power line conditioner. Do you know where I can get my unit checked out, as I am wondering after all these years whether it is working properly? John Clarke BURNABY, BC else to verify it. As a possible point of interest, it is likely that the neon bulbs on the front of the unit are flickering. That is normal for all neon bulbs, which begin flickering within a few months of being put into service. That seems to be harmless, though it can be annoying. FREE ADVICE ON LINE! www.uhfmag.com/FreeAdvice.html ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 15 Features Three Shows M y impression was that CES 2013 was smaller than the previous one, at least in high-end audio. More venues were added, however, notably the Mandalay Bay, shown above. Its cavernous halls were used for press day, including the ever-crowded CES Unveiled event. The Venetian (still used for high-performance audio and a few other sections) was no longer adequate. It was still pretty much impossible to get into the Samsung press conference, though, unless it was one’s only assignment of the day. A bonus for ink- and pixel-stained wretches such as I: the breakfasts and lunches at the Mandalay Bay were surprisingly good. But once the main show opened, it was back to the Venetian’s stale bagels and plastic muffins — not precisely what they serve in Venice! 16 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine by Gerard Rejskind The city itself remains in the doldrums. The huge shopping area of the CityCenter — the property of those two financial success stories, MGM and Dubai — remains vestigial, occupied only by the usual suspects (Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Cartier — who may not even be paying rent). That same complex no longer has a Cirque du Soleil show. Down the strip, the Sahara remains boarded up, and the skeleton of a new building where the Stardust once stood has grown only a little since last year, and appears abandoned again. The all-glass condo complex on the next page remains deserted, with a stationary crane on its roof and more and more of its windows broken. Getting into even the best restaurants does not require a reservation. What’s booming? Prostitution, for one thing. The undocumented people handing out cards for “girls that want to meet you” have been joined by competitors. The Gun Store, whose ads are found on many a taxi roof, is now just one commerce pandering to murderous instincts. Significantly, perhaps, a gun show was following CES at the Venetian. As for CES, it did seem somewhat smaller this year, though that’s not how the organizers tell it. In high-end audio, a number of regulars were either absent or had cut back their presence radically. That was noticeable even at “the zoo,” the convention centre that is the size of a dozen airplane hangars. What has not shrunk, despite CEA’s best efforts, is the number of journalists and pseudo-journalists, whose sheer numbers make it difficult to get into the more popular press conferences. The press-only CES Unveiled event was so overcrowded that it was difficult to get close to the tables of exhibitors. Pepcom’s invitation-only Digital Experience seemed less like a mob scene, perhaps because the aisles were wider. Free food and drink have lost none of their drawing power. There seems to be a Vegas company that specializes in making ice sculptures for events. Sculptures like one on the next page can usually be seen near to one of the bars, but an event without ice would be quite un-Vegas-like. At one time, high-end audio manufacturers would pay for a table at one or other event, but times are tough and it shows. The only audio manufacturer we spotted at either after-hours show, other than those who make diminutive Bluetooth speakers, was Beats by Dr. Dre. Yes, the headphone maker. It is now independent, having severed ties with Monster. We had given the original Beat phones a warm review, but subsequent reviews, including one in The New York Times, have been savage. Were the stores flooded with knockoffs? A Beats representative acknowledged the possibility, but assured me that the new production runs would be of uniformly high quality. Once the show itself was on, there was of course lots to see and hear. Some speaker line. Thiel would like to keep its large room if it can find some company with deep pockets to share the considerable cost. I f i n a l l y g o t t o he a r t h e i m p r e s s i v e l y s t y le d D ’A g o s t i n o M o m e nt u m monoblock amplifiers (featured in Gossip&News in UHF No. 89). Dan D’Agostino, you may know, was co-founder of Krell and its long-term desig ner, u nt il he placed second in a game of corporate politics. The Momentums cost $42,000 a pair, and they certainly have distinctive styling. I heard them three times, including in the rooms of major names were missing, as already Wisdom Audio and YG Acoustics. noted, and others were present in name My impression was that they sound only. That is to say, though their names as distinctive as they look, which is to were in the CES guide (which looks say that they have a recognizable sound. like the phone book of a medium-sized But then Krell amps did too. town), they did not have rooms of their One company I didn’t remember own, but had merely lent their gear to seeing in the CES high-end section actual exhibitors. That was the case of a lately is McIntosh. This amplifier number of cable companies, not surpris- company has been in the doldrums ingly, but — for example — Simaudio for years, passing from one owner to “placed” products with prominent another, but it is now Italian, owned exhibitors and did not set up their own by the consortium that is home to the (usually static) room. Even Liberty excellent speaker manufacturer, Sonus Trading, whose US division, May Audio, Faber. One result was already evident. usually books numerous rooms, this time The MC275 tube amplifier, a Mac classhared a room, and a small one at that. sic design, now has proper input jacks, For years now, we have been publishing, on our Web site, a free PDF Most of the high-end companies were and also massive binding posts that version of our magazine. in the Venetian tower, in proper hotel have replaced the 1950’s style barrier The reason is simple. We know you’re looking for information, and rooms, and not in the huge cubes made strips that were incompatible with good that is almost certainly why you’ve come to visit our site. And that’s why up by partitioning ballrooms. Most of cables. we give away what some competitors consider to be a startlingly large the ballrooms had in fact been converted What should a speaker enclosure be amount of information…for free. to private meeting spaces. An exception made from? How about glass? In fact, I We would give it all away for free, if we could still stay in business. was the Thiel-Bryston room. Though saw three glass loudspeakers in Vegas. Recent figures indicate that each issue is getting downloaded as many the space is too large, and cube-shaped The one at right is the Point MkII, as 100,000 times, and that figure keeps growing. besides, it has always been made to sound from a Swedish company whose name is Yes, we know, if we had a nickel for each download… good, thanks to the liberal use of plants, spelled Perfect8. Last year the Perfect8 Truth is, we’re in the business of helping you enjoy music at home folding screens and other acoustic aids. I saw had eight midrange drivers, which under the best possible conditions. And movies too. We’ll do what we need Thiel’s new CS2.7 speaker was being seemed to account for the name. This to do in order to get the information to you. demonstrated. This $9900 speaker is the one has but two. It seems the name Of course, we also want you to read our published editions too. We first created since Jim Thiel’s untimely refers to the speaker’s bidirectional hope that, having read this far, you’ll want to read on. death in 2009. It is based on his designs, radiation pattern, which resembles a however, and certainly it sounds superb. figure eight. It was accompanied by Bryston electronIf you’ve heard a large truck passing ics, DAC and streamer. by your house, you’ll know that glass However this was the last time we’ll rattles. The Perfect8 is made not from see these t wo companies together, window glass, but from several bonded because Bryston now has its own loud- layers of the sort of glass they make Why a free version? Features Feedback ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 17 Features Feedback expensive coffee tables from. This smaller speaker seemed much more at home than the one I had heard the previous year, which had been much too large for the hotel room. I stayed for several selections. The Perfect8 handled a Blues recording very well, and sounded delightfully natural on classical orchestra and opera. The price? At $115,000 it isn’t for the impecunious. Then there’s the intriguing speaker at left, the Giya G1, the flagship of the South African firm Vivid. Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore mincilit acing er accum vulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu feuipis modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa corperostrud tisi. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscidunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit lore facilis sequat. 18 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscidunt praestie er ametummod tat. Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. Andigna feuguer sustrud dolore conum ex et enisit prat vulputat iure dunt verit lutpat nullam velesto commolortie dolorpe riurem zzrit, senit nonsequis nibh er sum nim aliquis at accumsa ndrercipsum vent nullam, venis nim ipisim irit num euisis nisl ing elit wis ad i- ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 19 Features Feedback onullamet praestrud tie consequatue faccum autet, quis aliquat irilismolore exerat acidunt dolesto ex er incilis essim numsandrem verosto eummy nim velendre er ing euis nonulla faccumm olortionulla feuipsum eu facipis cipit, volobore erillaor in utpatie vel iustisl dipisim zzrillutetue corpera esendit ipisi blandrer susci te magna feugait vel ut iniam, velis amcore facilisl erit venit augait lute tem ing ercilit, velisci liquatuer il utatue consequat. Cil et veraessisl utat, sed tio dionsendipit nit aliquisi eu facincidunt lobor iure do ero dignit ullaortion ute feugiat. Lorem eum iurer iure tatue modigna feugait eros nisl utatum ip el ex eu feui eu facipsusto ea faccums andignis dit illaore do odit ilis dipit do euis eui te feugait niamcom modolor perilluptat. To commy nim iustio duipis num nostrud magna facip euis exerosto dolor sequipit augait lor se commodo lobore dolore conse conumsandit aliquisci tet lore tio eugait ad magnit utpat la feum nisl exercil lutatio consed tatem zzrilit aliquam quat utpat wisit praestie feuisim num do od exer augait duisse et lumsan etuercilisit nonsectet wissi blamcon utpat verostio et wisi tetueros nos autat lutat prat, commy nullamet adip esto delis dignisl dolorpe rcilis eum eu feu feugiam zzrit utat, con elenisi. Commod dolestrud te te euis alis niamconsed eummod te tet ing exerili quatummod dolute tem zzrit at alit, con ut iusto dit nos accum nummodiam, quamet, sequiscipit accum adiat volorem nos aliquatuerit iusto con velenit ilit luptat. 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Duiscilla adigna feugiam vent aliquam alit eu feu facip eu feugait ulputat, volortisisi. Il dignit erostie facidunt atio dolorem iustie magna core duipit wismod modit vel inibh et lore commolo rerosto delesseniat. Eliquis ex eugiam, suscidu ismodoloreet at. Molum zzriurem ad tem ipit aliquat. Ut nisl erciduis at. Ectem dolobore vulpute feu faci endre dipsuscip el etumsan diametu mmodoloreet lore volore faccummy nulla at velit alit lorperos ad dio dolortin euis am il dolenibh eummy nonullam il et, quipit in ea faccum nos atue dolorerat la feumsandit 20 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine enisim velis aut velit veros adipsusto odiamet augait iriliquisim velesse quatet alisi exero odolestrud mincipiscing endre doluptat prat, sit adignisl utet accum volor at, quis adit luptat. Ud dolor incipis modigniat acinibh erilla adignim num nim am, commod ea aut essequate ming ea facin velis dolore magna con ulla feugait augiamcore commy nisi. 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Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. A n hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. T by Gerard Rejskind show had not grown, and might have shrunk slightly. It may take a third show (2013) to confirm whether TAVES has momentum. In any case, don’t go thinking that this second TAVES has anything whatever in common with the Toronto shows of yesteryear. Putting a show into a downtown luxury hotel costs money, and TAVES landed an unlikely sponsor with deep pockets, Porsche. The first thing you saw entering the lobby of the King Eddie was the grey Porsche 911 shown above. The link with what is essentially a high-end audio show? The Porsche did have a Burmester sound system, and it you asked politely ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 21 Features Feedback he year 2011 saw the first Toronto high-end audio show in many years. The previous long-running shows, which had become smaller and smaller (and been held farther and farther out of town) had left sour memories. Would a new show succeed? Could it succeed? To the relief of the organizers, the answer turned out to be yes. Operations, set up with the aid of Michel Plante and Sarah Tremblay from the alwayssuccessful Montreal Salon Son&Image, contrasted pleasantly with the chaos of bygone years. TAVES (Toronto Audio Video Entertainment Show) was held at a quality downtown venue, the King Edward Hotel, and there was plenty to see and hear. And that was despite the reluctance of some industry members to leap in. I had talked to several potential exhibitors who had decided to sit out the first year, waiting to see whether the new organizers could draw them in. Michel and Sarah were not part of the organization this past year, but they were touring the show, and they told me that the 2012 TAVES had exactly the same number of exhibitors as the previous edition. Of course, an exhibit can be a large salon or it can be a table, and my subjective impression was that the and didn’t look too scruffy, you could sit in the all-enveloping leather seats and hear it. Note also the large banners for Burmester and LG, both of which are of course paid for. Bryston, which is close to being a local brand (it’s located in Peterborough), had its usual large room, but this time it wasn’t limited to showing off other people’s loudspeakers. Jim Tanner had asked a Canadian speaker company, Axiom, to design him a speaker he could live happily with, and their creation is being spun into a whole new Bryston line. You can see Jim with one of his new Model T speakers on the next page. This efficient (94 dB) floorstanding loudspeaker will sell for $6495. There will, however, be a whole series of them, including one with an outboard crossover, an active one (using a new version of Bryston’s own electronic crossover), a smaller stand-mounted speaker, a centre speaker for home theatre, and lots more. Axiom has been around a long time, but with a rather low profile. The new line is getting plenty of attention. The Model T sounded rather good, despite the dodgy acoustics, with solid bass. I saw and heard a familiar speaker, the Auditorium from Britain’s Living Voice. It’s the downmarket model from the Living Voice Avatar speaker that we have long used in our Alpha reference system. It was in a rather good system, which included a Simon Yorke turntable, a Manley Stingray tube amplifier and Chinook phono preamp. I stayed to enjoy a classic recording of Eartha Kitt. Gorgeous. I h a d n ’t s e e n tain the marketing Mimetism electronof this impressive ics in some years, but speaker as well. the products of this You m ay Franco-Swiss company also have were back, looking and not iced t he sounding very good. RJH ReferOn the previous page ence One is the 35.2 preamplifier speaker on the (under $6000), which next page, with its was feeding M imegiant cone driver. tism’s own 45.2 power It’s the creation of amplifier and a pair Ron Harper, who of compact but very has placed a reflexgood Kudos Super 10 loaded full-range speakers. Mimetism A ud io N i r v a n a is working on a new driver into a comseries, including (perplex hand-assemhaps surprisingly) a bled enc lo s u re. CD player. The f inish You have possibly is gorgeous, noticed the speaker at and the sound right. The Blueberry i s t o o. T he Hill R hapsody ver y speakers were much dominates the driven by a pair room, t hough it is of classic Quad II handsome in a moderntube monoblocks. ist sort of way, sculpted Several years from layered Russian ago, Gershman Baltic birch. It needs to Acoustics launched be seen to be believed, a startlingly inexand then it needs to be p e n s i v e heard to be believed. f loor st a ndThe optional bottom ing speaker in Las section Shows contains twoVegas, called t he Toronto, Sonogram. powered serinvo-concourse inisMontreal. trolled subwoofers, one looking up, the other looking down.and Theofmidrange Reviewed in UHF No. 81, it sold Sure, can find countless show reports line, but…and it seemed bipolar (there’s a second driver at the rear), and all you the drivers can be oriented initiallyonfor $3600, addsEfficiency its own unique or moved back and forth individually in precise, calibratedUHF fashion. tootake. good to be true. It was, alas, and its showtopictures better,price haverapidly you noticed? is very high, at 98 dB, and the Rhapsody wasEven beingour driven concertare levels soared, pricing it out of many, Wevisitors cover the shows on line, for free. with a tiny tube amplifier. The result was striking, and were asking possibly most, budgets. Gershman was back And whether then we they expand experience UHF itself. each other hadon yetthe made with ainnew entry-level speaker, the Idol. It a show? it to the end of theGoing hall totohear is floorstanding, like the Sonogram, though way, follow through ouraeyes. theEither Blueberry Hill. it The it has smaller footprint. Its initial price is price, not including even lower, at $3000. I heard it with a Camshipping from bridge amplifier and an Esoteric CD player. t he Toronto If Gershman can keep the price from flying factory, is just into the stratosphere, it should earn a place under $25,000. on your “must-hear” list. The speaker Speaking of affordable audio, the amplifier is the creation at left caught my eye, and my ear too, the of Marlen MogiVif MA KT88. It’s a prototype, which you lever, who also will have guessed by the fact that the model makes high-end number is on a piece of sticky tape. It looks cables and at one as though it could have come from Audio time built equipment stands Research, but in fact it’s made in Markham, too. We hope he has the resources to susand it sells for an impressively low $2699. If Features Feedback SHOW REPORTS 22 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 23 Features Feedback you look closely at the model name, you’ll see that it uses KT88 output tubes. Accomp a n ie d b y a We l l Tempered A madeus turntable and ProAc speakers, it sounded very good. Cabasse had come w it h it s new Pacif ic 3SA speakers, which are tall black towers, not the large globe-shaped speakers of recent years. They’re $16,000 in semiactive form (that is, with the woofers driven by its own amplifiers), or $22,000 in fully active form. I listened to an Eric Bibb recording, Booker’s Guitar (a reference to his guitar, once owned by the legendary Booker T), and it sounded sweet, but with excellent transients. There were other outstanding speakers, including the Atohm GT3 from France ($10,900), a tall tower with exquisite finish and superb dynamics and image, and the Virgo 25 from the always excellent Audio Physic of Germany. Todd Garfinkle of M•A Records was at a table, selling his fascinating recordings of classical and esoteric music. Next to him, conveniently enough, was Woo Audio, which makes a bewildering variety of amplifiers for hard-core headphone users. Naturally, some visitors were bringing M•A CDs over to listen. Woo even has a dedicated model for Stax electrostatic headphones. The combination is over $6000, but it is truly the state of the art. The woman at top right is singer Anne Bisson, who is listening to her own CD, Portraits&Perfume, through headphones. Since then, by the way, Anne’s LP Blue Mind has been named one of 2012’s top pressings by Tone Audio. Like most conventions, TAVES included an after-hours cocktail party for trade and press. The event is supposed to afford networking opportunities, but the noise level inevitably precludes conversation. The party included a singer, with an animated backdrop but no front lighting, so that she looked like a character from a Bond title sequence. The noise level was fearsome (see my SPL reading at right), with peaks of as much as 97 dB, even before she began singing. That was my cue to head for somewhere quieter…and safer. My ears are important to me! My conclusion? This second edition of TAVES was worth attending, though it has not (yet) attained the critical mass of the Montreal or Denver shows. What we’ll be keeping an eye on in the next year or two is whether it can grow, for grow it must if it is to survive in the long term. Too many manufacturers and distributors were still sitting it out, and that included local companies, for which travel costs are relatively modest. TAVES must find ways to win them over. Feature Feedback L uc and Benoît turned to each other and nodded slowly as the first notes of Dirty Three emerged from the speakers. Luc had brought his CD along and asked to listen to it in the Salon Idéal room. On a Rega system, including an Apollo-R player, a Brio integrated amp and RS5 speakers, the Australian rock band sounded truly excellent. And that wasn’t all that elicited mutual nods of approval. I noticed it again when Loreena McKennitt began to sing The Wind that Shakes the Barley on an LP via a Rega RP3 turntable (shown below). “Such richness!” said Benoît. I smiled as I watched him get into a long conversation about the turntable with the Rega representative. And that, dear reader and fellow audiophile, was a pattern that manifested 24 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine by Albert Simon throughout the Montreal show. Visitors were attracted by sound quality they were “discovering” through LPs, with turntables used in a large proportion of the rooms. The key word here is used. Some years ago, they were mostly displayed on cube pedestals as beautiful sculptures, but rarely heard. People would ooh and ah at the latest CD players, merely glancing at the turntables on their way out. But something else was happening. In rare instances, at that time, visitors were surprised to find that the music originated from a laptop or server, and they commonly assumed that it was merely for reasons of convenience. This time, however, Luc and Benoît were surprised to find that in most of the rooms where a turntable was not the source, music emerged from a computer. And I wanted to give them a chance to experience what I believe is the most important upgrade to digital reproduction. Such was the case with a Linn system that included the Akurate DSM player (read: internal drive, not CD player) and the Akurate 2200 amplifier, through Tannoy Definition DC8 speakers. Con- trol was through an iPad. “The sound is kind of…round,” said Benoît. “It’s rich and enveloping.” Luc chimed in: “And it’s gentle and discreet.” “In what way?” I asked, a bit puzzled. “It’s just… true,” he said. When was the last time you heard com ment s l ike that about d ig it al reproduction? I lost track of Benoît, who was quite taken with the different models of affordable turntables offered by ProJect. “Such a great choice,” he said as he stepped out of the crowded room. Further on, the just-as-affordable Grant Fidelity speakers were a wonderful surprise for my two friends as they sat silently listening to Benoît’s CD, the piano music of composer Federico Mompou, played by Jenny Lin on her Silent Music album. He asked to listen to his own CD of Hildegard Von Bingen, 11,000 Virgins, sung by Anonymous 4. “Wonderful!” was the only comment Benoît managed to muster, as if emerging from a dream. “Incredible!” added Luc. “Best sound I’ve heard today.” We quietly entered the Fidelio room, where I explained that they were going to hear music reproduced “with no moving parts.” They looked at me curiously as they took their seats. The source was a Mac mini computer, or album. The music was palpable, and the impression of being at a live performance was uncanny. Peter opened his laptop and selected a superb rendition of Schubert’s The Shepherd on the Rock for soprano, clarinet and piano, followed by an earthshattering live performance of Cabaret. To my surprise, Luc and Benoît were unmoved. They found it overwhelming, and I recognized the early signs of audio saturation. It was time for a much needed break. Spending four days in a row at an audio show has made me resilient. I find I can walk through room after room without carrying my last impressions along with me, rinsing them off along ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 25 Feature Feedback more accurately, a Mac mini with a Master Flash card plugged into one of its USB jacks. The signal travelled through Siltech cables to an Ayre KXR preamp and a VXR amp, and reached us through Audio Physic Avantera speakers. The sound of Vincent Bélanger’s cello was superb in Schubert’s Ave Maria (Bélanger also played live at the show — you can see him on the previous page). The next treat in store for us was a very recent recording of Ginastera’s music played by I Musici de Montréal. “I wanted to use a microphone configuration similar to that used by Mercury on their legendary LPs,” whispered Fidelio’s René Laflamme, “and we’re listening to it at 192 kHz.” Fabulous! I wanted my friends to have a very different experience, a spectacular music display on a grand scale. We walked into the Coup de Foudre room, which featured the Wilson Audio Sophia Series 3 speakers (above), a hefty pair of VTL MB-185 Series III power amps and a VTL 5.5 preamp, all connected by Transparent Audio cables. The sources were an AMG turntable and Peter McGrath’s own recordings. We listened to two selections on LP, first John Coltrane and then the Ray Brown Trio playing Easy Does It and Sweet Georgia Brown from their Soular Energy Features Feedback the way, so to speak, and remaining available for the next impression. Not so for most occasional visitors. The contrast between rooms can be disturbing. Imagine spending an evening at a concert listening to, say, a string quartet, and immediately after walking into a crowded jazz club. Remember to take frequent breaks at your next show. The next day I accompanied Michael, who had interesting comments about the Fidelio sound. After listening to the Mânouche Swing Quintet followed by an excerpt of the I Musici string orchestra with a solo piano on a Master Flash card, he said, “This is my reference. One doesn’t make any effort, the brain relaxes.” Again, fellow audiophile, when was the last time you heard comments like that about digital reproduction? 26 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine Michael also told me how much he liked the music in the Audio Note room, listening to Karen Young’s Live in Your Living Room. “Everything was beautiful,” he said. “Her voice, the cymbals…so difficult to reproduce cymbals. When they sound so good, you know that the highs are just right.” The CD was played on the Audio Note CD 4.1X and the Oto Phone SE Signature class A phono integrated tube amp, driving AN-E Spe/HE speakers positioned in the corners of the room, as intended in their original design. “I’m not impressed any more with all kinds of performance extremes,” added Michael. Above: Dr. Feckert’s Firebird turntable and arm, with room for a second tone arm, and the Monk Audio phono preamp, with settings for every recording curve we know of. “When I listen to a system for the first time, I ask myself a basic question: would I want to listen to music on it for four hours?” My friends couldn’t sample everything at the show (few visitors can), so they missed some fascinating stuff, such as the Plurison room, and specifically the stunningly designed Devialet D-Premier (on the previous page). This mirrorpolished alloy block, set up vertically flat against the wall like a work of art, is a 240-watt integrated amp/DAC. It was driving a pair of superb Electra Be speakers by Focal, and had no trouble filling the huge room. Rutter’s Requiem was simple and airy in its purity, and yet solidly grounded by the richly deep sound of the organ. Oh, did I mention the source? A laptop. I should add that while there are many excellent articles covering every single new component at audio shows and the latest technologies (see elsewhere in this issue), I choose to write about people who listen to some of those components and the way they react to the music those technologies recreate. Sound, yes, of course, but music above all else — music and emotion. Let me conclude by sharing part of a conversation I had with Peter McGrath. After we listened to his poignant live recording of Jordi Savall at a concert a few weeks earlier, where Savall’s Baroque ensemble was joined by a three-member group from Mexico, Peter explained that the legendary viola da gamba virtuoso had sat alone on stage and played a piece from Sainte-Colombe’s Tombeau Les Regrets, titled Les Pleurs — a meditation on loss. It was Savall’s tribute to his wife, soprano Monserrat Figueras, who had died the previous November. “Besides all the equipment I use when I’m mixing,” said Peter, “I have another set of ears, my wife’s. She always tells me to push the singers back. In this venue she was sitting in the fifth row. ‘No, they were not so forward,’ she would say. When I was working on the section with Savall alone on stage playing Les Pleurs, my wife began to cry as she walked into the room. I asked her why. ‘Because that’s what I did when I heard it play live,’ she said.” Audio Then and Now O ver the years, we have published a lot of equipment reviews, and a lot of other interesting articles as well. Let’s look back at a few of the more interesting ones. Most of these products are long discontinued, it goes without saying, but the memory lingers on. The Energy Reference Connoisseur Henry See pronounced the Winchesters the finest speakers he had ever heard. So what happened to the Winchester? Castle discontinued it. Not smart. $2000 a pair in rosewood finish, but would probably be closer to $10,000 today. Energy later produced a new speaker of the same name that was far inferior. Today, Energy is one of the brand names of Klipsch. The Castle Eden This was another Castle speaker that got a rave review, this one in UHF No. 53. The Castle Winchester Another speaker became famous in our pages after it got such a rave review from us (UHF No. 30) that many readers who had not read quite carefully thought we had adopted it as a new reference. That speaker was the Castle Winchester, then that British company’s new flagship, selling for the bargain price of $3660. There was nothing this speaker did not do well. By four o’clock the day of the review, we still had another speaker we had scheduled for a quick listen, but the panelists refused. They wanted to hear more from the Winchesters. Odette Roy, who had to make supper, stayed until six, and the other three hung around until seven. Panelist The Spectral SDR-1000SL In some quarters, the Compact Disc was hailed as the summum of high fidelity, “perfect sound forever.” For our part, we were appalled. Must we put up forever with those overly shrill highs, that thin bottom end, that impoverished sense of space? It would gradually become apparent that the worst of the musical damage was due not to the medium but ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 27 Feature Feedback One of the best two-way speakers ever made, the original RefCon used unique drivers. The woofer’s cone was hand-stitched to the surround, and the dual hyperdome tweeter was the result of a research project at Waterloo University. It was so good we adopted it as a reference, and these speakers still serve in our Kappa home cinema system. In our original review (Hi-Fi Sound No. 9), we wrote: The very wide range is one factor which influenced our choice. The second is the sheer beauty of the music that comes out of this speaker. The detail is truly superb. The depth and stereo image are as good as we can recall hearing from any loudspeaker. The Reference Connoisseur cost Our enthusiasm was due in part to its modest $1400 price, but also to its surprising way with music. We praised its “warm, lively sound, (with) a touch of real magic.” Oddly, Castle had a floorstanding speaker at exactly the same price, the Kendal. It was so poor that we didn’t even make it through our stack of test records. So what did Castle do? Right. They killed off the Eden but kept the Kendal. Feature Feedback to the terrible players. And they really were terrible. The engineer behind Reference Recordings, Keith O. Johnson, told us not to worry, that there was a breakthrough coming. That breakthrough turned out to be HDCD, but Johnson was also chief engineer of Spectral. While we awaited his breakthrough, he designed a CD player that astonished us and gladdened our hearts. The first one we reviewed, in UHF No. 26, was the SDR-1000, which contained a preamplifier (Spectral is rather famous for those too). It was so obviously superior to any other player that comparisons were barely needed. In issue No. 33, we reviewed the preamp-less SDR-1000SL (the “SL” stood for “straight line”). By then, some credible competitors had emerged, and in that issue we also reviewed the Esoteric P-2/D-2 and CD-Z5000, the Carver tube player, the MSB Silver, the Proceed PCD2 and PDT2/PDP2, and the unfortunately named Micromega Duo.BS. The Spectral was so superior that we bought it, and we opined (mistakenly) that it might never be surpassed. It was, of course. We replaced it with a Parasound transport, built by CEC, and a Counterpoint DAC, able to decode Keith Johnson’s other invention, HDCD. The Spectral was expensive, especially in Canada, at $9600. However, the US price was just $5795, then worth about C$6550. Our cheque was the last ever cashed by the Canadian distributor before it closed its doors forever. 28 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine The Simaudio W-4070 Anyone remember when Simaudio, originally called Sima Audio (for founder Victor Sima) was just a minor regional amplifier maker? That was many years ago, but it was widely believed that the company entered the big leagues in 1993 because of our review of the Celeste W-4070 power amplifier. LP version of this blockbuster choral recording. The brass section opened with the initial fanfare, and then the chorale began to sing. “Oh, God!” exclaimed Henry, who put his pen down again…as did we all. The effect of the review was buttressed by reviews of two other amplifiers in the same issue. One was lukewarm, and the other was perhaps the most devastating condemnation we have ever published. That made it clear, for those who didn’t know us well, that we don’t give praise to the undeserving. When a refined special edition version came out, we bought it, and it is still used, in bridged mode, for the centre channel of our Kappa cinema system. We would later choose, as a reference, a Moon W-5 amplifier, based on the same circuit design. Digital-to-Analog converters DACs, as they are known, are popular these days, and we’ve been running reviews on all we can get our hands on. Back in 1994, no one had thought of storing music on hard drives, which were too small to hold much music anyway. Even so, UHF No. 41 included three DAC reviews, with two of them pictured on the cover. The amplifier was the first to use what Victor Sima dubbed the Renaissance circuit, which would be the engine of Simaudio amplifiers for many years. The review was a rave, and we can do no better than to quote from it… The impact of the big drums (on the John Newton Howard recording) was powerful without a trace of distortion. The warmth of the sound struck us once more, as did the driving rhythm. “You just put your pen down and listen,” said Henry, who left his notebook blank until the music stopped. Gerard commented that the rhythm was so well rendered that you could predict what was coming next! It was close to a perfect performance. Even so, that didn’t quite prepare us for what we would hear now. The next recording was Testament, the Of course, DACs then had a different purpose. You would connect one to the digital output of a CD player with the hope of improving it. You might also buy a CD transport — essentially a disc drive without its own converter — as a source. This was the first time our cover MBox could provide phanactually featured converters. tom power to our EarthThe top one in the cover photo was works QTC-1 condenser the McCormack DAC-1, one of the microphones. The article first products from the renamed Mod was our first describing the Squad. Though McCormack (named use of a computer and its for founder Steve McCormack, who hard drive as a music storage would later leave the company) would system. turn out some very good products, the It was likely to be a DAC-1 wasn’t one of them. We did temporar y system, howpraise its lively and detailed sound, per- ever, because “large” hard haps because we were not yet expecting drives were not very large much from digital products not named at all. It was expected that Spectral, but we alsoWe saidremember it suffered from when ayou number competitors would wouldofmix your music “occasional confusion put on andline hardness only only at the cover table dow n toimage t wo and c h athe n nel s of the top end.” That might not be what contents. and put it on a blank CD. you would want to We spend would $1495 tell (in them 1994 that youThe don’t gobox fishing without grey on the left bait. dollars) on. Sure, we live from whatofyou through site and thespend cover photo is aour DAC, The bottom DAC the cover the in pages of ourpicprint issue. But you DA could t he C$1150 53 spend f rom days ture is the Enlightened Audio Design reading CEC. material for free. A nd it was prett y DSP-7000, then costing a hefty We think that’s$2800. the onlygood, way we can convince you of the though significantly We very much liked its broad, full-sizedUHF it difference, sounded better getting sound, though atoftimes it seemed to to why you might want us with future itstrust signal fromthe our CECof your magnify the music. Albert Simonmusic likened or home theatre system. TL51X player than from the experience to watching stage play We have areaders on every except Antarctica. the continent computer via USB. The through binoculars. We all commented Most of themDA53 discovered on line. had ausmicrophone input and on the EAD’s lack of warmth, Theythen readaa lot of ourcontrol, free material. volume which means it also concommon failing of digital audio. And then they an joined us. tained analog-to-digital converter. EAD would later be the first company to include HDCD-decoding in The DIY LP cleaner its DAC. Simaudio’s Moon Attraction Our best-selling issue ever was UHF preamp/DAC for home cinema was No. 58, and this is the reason for its based on an EAD design. Today our runaway popularity. Attraction is semi-retired, but we still use it to decode HDCD. The third DAC in the issue was the QED Reference Digit. “I did not like what I heard with this converter,” wrote Albert Simon, “and I liked it even less when I found out its price.” That price was $1050, a pretty penny at the time. Henry See likened listening to the QED to having an arrow shot into your ear. WHY A FREE ISSUE Like us, a lot of audiophiles enjoy the sound of LPs but hate the noise caused by dirt and worse. There are plenty of LP-cleaning machines available, but they are universally expensive. Could you actually build one at home? Yes. And we did, for about $150 of parts. A really good craftsman could probably do it for less. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 29 Feature Feedback Making your own recordings Issue No. 72 (above) was the first in which a computer appeared as a part of a music system. The laptop on the cover is an Apple iBook, running Audacity, open-source recording software. We also tried other software, including Digidesign’s ProTools and Apple’s GarageBand. The vertical blue device next to it is the Digidesign MBox, an inexpensive USB interface box: it included both a DAC (for playback) and an analog-todigital converter for recording. The What made this machine possible was the small wet-dry shop vacuum cleaner, commonly available in hardware stores for $50. You place the LP on the platter, apply the cleaning fluid to it, brush it into the grooves, and then vacuum it all up, leaving your LP clean and dry. One of our readers subsequently suggested an improvement to our design, using an inertia-driven platter and leaving out the drive motor. As for us, we harnessed our knowledge of chemistry to develop a record-cleaning fluid that would be effective against oils and grime, but wouldn’t leave a sticky residue and would be safe for your precious vinyl. No, don’t write and ask whether you can get a copy of that issue, because it is long gone. A PDF version was not possible, because UHF was not put together by purely electronic means until issue No. 68. We’re not about to make photocopies either. The prodigious sales of issue No. 58 are a sign that, even before the LP’s relatively recent renaissance, it still commanded solid interest from audiophiles. It is perhaps also a sign that we ought to develop a second version of our LPcleaning machine. We’ve got ideas. How about it? Cinema Onkyo’s Home Cinema Solution T here are home cinema processors and then there are receivers. Any big box store you might wander into will have only the latter. A gulf seems to be widening between them. You would no doubt assume that the standalone processors would be superior, whereas receivers would have a lot of doubtful legacy circuitry crammed into a small box. You would also assume that having less in the box is going to cost you…more. You would of course be right. In our own home cinema reference system, we have been borrowing other people’s processors, but we knew it was time we had our own. We had our eyes on the Moon CP-8, and also on the Bryston SP-2, both well-regarded. And both extremely expensive. Truth is, we couldn’t get either one for review, and it’s not because we haven’t asked. Such upscale products are built in very small quantities even by the larger high end companies, and, unlike what you might expect, they are in huge demand. You’ve heard of the one percent? We don’t know how big your upgrade budget is, but ours is a little anemic just at the moment. Losing our newsstand distributor (see this issue’s Editorial) and the huge amount of money it owed us left 30 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine us with a slimmer budget than we would have liked. Which got us to thinking. The quality of the processor depends in part on the chipsets used, but a lot of companies use the same chipsets. Could we do well by selecting a receiver from one of the better receivers, and simply ignoring its power amplifiers? We thought first of Pioneer, Denon and Marantz, but when we checked the feature on some of their newer receivers we saw that couldn’t work. Thanks to ongoing price wars, manufacturers are cutting features in order to remain competitive (which is to say, cheap). One feature widely cut is preamplifier outputs. W hich means we couldn’t bypass the power amplifiers and use our own. Using such amplifiers was not an acceptable compromise, but was a receiver a realistic alternative at all? We did finally find an exception. Onkyo is not as well known as Pioneer, Yamaha or Panasonic, but it has long had a reputation for superior build quality. We selected the TX-NR709, a 7.1-channel receiver with a full set of connectors, The Onkyo TX-NR709 may be the last (and best) of a dying breed and a price that varies between $600 and $1000, depending on where you buy it. The Onkyo has the chips we had hoped for aboard, including the Marvell Qdeo chip, which handles upscaling and deinterlacing (it is also used by Oppo and Cambridge). It even comes with the Audyssey alignment system, which uses a microphone placed at the listening position in order to align levels and time delay of the different channels. Still, if it was to do what we hoped on movie sound, it needed to be at least very good at the basics: as a two-channel audio-only preamplifier. Any product with this many connectors can be a challenge to set up, and no mistake. Of course a knowledgeable dealer can easily do the job for you, but receivers like this are often sold in big stores full of “associates” on minimum wage, or even on line. The good side of this bewildering complexity is that the TX-N709 can do pretty much anything you might want to do. Or at least it can if you can connect it properly and then program it suitably. It does come with one of those “quick start” leaflets included with most technology products today, but “quick,” in this case, has only an ironic meaning. We were startled to find that, right out of the box, the receiver sounded not at all as we expect receivers to sound, and as we had feared it might. After some 50 hours of run-in time (the minimum we’ll put any product through before listening to it), we sat down for some serious comparisons. You can, of course, get the paid version of this issue, and we hope you’ll want to. If Maggie’s electronic version floats your boat, drop by www.uhfmag. com/maggie.html. We continue in imitation Latin. Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco adionullamet praestrud tie consequatue faccum autet, quis aliquat irilismolore exerat acidunt dolesto ex er incilis essim numsandrem verosto eummy nim velendre er ing euis nonulla faccumm olortionulla feuipsum eu facipis cipit, volobore erillaor in utpatie vel iustisl dipisim zzrillutetue corpera esendit ipisi blandrer susci te magna feugait vel ut iniam, velis amcore facilisl erit venit augait lute tem ing ercilit, velisci liquatuer il utatue consequat. Cil et veraessisl utat, sed tio dionsendipit nit aliquisi eu facincidunt lobor iure do ero dignit ullaortion ute feugiat. Lorem eum iurer iure tatue modigna feugait eros nisl utatum ip el ex eu feui eu facipsusto ea faccums andignis dit illaore do odit ilis dipit do euis eui te feugait niamcom modolor perilluptat. To commy nim iustio duipis num nostrud magna facip euis exerosto dolor sequipit augait lor se commodo lobore dolore conse conumsandit aliquisci tet lore tio eugait ad magnit utpat la feum nisl exercil lutatio consed tatem zzrilit aliquam quat utpat wisit praestie feuisim num do od exer augait duisse et lumsan etuercilisit nonsectet wissi blamcon utpat verostio et wisi tetueros nos autat lutat prat, commy nullamet adip esto delis dignisl dolorpe rcilis eum eu feu feugiam zzrit utat, con elenisi. Commod dolestrud te te euis alis niamconsed eummod te tet ing exerili quatummod dolute tem zzrit at alit, con ut iusto dit nos accum nummodiam, quamet, sequiscipit accum adiat volorem nos aliquatuerit iusto con velenit ilit luptat. Od tat lor sim nisci tat at ut iril eum vullaor se ex enim dignim digna commodolore commy num veniam dolut wiscipit exercil ut ilis eum non volessim dunt wisl do do commod magniat. Ut wisisim zzrit nonsequatie magnit nos nonsed delenim dolenis adiatem zzrilisit ad doluptat. Quat ip eugait wissenis adipissecte do eu feugait praessit ute veniamc onulla feugueril et lore min essenis nos et amet lore molobor percipit in eniam, vulla coreet, venim eugiate dolore dionseniam nulla conse dip ex exerat, sequat nosto do euisciliqui etum delit nos nonse tem iriureet, secte dolor sum zzriustrud tat, suscips ustrud tie vel dolore modo conse modolortio et nos nit utem zzrit irit pratueros dolorem diat, quipit nonsequate magna facip exer summodion vullaore duis euismod ignibh esting et, vel estrud estrud dipisit inciduis aliquam eum doloborer sed tionsenit lum nos dolore eum niam iustrud euis am euipsum molobore cor at. Duiscilla adigna feugiam vent aliquam alit eu feu facip eu feugait ulputat, volortisisi. Il dignit erostie facidunt atio dolorem iustie magna core duipit wismod modit vel inibh et lore commolo rerosto delesseniat. Eliquis ex eugiam, suscidu ismodoloreet at. Molum zzriurem ad tem ipit aliquat. Ut nisl erciduis at. Ectem dolobore vulpute feu faci endre dipsuscip el etumsan diametu mmodoloreet lore volore faccummy nulla at velit alit lorperos ad dio dolortin euis am il dolenibh eummy nonullam il et, quipit in ea faccum nos atue dolorerat la feumsandit enisim velis aut velit veros adipsusto odiamet augait iriliquisim velesse quatet alisi exero odolestrud mincipiscing endre doluptat ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 31 Cinema Feedback rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore mincilit acing er accum v ulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu feuipis modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa corperostrud tisi. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscidunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit lore facilis sequat. Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscidunt praestie er ametummod tat. Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. Andigna feuguer sustrud dolore conum ex et enisit prat vulputat iure dunt verit lutpat nullam velesto commolortie dolorpe riurem zzrit, senit nonsequis nibh er sum nim aliquis at accumsa ndrercipsum vent nullam, venis nim ipisim irit num euisis nisl ing elit wis Cinema Feedback prat, sit adignisl utet accum volor at, quis adit luptat. Ud dolor incipis modigniat acinibh erilla adignim num nim am, commod ea aut essequate ming ea facin velis dolore magna con ulla feugait augiamcore commy nisi. Ommy nim in ea augait, quam dolore consed tetue eu faccum vel utat. Ut aci bla facip et autatis autem dolenim nit, velisl ing el er suscill utpatin henibh ese duis alit, suscil dolesto coreet et vel et nummy nulla adit lorpero odo doluptatie verosting et vel utpat volorem quat adionsent ad molore deliqui psummy nit luptat, venibh erat. Duissi exerat, quis nos nulla feugueros niat, quisl dunt aute te dolor si. Ecte tatisim irit erat er sum iliquat am erit adiam, susci bla faci exerilit at praestrud magnim volore tis aut nim nostio commy nim deliqui sciduis nonsequatue euip ea aut ad eugait, conse ex essi tat, quis num ipit utem dolor sit aci eros dolorperat, volor sum atumsandre magna aut nos at praestie velisl et augait. Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla 32 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore mincilit acing er accum v ulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu feuipis modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa corperostrud tisi. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscidunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit lore facilis sequat. Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscidunt praestie er ametummod tat. Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. Andigna feuguer sustrud dolore conum ex et enisit prat vulputat iure dunt verit lutpat nullam velesto commolortie dolorpe riurem zzrit, senit nonsequis nibh er sum nim aliquis at accumsa ndrercipsum vent nullam, venis nim ipisim irit num euisis nisl ing elit wis adionullamet praestrud tie consequatue faccum autet, quis aliquat irilismolore exerat acidunt dolesto ex er incilis essim numsandrem verosto eummy nim velendre er ing euis nonulla faccumm olortionulla feuipsum eu facipis cipit, volobore erillaor in utpatie vel iustisl dipisim zzrillutetue corpera esendit ipisi blandrer susci te magna feugait vel ut iniam, velis amcore facilisl erit venit augait lute tem ing ercilit, velisci liquatuer il utatue consequat. Cil et veraessisl utat, sed tio dionsendipit nit aliquisi eu facincidunt lobor iure do ero dignit ullaortion ute feugiat. Lorem eum iurer iure tatue modigna feugait eros nisl utatum ip el ex eu feui eu facipsusto ea faccums andignis dit illaore do odit ilis dipit do euis eui te feugait niamcom modolor perilluptat. To commy nim iustio duipis num nostrud magna facip euis exerosto dolor sequipit augait lor se commodo lobore dolore conse conumsandit aliquisci tet lore tio eugait ad magnit utpat la feum nisl exercil lutatio consed tatem zzrilit aliquam quat utpat wisit praestie feuisim num do od exer augait duisse et lumsan etuercilisit nonsectet wissi blamcon utpat verostio et wisi tetueros nos autat lutat prat, commy nullamet adip esto delis dignisl dolorpe rcilis eum. Will That Be 3D or HD? D o you actually have to choose between them? You may have to, not that you should expect manufacturers to tell In fact, the consumer system does not work just like the one used in cinemas, because the image is delivered by the same limited-bandwidth system as 2D. Two pictures, one for the left eye and one for the right, must share the bandwidth available. The result is two images of 960 x 540 lines each instead of Blu-ray’s usual 1920 x 1080 lines. You have traded away HD in order to get 3D. But never fear, say the proponents of passive 3D. Your brain will somehow fuse together the two half-resolution images to reconstitute a full resolution picture. We wish this were true, but two minutes spent watching a passive 3D screen at a big box store will make it plain that the argument is bogus. Suddenly, you can see the individual scanning lines, just as you could in the days of cathode ray tubes. Step back to a more typical viewing distance, and you can still see them. In order to get 3D, you feel as though you had returned to 1996. The other 3D-delivery system is active. The set alternates between two high-definition images for a sixtieth of a second. The active glasses include LCD shutters that lighten and darken in time with the appearance of the images, so that each eye sees only the image it should. The disadvantages are evident. The glasses are electronic devices, relatively heav y, w it h a bat ter y, requ ir i ng l i ne of sight with the player. To avoid “ghost” images, the screen must be able to react at very high speed. LCD screens, used in the majorit y of sets, have d i f f ic u lt y w it h this. But at least active 3D maintains full HD. Or does it? Not if we judge by some tests that were done on European sets by Vincent Alzieu and Pierre-Jean Alzieu on lesnumeriques.com (an English version is available at digitalversus.com). On the basis of their published test images, none scores perfectly, or (in our evaluation) very well. Especially poor were Samsung’s entry-level (6-series) active 3D sets. Samsung admitted these sets did not have the same level of performance as the company’s top series and argued that there is more than one sort of full HD. It has since removed the “Full HD” logo from those sets. In the light of this, it appears that you really may have to choose between 3D and HD. Is the tradeoff worthwhile? Considering that a lot of “3D” material, including movies, is not actually shot in 3D but is “converted,” the tradeoff seems like a poor one. We suggest trusting your eyes. We love 3D, but we love high-definition images even more. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 33 Cinema Feedback you that. We’re very fond of high-definition television, and in fact “fond” may be too mild a word. We look back with no fondness at all to the days of v isible scanning lines you could see from across the room. However, they’re back, and if you have looked critically at recent television sets, you may have noticed it. The problem is 3D. The major television set makers have been, for the most part, losing money on every television set they sell. TVs had become a commodit y, with little in the way of technological distinctions to give one brand an edge over another. Only price mattered then, unless some new innovation — any innovation — could persuade consumers to pass their existing TVs on to their grandparents and go shopping again. The current gee-whiz innovation, you’ll have noticed, is 4K, with four times the resolution of high-def, for which there are, unfortunately, no consumer sources. Before that there was…3D. Now, 3D television is a genuine upgrade, not just one more item on a company’s spec sheet. Unfortunately, it may have a down side. We may have to choose between 3D and the highdefinition images we have come to love. Let’s see why. There are two contemporary systems for viewing three-dimensional television images. One is passive, using polarizing filters, the same method used for 3D in the 1950’s. Two images are superimposed, but with polarization that is angled at 90°. You wear glasses with polarizing lenses that are rotated 90° in respect to the other. Each eye sees the image intended for it. The glasses are cheap (too cheap for the most part), light and durable. Nuts&Bolts Feedback and Feedforward W h i le do i n g r e s e a r c h for this brief article, I realized that these two terms are commonly used today to refer not only to amplifier topology, but to management styles. Feedback is what a manager gives an employee during the dreaded annual performance review. Feedforward is a set of suggestions that are deemed to be useful for the future. It seems to be nothing more than “constructive” feedback. I’m glad I no longer need to deal with this sort of bureaucratic stupidity. In electronics, however, feedback and feedforward have totally distinct meanings, though both are methods with the same aim: reducing distortion in an amplifying device. Feedback It is sometimes called inverse feedback, to distinguish it from the positive feedback heard when a public address system is turned up too high. It is commonly used in amplifying circuits in order to reduce distortion and possibly to alter a circuit’s bandpass. A small amount of the output signal is brought back to the input and added in with its phase reversed in order to cancel out a part of the signal, and reduce the harmonic distortion added by the amplification device. IN + OUT – Feedback also reduces the gain (amplification) of the circuit, to be sure, and so the circuit must be designed for higher gain than it would otherwise require. Since gain is always accompanied by increased distortion, this would 34 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine by Paul Bergman appear at first glance to be a poor trade off. On closer examination, however the advantage of feedback becomes apparent. The altered output signal appears at the output inverted, and can cancel out some of the spurious harmonics (i.e. harmonic distortion) that can be found at the output. The more inverse feedback is added, the lower the harmonic distortion can be made. Now let’s add a capacitor to the feedback loop. IN + OUT – A capacitor is a high pass filter, which means it passes higher frequencies more effectively than lower frequencies. Adding the capacitor increases the amount of feedback at higher frequencies, and thus has a filtering effect, rolling off the upper highs. Such filtering is used to avoid amplifying frequencies that the system cannot effectively deal with, it is used in crossover networks, and also to tailor frequency response in phono preamplifiers, tape preamps and even microphone preamps. An additional benefit is that feedback can stabilize a circuit that might otherwise be marginally stable, especially one driving a reactive load, such as a loudspeaker. Inverse feedback has been used since the early 1930’s, and its benefits are so evident that it is hardly a wonder that it remains in widespread use today. However, it is not without disadvantages, and for that reason a number of manufacturers boast that their products do not use feedback. What is wrong with feedback? One disadvantage may already have occurred to you. We are taking a sample of the output signal and bringing it back to the input to effect a correction. However, the signal we are attempting to correct is already at the output. It appears evident that, for a rapidly changing signal, such as a musical transient, the leading edge of the signal will emerge uncorrected. This problem is recognized by experienced designers, who advise making the circuit behave properly in “open loop” conditions (that is, with the feedback loop disconnected), and only then applying feedback. It was once common to use a feedback loop to effect RIAA equalization in phono preamplifiers. In part because of the problem I have mentioned, other filtering methods are commonly used in all but the most primitive phono preamplifiers. This may be the right time to add that some “class D” amplifiers are designed to have very high distortion, which is then corrected with feedback. The problem is, I believe, evident. Today it’s common, as already noted, for an amplifier manufacturer to boast that its products do not use feedback. In many cases this actually means that the amplifier does not use overall feedback, a loop that goes from the output all the way back to the input. It is common, however, to use feedback on individual amplifier stages, not only to reduce distortion but also to stabilize a circuit that might otherwise “ring,” the electronic counterpart to the familiar mechanical resonance. Ironically enough, a feedback loop can itself be a source of instability, allowing an amplifier to behave like an oscillator! Methods for avoiding this have, however, been understood since the 1930’s. Feedforward The concept is by no means a recent one. QUAD founder Peter J. Walker, in his seminal 1975 AES white paper on current dumping, noted that engineer Harold Black had patented feedforward error correction back in 1928. Black had also patented feedback, a technique that got much more attention. Walker returned to the feedforward concept, believing that distortion could thus be reduced to zero, all the while avoiding the well-known disadvantages of feedback. In feedback, you will recall, we bring a portion of the (presumably) distorted least as perfect as the smaller of the output. Although this distortion may be output signal back to the input so that two amplifiers, and apparently Walker level-independent (that is, it is constant we can correct it. Feedforward, as its expected it would be so. Though his regardless of signal level and becomes name implies, operates in the opposite feedforward, or current dumping, cir- more dominant at low levels) it is essenfashion, bringing the (presumably) cuit has been much praised, its claim to tially insignificant. undistorted input signal to the output. virtual perfection has not been immune However, Vanderkooy and Lipshitz Walker concluded in his paper that con- from criticism. In 1976 two research- postulate a second source of distortion, ventional push-pull amplifier circuits, ers from the University of Waterloo, one caused by an imbalance in the bridge whether class AB or class A, could not John Vanderkooy and Stanley Lipshitz, circuit used for the small amplifier to fully eliminate distortion products near published a paper titled Current Dump- correct the output of the large one. The the zero-volt line, the point at which one ing — Does It Really Work? imbalance would result from the asymof the push-pull devices “hands off” to Notwithstanding the provocative metry of the dumper’s current gain, and the other. He therefore proposed his title, they concluded that in fact it does specifically the non-linearity of this gain current dumping principle, which was work, stating that “this article endorses with variations in the signal. Once again, at the heart of a commercial product, the soundness Itofwork in threedumping ways. the current this distortion can be minimized by the In the table of contents, clickwith on an the QUAD 405 amplifier. Other cur- principle.” They did take issue thearticle use title, of conventional feedback, but the and you are whiskeddumping right to the rent dumping models would follow, and identification of current as aarticle. authors believe that the QUAD 405 is In the of advertisers on the second-last remain available today. form oflist feedforward and they also cast notpage, able to reduce it to zero. click on name, right totothe ad All itself. The concept works in this fashion. A doubt on an thead ability ofand suchgoa circuit is not lost, however. Vanderkooy Then clickoutput. on an ad, high-powered, though high-distortion, produce zero-distortion Their and Lipshitz provide a mathematical and youranalysis browser will authors take youare right to the advertiser’s amplifier is used to provide the energy (both physicists) is analysisWeb thatpage. indicate the possibility of when have to circle littledesigning numbersa bridge configuration without to drive the loudspeaker. A much smaller Remember mathematical andyou’d not easily accessible on a card youreader. wouldThe thenpaper mail in? class A amplifier, which can be made to the non-specialized this problem. Their idea depends on sufDoesn’t that seem like a long time ago? to produce output at vanishingly low did, however, argue that the current ficient available gain, however, and they distortion, operates in parallel. At the dumping configuration produces not conclude by inviting readers to produce output, a balance bridge is used so that one but two varieties of distortion, only a better solution. the undistorted output of the small one of which can be totally eliminated I need hardly add that a mathematical amplifier may correct the output of the by Walker’s configuration. analysis is not an amplifier design. If it The analysis of Vanderkooy and were, designs could be made entirely on large one. Since the two amplifiers operate in parallel, their respective signals Lipshitz, it must be emphasized, is math- paper (or, today, inside a computer), and arrive at the output at the same time, and ematical and is not based on empirical then simply sent to the manufacturing there can therefore be no time-domain data — that is to say, hands-on experi- facility. difference. A simplified equivalent cir- ence with the QUAD 405. Some critics Nor is total harmonic distortion had claimed that distortion could not (THD) — the addition of spurious cuit would look like this: be eliminated unless the small ampli- overtones to the music signal — the only fier’s transconductance was infinite, form of distortion in amplifiers. Interwhich would of course be impossible. modulation distortion (IM), which may Vanderkooy and Lipshitz conclude affect two tones of differing frequency, otherwise. According to them, we are and slew distortion, an artifact caused left with an error, which (ironically) by a broadband signal transiting an may be made vanishingly small by the amplifier with limited rise time, can be use of…feedback. They state that the important sources of imperfection in an On paper it would appear that such QUAD 405’s circuit would reduce this amplifier. They may, ultimately, be more a circuit would be quite perfect, or at distortion to some 132 dB below full important than THD itself. THIS MAGAZINE IS INTERACTIVE! Nuts&Bolts Feedback ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 35 Listening Room QUAD Elite QSP Amplifier T his iconic British company is now Chinese-owned, though its headquarters remain in Hu nt i n g d o n , E n g l a nd , where they have been since the War. Its name is a now-obscure acronym for Quality Unit Amplifier Domestic, a topsy-turvy moniker that a government bureaucrat might have hatched. The company’s original name was The Acoustical Manufacturing Co. Ltd., and it can still be found on the name plates of products that are over 30 years old. QUAD is perhaps best known for its immensely successful electrostatic speakers. Some die-hard QUAD fans insist that the original electrostat, the ESL-57, which is well over 60 years old, remains unbeatable for sheer realism. It is ironic that, for many years, the way to make these electrostatics sound their best was not to match them with QUAD’s own amplifiers. 36 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine But that changed in the 70’s with an innovative design from QUAD’s founder, Peter Walker. Based on the concept of feedforward, originally patented in the 1930’s, Walker developed a totally new amplifier topology that could, at least theoretically, banish distortion altogether. Walker proposed using a crude but powerful class B amplifier, and then controlling its output with a much smaller class A amplifier. He called the new system current dumping. The new amplifiers, unlike QUAD’s earlier solid state designs, could give excellent results even with the company’s demanding electrostatic speakers. QUAD says that with the QSP (which seems to stand for “QUAD stereo power”), the current dumping principle has been refined to a greater extent than ever, and that it eliminates the problems of crossover distortion, quiescent current adjustment, thermal tracking and transistor matching, all concerns for the designers of conventional amplifiers. No internal adjustments are needed. For more on the operation of these amplifiers, see Feedback and Feedforward in this issue. Though the Elite QSP is compact as powerful amplifiers go, it truly is powerful, rated at 140 watts/channel into 8 ohms. Harmonic distortion, as you would expect, is vanishingly low, at 0.01%, below the resolution of nearly all instruments, and possibly below the noise level, which is itself low. Under stress the amplifier runs warm, though never truly hot. Still, you’ll need to provide for adequate ventilation. A glance at the rear panel indicates that QUAD engineers give little credence to the importance of choosing good speaker cables. What appear to be the usual five-way binding posts are actually designed for one single type of “All Amplifiers Sound the Same” It’s amazing how often we still hear and read this absurd comment. At one time there were several audio magazines whose philosophies — if we may be so kind as to call them that — were predicated on this precept (they also believed all CD players sounded the same). Why such magazines found it useful to publish amplifier tests remains a mystery, but it is moot, for one by one they closed their doors. Is the claim more than a dumb assumption? Sometimes it is. The Internet is filled with reports of blind tests, many of them “ABX” tests, purporting to show that listeners cannot identify differences in amplifiers, cables, etc. unless they know what they are listening to. The earliest such test we are aware of is from the early 80’s, when Dr. Floyd Toole, then at Canada’s National Research Council, ran a blind comparison of several amplifiers, showing no consistent audible results. A magazine then concluded that therefore all amplifiers sound the same (a conclusion that Toole himself did not endorse). Stereo Review ran an article by Canadian author Ian Masters concluding they all sound the same. He maintains it to this day. We don’t, as is obvious. ABX tests run afoul of an important part of the scientific method, called the range rule: a system must be tested with the same parameters under which it was designed to operate. Amplifiers are made for musical enjoyment over time, not quick A-B comparisons. Beyond that, we ask this question. There are two types of magazines. Which will help you get the most satisfaction from your system? An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Summing it up… Model: Quad Elite QSP Price: $1995 Size (WDH): 55 x 45 x 27 cm Rated power: 140 watts/channel Most liked: Outstanding sound Least liked: Poor usability of the binding posts Verdict: Peter Walker’s legacy lives on Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore mincilit acing er accum v ulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu feuipis modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 37 Listening Room connection: bare wires. You probably know that quality cables don’t come in that form. Though you can certainly get away with putting a solid core wire directly into a binding post, you wouldn’t do that to stranded wire without risking rapid deterioration and a dodgy connection. Because loudspeakers have such a low impedance, often 4 ohms or less, even minor resistance in the connection will have a dramatic effect. Fortunately, there is a way to connect better wires. With small pliers you can pry off the tiny stoppers on the ends of the posts and plug a banana connector into the end. Note, however, that the connection will be firm only if the posts are themselves tight. We strongly suggest retightening them every few months. The rear panel also has 15-pin computer-style plugs to allow you to use QUAD’s Ampbus cables in lieu of proper interconnects. It surely won’t come as a surprise that we favor the interconnects. We were reminded of the bad old days when QUAD components (and those of several other British manufacturers) came with those dreadful round DIN plugs. At least now you have a choice. We gave the QSP more than 100 hours of break-in time, and then we did some serious listening in our Omega system, comparing it to our Moon W-8 reference amplifier. This was another all-LP review, bringing a smile to the faces of our panelists. This review is incomplete in this, the free version of UHF. You can buy this issue, in either paper or electronic version, but there are savings to be made if you subscribe. For a subscription to the print issue, go to: www.uhfmag.com/subscription.html But you can also subscribe to Maggie’s electronic version: www.uhfmag.com/maggie.html. Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa corperostrud tisi. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscidunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit lore facilis sequat. Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscidunt praestie er ametummod tat. Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. 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Lorem eum iurer iure tatue modigna feugait eros nisl utatum ip el ex eu feui eu facipsusto ea faccums andignis dit illaore do odit ilis dipit do euis eui te feugait niamcom modolor perilluptat. To commy nim iustio duipis num nostrud magna facip euis exerosto dolor sequipit augait lor se commodo lobore dolore conse conumsandit aliquisci tet lore tio eugait ad magnit utpat la feum nisl exercil lutatio consed tatem zzrilit aliquam quat utpat wisit praestie feuisim num do od exer augait duisse et lumsan etuercilisit nonsectet wissi blamcon utpat verostio et wisi tetueros nos autat lutat prat, commy nullamet adip esto delis dignisl dolorpe rcilis eum eu feu feugiam zzrit utat, con elenisi. Commod dolestrud te te euis alis niamconsed eummod te tet ing exerili quatummod dolute tem zzrit at alit, con ut iusto dit nos accum nummodiam, quamet, sequiscipit accum adiat volorem nos aliquatuerit iusto con velenit ilit luptat. Od tat lor sim. Room Listening Feedback CROSSTALK Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore 38 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore mincilit acing er accum vulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu feuipis modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa corperostrud tisi. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscidunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit lore facilis sequat. Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscidunt praestie er ametummod tat. Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. Andigna feuguer sustrud dolore conum ex et enisit prat vulputat iure dunt verit lutpat nullam velesto commolortie dolorpe riurem zzrit, senit nonsequis nibh er sum nim aliquis at accumsa ndrercipsum vent nullam, venis nim ipisim irit num euisis nisl ing elit wis adionullamet praestrud tie consequatue faccum autet, quis aliquat irilismolore exerat acidunt dolesto ex er incilis essim numsandrem verosto eummy nim velendre er ing euis nonulla. Back Issues THE ACOUSTIC COLLECTION: This is the closest we can get to a book on acoustics by Paul Bergman. Issues No.7784: eight issues available for the price of five issues. Including Paul Bergman’s complete series on acoustics for audiophiles (room size and acoustics, taming reverberation, absorbing sound, absorbing unwanted low frequencies, diffusing sound, soundproofing, speaker placement and room acoustics, and signals for acoustic measurement). No. 92: Reviews: The Mastersound Evolution 845 tube amplifier, the Eximus DP1 preamplifierDAC, two USB interfaces for much better computer audio, from M2Tech and Stello. Plus the 3T hybrid interconnect from Van den Hul and both interconnects and digital cables from Atlas. Home theatre: A guide to the state of the art so far. Features: A look back on this, our 30th anniversary, a chat with A.J. Van den Hul, Paul Bergman’s audio lexicon, and the latest from Vegas. Also: The classical music genres: Romantic, Baroque, modern, etc. No. 91: Reviews: The Benchmark DAC1 HDR, the Audiomat Phono2, the Moon 300A power amplifier, the Trends palm-sized power amp, and two software packages for music playback: Pure Music and Amarra. Home theatre: The 3D wave...is this the year it catches on? Features: Are humans programmed to need music? Show reports, from Toronto and Montreal. And how Reference Recordings has reinvented vinyl. Plus: Reine Lessard on why the Beatles live on and on. No. 90: Reviews: The Moon 100D converter and 110LP phono preamp, another phono preamp from Nerve (who?), the Thorens TD-309 turntable, the Revolver Music 5 loudspeaker, a blind test of two new interconnects from Atlas. Home theatre: Apple’s second stab at a set-top box for your TV. Features: Paul Bergman reveals how precious master tapes turned out to have short lives, and we have more show reports. Plus: Toby Earp on the great Count Basie. No. 89: Reviews: The Moon 300D converter, the Allnic L-1500 tube preamplifier, the Leema Elements phono preamp, the ELAC FS 249 loudspeaker, and a tube headphone amp from Trends. Home theatre: We compare a new LEDbacklit HDTV from Samsung with our reference plasma. Features: We look at 3D films, and reveal why most of them are bogus, we cover the best and worst from Vegas and Montreal, and Paul Bergman looks at the elements that make up a computer music source. Plus: Rachmaninoff, the great 20th Century neo-Romantic. No. 88: High resolution music: We open our copies of Reference Recordings’ HRx 24/176.4 recordings, and check how good they can sound right now. Reviews: Two speakers, the Reference 3A Episode and the Audes Orpheus. An amazing four-box CD player from Cyrus. Cambridge’s affordable DACMagic. Blue Circle’s unusual Fon Lo phono preamps, two new cables from BIS, and headphones from AblePlanet. We try to determine whether a “better” USB cable sounds better. Plus: Paul Bergman on why many “stereo” recordings are done with a single microphone. No. 87: Digital: We review the April Music Eximus CD player, and we plug things into its digital inputs. We also try to get great sound from the increasingly popular Apple Airport Express. Analog: We listen to the Audiomat Phono-1.6, successor to our reference phono preamp, and a hand-wound step-up transformer from Allnic. Plus: A lovely little tube amp from Audio Space, the Pioneer BDP-11FD Blu-ray player, and a feature article on good sound in bad times. No.86: Analog: The Scheu Analogue Premier II turntable and Cantus arm, and two phono preamps: the Allnic H-1200 and the Moon LP3. Also: We continue our investigation of speaker connectors by putting WBT nextgens on our reference cable, we listen to Beats headphones, and the Shure SE530 and SE420 phones. We put the Zoom H2 palm-sized digital recorder through a tough test. Plus: color space in home theatre, Paul Bergman on analog in a digital world. No.85: Integrated amplifiers: the luxurious Sugden A21SE and the affordable Vecteur Ai4. We evaluate Eichmann’s new Quiessence cables, and chat with Keith Eichmann himself. We listen to a very good mid-priced speaker cable with four different connectors, and the results leave us stunned. Plus: We choose (and evaluate in depth) a new HDTV reference monitor, Paul Bergman winds up his series on acoustics, and we tell you how to transfer music to hard drive without saying you’re sorry. No.84: Digital streaming: the awesome Linn Klimax DS and the Off-Ramp Turbo 2 interface. Also: the classic Harbeth HL5 speaker, the affordable Moon CD-1 and i-1 amplifier, and a great phono stage from Aurum. Plus: UHF chats with Linn’s Gilad Tiefenbrun and Harbeth’s Alan Shaw, Paul Bergman discusses signals for acoustic measurement, and we look at the prospects for 3-D…at home and in the cinema. No.83: Digital: The Raysonic CD128 and a lowcost player from VisionQuest. Other reviews: The Moon LP5.3 phono stage, the Castle Richmond 7i speaker, the upscale Mavros cables from Atlas, and a retest of the Power Foundation III line filter, with a better power cord this time. Plus: The acoustics of speaker placement, the two meanings of video image contrast, and a portrait of super tenor Placido Domingo. No.82: Amplifiers: A large sweet tube amplifier from Audio Space, the Reference 3.1, and the reincarnation of an old favorite, the Sugden A21. Digital: Bryston's first CD player, and the Blue Circle "Thingee," with USB at one end and lots of outputs at the other end. Plus: the BC Acoustique A3 speaker, a small subwoofer, two more London phono cartridges, line filters from AudioPrism and BIS, a blind test of three interconnects, Paul Bergman on soundproofing, and a thorough test of Sony's new-generation Blu-ray player No.81: Digital: The newest two-box CD player from Reimyo, and the magical Linn Majik player. Headphones a new version of our long time reference headphones, from the Koss pro division, and the affordable SR-125 headphones from Grado. Plus: The astonishing Sonogram loudspeakers from Gershman, a small but lovely tube integrated amplifier from CEC, and the London Reference phono cartridge. No.80: Equipment reviews: From Linn, the Artikulat 350A active speakers, the updated LP12 turntable, the Klimax Kontrol preamplifier, and the Linto phono stage; ASW Genius 300 speakers, ModWright preamp and phono stage. Also: Bergman on absorbing low frequencies, emerging technologies for home theatre, and coverage of the Montreal Festival. No.79: Digital players: Simaudio’s flagship DVD (and CD) player, the Calypso, and Creek’s surprising economy EVO player. Phono stages: A slick tube unit from Marchand, and the superb Sonneteer Sedley, with USB input and output. Plus: the talented JAS Oscar loudspeakers, the Squeezebox plus our own monster power supply. Also: Bergman on what absorbs sound and what doesn’t, what’s next in home theatre, Vegas 2007, and the secrets of the harmonica. No.78: Integrated amplifiers: the affordable Creek EVO, and the (also affordable) Audio Space AS-3i. Loudspeaker cables: six of them from Atlas and Actinote, in a blind test. Plus: the astonishing Aurum Acoustics Integris 300B complete system, and its optional CD player/ preamplifier. Whew! Also: Bergman on taming reverberation, how to put seven hours of uncompressed music on just one disc, and the one opera that even non-opera people know. No.77: Electronics: The Simaudio Moon P-8 preamplifier, the successor to the legendary Bryston 2B power amp, the Antique Sound Lab Lux DT phono stage. Plus: the Reimyo DAP-777 converter, an affordable CD player/integrated amp pair from CEC, and five power cords. Also: Paul Bergman on room size and acoustics, how to dezone foreign DVDs, and how to make your own 24/96 high resolution discs at home. No.76: Loudspeakers: a new look at the modern version of the Totem Mani-2, an affordable ELAC speaker with a Heil tweeter, and the even more affordable Castle Richmond 3i. Plus headphone amps from Lehmann, CEC and Benchmark, a charger that can do all your portables, and the Squeezebox 3, which gets true hi-fi music from your computer to your stereo system. Bergman on speaker impedance and how to measure it. No.75: Amplifiers: The new Simaudio Moon W-8 flagship, and integrated amps from Copland (the CTA-405) and CEC. Speakers: the Reference 3a Veena and the Energy Reference Connoisseur reborn. Plus the Benchmark DAC converter. And also: Bergman on the changing concept of hi-fi and stereo, a chat with FIM’s Winston Ma, and the rediscovery of a great Baroque composer, Christoph Graupner. No.74: Amplifiers: Mimetism 15.2, Qinpu A-8000, Raysonic SP-100, Cyrus 8vs and Rogue Stereo 90. More reviews: Atlantis Argentera speaker, Cyrus CD8X player, GutWire MaxCon 2 line filter, Harmony remote, Music Studio 10 recording software. Cables: Atlas, Stager, BIS and DNM, including a look at how length affects digital cables. Plus: the (hi-fi) digital jukebox, why HDTV doesn’t always mean what you think, and Reine Lessard on The Man Who Invented Rock’n’Roll. No.73: Integrated amplifiers: Audiomat Récital and Exposure 2010S. Analog: Turntables from Roksan (Radius 5) and Goldring (the Rega-designed GR2), plus two cartridges, and four phono stages from CEC, Marchand and Goldring. The Harmonix Reimyo CD player, Audiomat Maestro DAC, ASW Genius 400 speakers, and the Sonneteer BardOne wireless system. Plus: Paul Bergman on the making of an LP and why they don’t all sound the same. No.72: Music from data: How you can make your own audiophile CDs with equipment you already have. We test a DAC that yields hi-fi from your computer. We review the new Audio Reference speakers, the updated Connoisseur singleended tube amp, upscale Actinote cables, and Gershman’s Acoustic Art panels. How to tune up your system for a big performance boost. No.71: Small speaker: Reference 3a Dulcet, Totem Rainmaker, and a low cost speaker from France. A blind cable test: five cables from Atlas, and a Wireworld cable with different connectors (Eichmann, WBT nextgen, and Wireworld). The McCormack UDP-1 universal player, muRata super tweeters, Simaudio I-3 amp and Equinox CD player. Paul Bergman examines differences behind two-channel stereo and multichannel. No.70: How SACD won the war…or how DVD-A blew it. Reviews: Linn Unidisk 1.1 universal player and Shanling SCD-T200 player. Speakers: Reference 3a Royal Virtuoso, Equation 25, Wilson Benesch Curve. Other reviews: Simaudio W-5LE amp, the iPod as an audiophile source. Plus: future video screens, and the eternal music of George Gershwin No.69: Tube Electronics: Audiomat Opéra , Connoisseur SE-2 and Copland CSA29 integrated amps, and Shanling SP-80 monoblocks. Audiomat's Phono 1.5, Creek CD50, GutWire's NotePad and a music-related computer game that made us laugh out loud. Paul Bergman on the return of the tube, and how music critics did their best to kill the world’s greatest music. No.68: Loudspeakers: Thiel CS2.4, Focus Audio FS688, Iliad B1. Electronics:Vecteur I-6.2 and Audiomat Arpège integrated amps, Copland 306 multichannel tube preamp, Rega Fono MC. Also: Audio Note and Copland CD players, GutWire MaxCon power filter. And there’s more: all about power supplies, what’s coming beyond DVD, and a chat with YBA’s Yves-Bernard André. No.67: Loudspeakers: An improved Reference 3a MM de Capo, and the Living Voice Avatar OBX-R. Centre speakers from Castle, JMLab, ProAc, Thiel, Totem and Vandersteen. One of them joins our Kappa system. Two multichannel amps from Copland and Vecteur. Plus: plans for a DIY platform for placing a centre speaker atop any TV set, Paul Bergman on the elements of acoustics, and women in country music. No.66: Reviews: the Jadis DA-30 amplifier, the Copland 305 tube preamp and 520 solid state amp. Plus: the amazing Shanling CD player, Castle Stirling speakers, and a remote control that tells you what to watch. Also: Bergman on biwiring and biamplification, singer Janis Ian’s alternative take on music downloading, and a chat with Opus 3’s Jan-Eric Persson. No.65: Back to Vinyl: setting up an analog system, reviews of Rega P9 turntable, and phono preamps from Rega, Musical Fidelity and Lehmann. The Kappa reference system for home theatre: choosing our HDTV monitor, plus a review of the Moon Stellar DVD player. Antivibration: Atacama, Symposium, Golden Sound, Solid-Tech, Audioprism, Tenderfeet. Plus an interview with Rega’s turntable designer,. No.64: Speakers: Totem M1 Signature and Hawk, Visonik E352. YBA Passion Intégré amp, Cambridge IsoMagic (followup), better batteries for audio-to-go. Plus: the truth about upsampling, an improvement to our LP cleaning machine, an interview with Ray Kimber. No.63: Tube amps: ASL Leyla & Passion A11. Vecteur Espace speakers, 2 interconnects (Harmonic Technology, Eichmann), 5 speaker cables (Pierre Gabriel, vdH , Harmonic Technology, Eichmann), 4 power cords (Wireworld, Harmonic Technology, Eichmann, ESP). Plus: Bergman on soundproofing, comparing components in the store. No.62: Amplifiers: Vecteur I-4, Musical Fidelity Nu-Vista M3, Antique Sound Lab MG-S11DT. Passive preamps: Creek and Antique Sound Lab. Vecteur L-4 CD player. Interconnects: VdH Integration, Wireworld Soltice. Plus: the right to copy music, for now. Choosing a DVD player by features. And all about music for the movies. No.61: Digital: Audiomat Tempo and Cambridge Isomagic DACs, Vecteur D-2 transport. Speakers: Osborn Mini Tower and Mirage OM-9. Soundcare Superspikes. And: new surround formats, dezoning DVD players. No.60: Speakers: Monitor Audio Silver 9, Reference 3a MM De Capo, Klipsch RB-5, Coincident Triumph Signature. SEE MORE AT: http://www.uhfmag.com/IndividualIssue.html EACH ISSUE costs $6.49 (in Canada) plus tax (15% in QC, 14% in ON, NB, NS and NF, 12% in BC, 5% in other provinces), US$7.69 in the USA, CAN$15 elsewhere (air mail included). For VISA or MasterCard, include number, expiry date and signature. UHF Magazine, 270 rue Victoria, Longueuil, QC, Canada J4H 2J6. Tel.: (450) 651-5720 FAX: (450) 651-3383, or www.uhfmag.com. Some back issues are available electronically at www.uhfmag.com/maggie.html for C$4 each, plus applicable taxes. Well Tempered Versalex Room Listening Feedback I t’s probably safe to assume that Bill Firebaugh is a Bach fan. It was 1985 when he designed his first turntable and named it for one of Johann Sebastian’s most famous keyboard pieces. His company never did climb into the exalted heights occupied by the best-known turntable makers, but he has endured…which is more than can be said of some once famous companies we all know. The Versalex model name has a less obvious origin, though anyone with some notion of Latin will recall that “lex” means “law,” and is therefore likely to conclude that the name means “against the law.” That seems fitting because, throughout his career, Firebaugh has maintained that “the law” (i.e. what is considered obvious by his competitors, and thus mandatory) is wrong. Let us then examine the problem of a turntable platter’s bearing. We’ve known since the 1970’s that the major source of noise and vibration in a turntable is likely to be not the motor, as was once assumed, but the bearing. Most turntable designers, therefore, concentrate on establishing a friction-free contact 40 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine between the platter spindle and the shaft, with as little play as possible. The ways of doing this are well established. Typically, that means tapering the shaft of the platter that rests against a ball bearing at the bottom of the well, soaked in light oil. Tapering the shaft means its rotating surface is small, and one can expect minimal noise if the machining is of good quality. However, Firebaugh long ago pointed to a problem with such bearings. The belt from the motor to the platter pulls the platter laterally, and therefore the shaft will rub against the side of the well. Problem! To make matters worse, the tight tolerances leave little room for even light oil to find its way between spindle and well. Others have noticed the same problems. On some turntables the belt goes from the motor to the sides of the platter, then on to a second pulley on the other side. That eliminates the side thrust, but the second pulley adds a new source of vibration, thus swapping one problem for another. Tiny holes may be drilled into the spindle to let oil circulate, but Bill Firebaugh found that measure unsatisfactory. Firebaugh’s solution is to use the side of the well as the bearing, reducing noise and vibration as much as possible, but there’s more to it than that. His spindle is much smaller than the well in which it spins, leaving room for lubricant, and it is supported at five points: from underneath, and at each of four lateral points. The supports are nitrite rubber, the material used for engine piston seals. The lubricant is not oil but silicone, which also provides damping of vibrations. The Versalex comes with Firebaugh’s own LTD arm, and that’s not of conventional design either. Like a turntable, a tone arm must be made according to requirements that conflict. Make the bearings too tight and you have excessive friction. Make them too loose and they will “chatter,” adding spurious vibrations to the desired vibrations you need to recover from the record groove. What’s more, excessive play will hamper the arm and cartridge’s ability to recover subtle information from the groove. His solution was to suspend the centre of the arm (actually a black golf ball) from an overhead support with a twisted monofilament thread. The ball bathes quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore mincilit acing er accum v ulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu feuipis modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa corperostrud tisi. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscidunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit lore facilis sequat. Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscidunt praestie er ametummod tat. Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. Andigna feuguer sustrud dolore conum ex et enisit prat vulputat iure dunt verit Summing it up… Brand/model: Well Tempered Versalex turntable and LTD arm Price: C$4975 Size (WDH): 48 x 41.5 x 18.2 cm Most liked: xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx. Least liked: xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx. Verdict: xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx. lutpat nullam velesto commolortie dolorpe riurem zzrit, senit nonsequis nibh er sum nim aliquis at accumsa ndrercipsum vent nullam, venis nim ipisim irit num euisis nisl ing elit wis adionullamet praestrud tie consequatue faccum autet, quis aliquat irilismolore exerat acidunt dolesto ex er incilis essim numsandrem verosto eummy nim velendre er ing euis nonulla faccumm olortionulla feuipsum eu facipis cipit, volobore erillaor in utpatie vel iustisl dipisim zzrillutetue corpera esendit ipisi blandrer susci te magna feugait vel ut iniam, velis amcore facilisl erit venit augait lute tem ing ercilit, velisci liquatuer il utatue consequat. Cil et veraessisl utat, sed tio dionsendipit nit aliquisi eu facincidunt lobor iure do ero dignit ullaortion ute feugiat. Lorem eum iurer iure tatue modigna feugait eros nisl utatum ip el ex eu feui eu facipsusto ea faccums andignis dit illaore do odit ilis dipit do euis eui te feugait niamcom modolor perilluptat. To commy nim iustio duipis num nostrud magna facip euis exerosto dolor sequipit augait lor se commodo lobore dolore conse conumsandit aliquisci tet lore tio eugait ad magnit utpat la feum nisl exercil lutatio consed tatem zzrilit aliquam quat utpat wisit praestie feuisim num do od exer augait duisse et lumsan etuercilisit nonsectet wissi blamcon utpat verostio et wisi tetueros nos autat lutat prat, commy nullamet adip esto delis dignisl dolorpe rcilis eum eu feu feugiam zzrit utat, con elenisi. Commod dolestrud te te euis alis niamconsed eummod te tet ing exerili quatummod dolute tem zzrit at alit, con ut iusto dit nos accum nummodiam, ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 41 Listening Room in silicone, which damps out vibration and keeps the arm centred. By twisting the filament loop, you apply antiskating force, all without resorting to the usual Rube Goldberg weights and pulleys. The plinth of the Versalex is made of a slab of Baltic plywood, with a decorative walnut veneer glued to the top. The rubber feet are hollow so they can absorb vibrations. There is an outboard power supply to run the single-speed motor — you select the desired platter speed by looping the monofilament drive thread around the appropriate pulley. The LTD arm, which is also available separately, does not have its own output cable. Instead, it is fitted with a pair of good quality output jacks, into which you plug the interconnect cable of your choice. That adds to the cost, to be sure, but considering the mediocre cables supplied with all too many turntables, we can only applaud. This article is available in complete form in either our print issue or in Maggie’s electronic edition. Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse wiscipit exercil ut ilis eum non volessim dunt wisl do do commod magniat. Ut wisisim zzrit nonsequatie magnit nos nonsed delenim dolenis adiatem zzrilisit ad doluptat. Quat ip eugait wissenis adipissecte do eu feugait praessit ute veniamc onulla feugueril et lore min essenis nos et amet lore molobor percipit in eniam, vulla coreet, venim eugiate dolore dionseniam nulla conse dip ex exerat, sequat nosto do euisciliqui etum delit nos nonse tem iriureet, secte dolor sum zzriustrud tat, suscips ustrud tie vel dolore modo conse modolortio et nos nit utem zzrit irit pratueros dolorem diat, quipit nonsequate magna facip exer summodion vullaore duis euismod ignibh esting et, vel estrud estrud dipisit inciduis Our equipment reviews arealiquam unusualeum doloborer sed tionsenit in a number of ways, lum nos dolore eum niam iustrud euis but what makes them trulyam unique euipsum is molobore cor at. Duiscilla adigna feugiam vent aliquam alit eu feu our Crosstalk section. eu feugait ulputat, volortisisi. Actually, what is especiallyfacip unusual dignit erostie facidunt atio dolorem is that we review products as aIlgroup, typically of three of iustie us. magna core duipit wismod modit vel inibh et lore commolo rerosto We listen to actual music, delesseniat. not sonic excerpts. And we discuss Eliquis ex eugiam, suscidu what we heard, though with ismodoloreet no pressure at. Molum zzriurem ad tem ipit aliquat. to conform. If we disagree, so beUt it. nisl erciduis at. Ectem dolobore vulpute feu faci endre dipsuscip el etumOd tat lor sim nisci But then tat atcomes ut iril the eumCrosstalk. sanis diametu vullaor se ex enim The main dignim textdigna of each comreview based mmodoloreet lore volore modolore commy on the comments num veniam made dolut in thefaccummy. discussion following each session. But at the end, each reviewer participates in the Crosstalk, modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore a personal comment on thefeuipis product. laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla We may even disagree among ourselves. eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am And you know what? feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen Readers tell us they love ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis to see us disagree. eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa dolessi. Because if we, the “experts” can corperostrud tisi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con disagree, so can they. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscutatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos us adionsed euisi They tell our disagreements, idunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit lore ex eril ilismod te mostly te mod et adionse quissent minor but sometimes major, facilis sequat. Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscaliquisi te doluptat ing enit ea alis accumsan empower them. idunt praestie er ametummod tat. velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. That’s just one way UHF Magazine Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore is different from all other magazines. CROSSTALK! Listening Room quamet, sequiscipit accum adiat volorem nos aliquatuerit iusto con velenit ilit luptat. CROSSTALK Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum 42 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine mincilit acing er accum vulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu Andigna feuguer sustrud dolore conum ex et enisit prat vulputat iure dunt verit lutpat nullam velesto commolortie dolorpe riurem zzrit, senit nonsequis nibh er sum nim aliquis at accumsa ndrercipsum vent nullam, venis nim ipisim irit num euisis nisl ing elit wis adionullamet praestrud tie consequatue faccum autet. Get UHF from Maggie on your desktop or iPad anywhere in the world! The other way of getting UHF Magazine...on line from Maggie herself This is the version for computer, iPad, Android almost anything. Have no fear, the printed edition of Ultra High Fidelity Magazine remains available, but there is now another way to get UHF, right on your computer. Or your iPad. Or any device capable of reading a PDF file. When you order, our staff processes your credit card order, and then Maggie will send you a link, with your user name and password. You’ll need them only for the initial download. The electronic edition is a PDF, without digital rights management, readable even when you’re offline. Just transfer it to any computer you own, including a Windows or Linux PC, a Macintosh, or a tablet such as an iPad. We do ask that you not share with anyone else, because though some publications live entirely from their advertising, UHF is financed to a considerable extent by sales of the magazine. An individual issue costs $4.00, in Canadian dollars, no matter where in the world you live. Sales tax applies within Canada. You can subscribe for 13 issues for $40, or $20 for six issues. Come visit Maggie www.uhfmag.com/maggie.html Moon 300D v.2 Room Room Listening Listening Feedback T hat Si m aud io c reated a terrif ic digital-to-analog converter with its 300D is by now well established. We liked it so much that we bought one. It joined our reference systems initially in conjunction with an Apple Airport Express, linked by optical fibre. Since then we have added other equipment, including a dedicated computer, and that has made our CD player obsolete. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. The original 300D, reviewed in UHF No. 89, like all the other DACs arriving on the market, is an increasingly familiar device. It converts a digital signal, which can come from a CD player, a computer or some other digital source, into a twochannel analog signal that can be amplified and sent to loudspeakers. There are plenty of devices for doing this, more or less well. Your iPod contains a DAC, and so almost certainly does your computer. The 300D, however, does the job better than other DACs we have heard, including some that were far more expensive, but older. How do you connect a DAC like this? There are several ways. The 300D has two coaxial inputs, known as S/PDIF (which stands for Sony/Philips Digital InterFace). An S/PDIF cable looks like half of an analog interconnect pair. Most CD players have S/PDIF digital outputs, so that they may be used as transports, leaving an outboard DAC to do the conversion to analog. DVD players once had such 44 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine outputs too, though you we should warn you that most recent ones do not. The 300D, by the way, does not have an AES/EBU balanced input (the acronym refers to the organizations that established the standard, the Audio Engineering Society and the European Broadcast Union). It does have balanced analog outputs, as you’ll see from the rear panel, shown on the next page. There is an optical input, to which you can connect a TOSLINK optical cable (the “TOS” in the acronym stands for Toshiba, which first popularized it). That’s the input you’ll use from an Apple Airport Express, which has a digital optical output. So do all Macintosh computers except the MacBook Air, and some Windows computers. Finally, there is USB, the interface found on all modern computers to connect keyboards, mice, hard drives, cameras and a host of other devices. USB can also be used as an audio input or output, and the upgrade to the USB circuitry is the major reason for the upgrades of the 300D and some of its competitors. Early consumer DACs didn’t come with USB inputs at all, because a USB cable is limited to a length of 5 metres, which makes it impractical unless the computer is close to the music system, or is actually part of the music system. The first USB connections were often afterthoughts, off-the-shelf chips of the type used in low-cost computers, with limited capabilities. Resolution was typically limited to 16 bits with a 48 kHz sampling rate. Some companies went so far as to state, incorrectly, that the 16/48 limit was that of the USB standard. Modern USB links are also asynchronous (see the Synchronous and Asynchronous sidebar on page 46). Many audiophiles now add compact computers to their music systems as sources, and they need full resolution from USB. That’s our case, and we have been using an outboard USB device, the Stello U3 (reviewed in UHF No. 92), to convert USB to S/PDIF. Simaudio has now engineered its own USB circuit, which is the major upgrade included in version 2 of the 300D. Simaudio says other unspecified refinements have been added as well. The price has also been “improved,” and we’ll get to that shortly. This second version of the 300D looks identical to the original, and Simaudio offers a factory upgrade. The front panel is untouched, and one result is that the 300D still has no remote control. We think that should be the next improvement on Simaudio’s to-do list. We would need to listen twice to the new 300D. Since we use the outboard Stello to connect to our 300D’s coaxial input, we would simply substitute the new 300D to determine whether it sounds different. We would then remove the Stello and use the 300D’s own USB input. We selected four recordings, two of them high definition, two in standard Red Book CD format. The first was the Rachmaninoff Symphonic Dances (Reference Recordings HR-96), a 24-bit 176.4 kHz recording from the company’s magnificent HRx series distributed on DVD-ROM for loading onto a hard drive. We weren’t sure whether we were hearing a meaningful difference. With both converters the quality was superb. Gerard thought there was a minor difference in the sound of the strings, but wasn’t certain it represented an improvement. Albert focused on what seemed to be a minor difference in the woodwinds. Toby thought the new 300D might possibly be quieter and more transparent, and that the strain of melancholy in Rachmaninoff’s music might be more apparent. Our notes were filled with question marks. We removed the Stello from the circuit and ran our BIS Audio USB cable from the computer directly to the new 300D’s own USB input. The Moon showed up right away in the Audio & Midi Setup utility of our MacBook Pro, and once again we selected a resolution of 24 bits and a sampling rate of 176.4 kHz. It was obvious from the start that the 300D’s USB circuit had been vastly improved — with the old one we could not have played at such high resolution at all. Depth and percussive impact were superb. Were we hearing more than we had using the outboard Stello USB box? As the music continued, we weren’t so sure. Gerard liked the detail in the complex structure of the large orchestra, and especially the clearer harmony of the woodwinds. “The difference isn’t huge, but it’s real.” Toby and Albert liked the newer DAC’s version initially, but then found the music less involving. Why? It was certainly not because we were getting bored with Rachmaninoff! Summing it up… Brand/model: Moon 300D v.2.0 Price: C$2200 Size (WDH): 19 X 28 X 8.5 cm Inputs: USB, coaxial (2x), optical Outputs: Coaxial, balanced Most liked: USB finally modernized Least liked: Sticker shock, rhythm sometimes weaker (USB) Verdict: An overdue improvement to a landmark product The Bruckner was going to be a tough test, in part because rhythm is such an important part of its appeal. With our original 300D and its outboard USB box, we loved what we heard. The new DAC, with its own USB circuit, sounded impressive as well. Louder instruments, notably the brass, seemed more restrained, letting us hear softer background details more clearly. There was another difference too. When we had first listened to the piece with our own DAC, we had initially set the volume uncomfortably high and begun again at a more reasonable volume (we choose this by consensus). Albert wanted to hear the Scherzo at the same level through the new DAC. Surprisingly, that high level now seemed more bearable. Gerard added a negative note, one involving timing. The rhythm of the Bruckner is very strong, and you should be able to mark it with your hand. With the new 300D it was noticeably harder to do. We would return to the older DAC to confirm that. That problem cropped up again on What a Wonderful World, which is a swing piece. In nearly all respects it sounded wonderful, with a strikingly natural piano sound. Yet the rhythm seemed weaker, and all three of us noticed it. The final song, Soft Lights and Sweet Music, was a delight, as it nearly always is. Margie Gibson’s mastery of phrasing, the way she slides from one note to the other, were superb. The accompanying ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 45 Room Feedback Listening We continued with another recording, in 16/44.1 resolution this time, the Scherzo from Bruckner’s Symphony No. 9 (RR-81CD). We have often used this remarkable recording in equipment evaluations, in either its original HDCD form or its enhanced SACD version. It is supremely enjoyable, but also highly revealing. Only Toby thought he detected a possible improvement, preceding his explanation by saying “I have to be careful.” He thought the new 300D brought him closer to the music, farther from the confusion and bombast that is the hallmark of this music when it is inadequately reproduced. Albert and Gerard, however, found both renditions outstanding. The third piece was 24/176.4, just like the first. It had come from a flash key from Fidelio, and featured the Mathias Landaeus Trio playing What a Wonderful World. This is an outstanding recording, projecting a vast space, with depth and an attractive “roundness” to the instruments. It was wonderful with both DACs. Toby wondered whether, just possibly, he was hearing more with the newer DAC, but suspected that he was noticing more because he was hearing the music for the second time. We should mention that we sometimes counter this real danger by returning to the reference for another listen. If the difference is real, it will become evident. We ended with Margie Gibson’s Soft Lights and Sweet Music from her Say It With Music album. There might in fact have been a small difference favoring the newer 300D but, perhaps significantly, we didn’t all focus on the same aspects of the song. Albert thought the piano seemed louder, with a little more detail emerging. Toby thought the sound was a little more glassy and edgy with the older DAC, and that the newer one revealed extra detail and a quieter background. Gerard estimated that certain sounds were “punchier” with the newer DAC, but he wasn’t sure of that either. “If this had been a blind test,” he said, “I don’t think we would have spotted any of this.” We agreed. We now came to the second part of the test, using the same four recordings. Synchronous and Asynchronous These terms have to do with timing. Phone calls are synchronous: you and the person you’re calling must be there at the same time. E-mail is asynchronous: you can send a message whether the recipient is available at that moment or not. Early digital connections were synchronous, meaning that there was a one-way link between the digital signal source and the DAC. Such connections suffered from high jitter, a cyclic inaccuracy in timing, caused by the DAC’s dependence on a noisy and imprecise clock signal derived from the CD or other source. Better players were asynchronous, establishing a two-way link. That means the DAC “told” the source when to send the data, and assembled it using its own master clock. Because the first USB inputs on consumer DACs were mere afterthoughts, they were typically synchronous. However, USB is a two-way pipe and lends itself well to the vastly superior asynchronous system. instruments — piano, cello and bass — were gorgeous. There was depth and wonderful presence. Yes, but was it better than it had been with the original 300D plus the Stello? Toby thought he had found one syllable that had been a little edgy but was now smoothed out. Not much there. We were comparing superb with superb. But what about rhythm? We listened to another Gibson song, Puttin’ on the Ritz, a bouncy show tune, and we could hear that our own DAC communicated the rhythm more solidly. Now here are the tough questions. Is the new 300D worth its higher price, and if you have the older one, as we do, should you upgrade? We are not among those who shout greed when a product’s price rises. There are many factors determining a manufactured product’s price, from manpower cost to price of materials. The size of the market is important too. Many high-end audio products sell in tiny numbers, making economy of scale impossible. On the other hand, competition places downward pressure on prices. There is an explosion in the number of quality DACs now, and the reasons are obvious. Simaudio would have weighed all of these factors in setting its price. We have seen the price of the 300D climbing, from the original $1600 to $1800 and now to $2200. The 300D has more and more competitors, but it remains one of the world’s finest DACs. We will change ours for another if a new one can help us do our job better. That time has not yet come. As noted, the original 300D can be upgraded to the v.2 standard for $800. This is done at the factory and arranged through your authorized dealer. That sounds like a lot, but a proper USB input is mandatory if you want to have a dedicated computer as part of your music system, as we do. You do have other choices. We’re using an outboard USB interface, whose price of $495 is well below that of the 300D upgrade. However, we also needed a digital cable to run from the Stello USB box to the DAC. Ours, an Atlas Mavros, sells for $599. Do the math, and you’ll see that we are not exactly saving money. That’s the combination we are staying with for the time being, and it is giving us unparalleled sound, to enable us to do our work, but also to warm our souls. Room Listening Feedback CROSSTALK The 300D was an excellent reference quality DAC, and there I sat, expecting to be impressed by its new incarnation. Well, I enjoyed the music tremendously. It was almost frustrating, however, to notice how beautiful it sounded and find that I had nothing to say about it. What I really mean is that I had nothing to add because, as far as I could tell, it didn’t add anything. The USB section has been improved from so-so to very good, okay. But “very good” is far from reference quality, as is the rest of this DAC. If its price were unchanged I would have recommended this model over the previous one to any serious music lover and audiophile. At its much higher price, I’m not so sure. —Albert Simon It really was way past time Simaudio added a proper USB circuit to its otherwise 46 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine superb 300D converter. It has, and that’s good. That circuit is not yet state of the art, however, and considering that the price has risen by some $600, that’s a disappointment. I don’t want to overstate this. Anyone using the simple USB input in the original 300D would not have been pleased. The new one is immensely better, no question about it, and I suspect many purchasers will love it. The reality is, however, that it still sounds better through its other inputs. —Gerard Rejskind I was expecting the upgraded Moon converter to sell itself to me easily. The original 300D was tremendously good, and only the limitations of its USB input kept me from putting one on my shopping list. On this new version, music via the coax input hardly spoiled the impression. The Rachmaninoff was perhaps a little quieter, the Bruckner made more musical sense to me. I noted the piano’s timing on What a Wonderful World — it truly is a wonderful world when a piece of gear like this one can get you further into the music. The new 300D, via its coax input, was no worse, and perhaps a little better than the older one. But the next time around, using the USB input, that timing wasn’t quite right. Two plays of Margie Gibson’s delightful version of Puttin’ on the Ritz made it clear that, with the USB input, this new 300D didn’t have as solid rhythm as the older model. Oh, counting time on this piece isn’t easy. Margie syncopates like the Duke, and there were two moments when I lost it even with the older model DAC. But on USB, the new model never quite let me get settled in. Hi-res capability via USB is a real upgrade, but I missed the rhythm. —Toby Earp Get UHF on your desktop anywhere in the world! www.uhfmag.com/maggie.html www.audiophileboutique.com a division of UHF Magazine An Affordable DAC Listening Room D o you really need to spend thousands of dollars for a digital-to-analog converter if you aspire to good music? No. In fact, we can name one good one that costs “mere” hundreds, namely the Moon 100D. It even has asynchronous USB. But the 100D costs over $600. How well can you do at much less than half its price? Brik is a Taiwanese company that makes an entire series of small audio products, all of them in the same size box, shaped like — yes — a brick. These components can be stacked, the way hi-fi components once were, or they can be inserted into cases that the company offers as an option. The series includes a phono preamplifier, a small integrated amplifier, a headphone amplifier and an Internet radio. And of course, this converter. The DAC comes with a “wall wart” power supply, but an optional power supply is available, capable of supplying clean power to the other components in the series as well. All of these modules are the same price. The DAC is a simple enough device. Its only front-panel switch selects among the three inputs: USB, coaxial and optical. A switch at the rear selects output level so that you can match it to the gain of your amplifier and run your volume control at a comfortable level. Because the unit is small, its USB input is miniature, not the usual USB-B jack. We used the cable supplied with the Brik, rather than our own premium-grade BIS Audio cable. 48 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine We ran the Brik for some 200 hours, using the USB and then the coaxial input, then listened to it alongside our Moon 300D DAC. Yes, we know the 300D is far more expensive, but our reference system would actually be made from perfect products, if such existed. We avoided selecting the same recordings we had used in evaluating the 300D v.2, to avoid the temptation to make inappropriate comparisons. For reasons we have explained, our reference system uses an outboard USB box, a Stello U3, which then feeds our DAC’s coaxial input (the Stello is reviewed in UHF No. 92). We used the same initial setup with the Brik. The first selection was Jennifer Warnes’ Way Down Deep from her album The Hunter. This is another of the songs she wrote with Leonard Cohen. This song is clearly about (ahem!) sex, and features percussive effects that will stress any loudspeaker. And any source too. We were in agreement that the Brik Summing it up… Brand/model: Brik DAC Price: C$250 Size (WDH): 14 x 16.3 x 5 cm Inputs: Mini-USB, coaxial, optical Outputs: Coaxial Most liked: Surprisingly good performance with S/PDIF source Least liked: Mediocre USB performance Verdict: Terrific for some applications did well, though it was not the equal of our reference converter. The sound was by no means thin, but the resonant percussive punch was considerably reduced, and that certainly took away from the song’s mesmerizing impact. There was a good side, however, because the voices — those of Jennifer and her backup singers (Blondie Chaplin, Kevin Dorsey and Warnes herself ) — were easier to understand. As for Warnes’ own solo voice, it was less silky but exhibited none of the all-too-familiar artifacts of bad digital. We continued with an old favorite, the Elegia from Arensky’s Piano Trio No. 1 on the Dorian label. This longvanished recording feat ures t hree Canadian-based musicians billed as the Rembrandt Trio. Properly reproduced, this recording carries you off into a dream world. Poorly reproduced, on the other hand, it merely puts you to sleep. It is as fragile as a gossamer web. Would it survive? It did. Yes, the piano notes were a little punchier, and the very softest passages were a bit less magical, but that’s not what we were thinking about while we listened. “Logically, this seems impossible,” said Steve. “Nice work,” added Albert. We would hesitate to review a digital product without including Margie Gibson’s Say It With Music album (Sheffield CD-36), because her songs are at once sonically revealing and musically delightful. Or they should be. We selected the perky ballad The Best Thing for You. The song held together and remained enjoyable when played through the Brik. There were certainly differences, however. Margie’s voice was noticeably grainier, and the lack of smoothness made it seem more artificial, taking away a little of its natural warmth. Piano chords were punchier and trailing notes shorter. The depth was curtailed. There was plenty of detail in both voice and accompanying instruments, but in a song like this, mere detail is not what’s most important. And yet, long as the list of flaws may seem, the essentials of the song survived and it remained supremely enjoyable. Through its coaxial input, then, the Brik turned in a respectable performance. We listened briefly to the optical input, running an optical cable from our Airport Express. Performance was similarly fine. Which left the USB input to be listened to. That is where many DACs fail. Until recently, most of them actually lacked a USB input altogether, because so few customers could be expected to have a computer within easy reach (5 metres or less) of their music systems. The first DACs to have this essential input implemented the feature with a low-cost synchronous circuit that might have worked fine for a keyboard or a mouse, but not a high-grade audio component. See the sidebar, Synchronous and Asynchronous, on page 46 that explains the difference. The inexpensive chips behind these circuits cannot handle high-definition signals, and do none too well with standard-definition files either. That, unfortunately, is what Brik used. When plugged into our MacBook Pro via its camera-style USB cord, the Brik converter identified itself as a “C-media USB headphone set.” The C-media is a multiuse chip from Taiwan that includes a headphone amplifier, though Brik has not used it. The dual DAC on the chip is limited to 48 kHz sampling rate and 16 bits. Naturally, we were expecting the worst with this chip, and it didn’t disappoint us! We listened again to the Margie Gibson song, which had now lost much of its appeal. Notes seemed truncated and the overall sound was more distant. Margie’s voice, normally so smooth, was now hard-edged. Paradoxically, everything seemed mushy because detail was deficient. Albert was kinder, finding the song “not so bad,” though limited to two dimensions. We think that the high-end audio industry needs to invest in the development of a hi-fi oriented USB chip. Such chips exist, though on the evidence they are expensive. Economy of scale would help, we suspect, and a superior chip could be made available to all manufacturers without resulting in everyone’s products sounding alike. So much for the future; let us return to this inexpensive little box. The conclusion is obvious. Brik has made an inexpensive DAC that — through two of its three inputs — can produce real music likely to please you. The third input might as well not be there. We give the Brik DAC, therefore, a conditional pass. If your source is coaxial or optical — and it very well may be — it’s a bargain. This is a good DAC but not a great one. That is not meant to be disparaging, since it actually sounded better than it has any right to. Just don’t expect to be blown away by the music you’ll hear. It does certain things better than expected but, as is often the case, it is lacking in other areas. The listening experience was not as satisfying when I kept comparing every aspect of the reproduced performances. However, as soon as I stopped being so analytical I started enjoying the music and, yes, there was music coming out of our speakers, and it had no trouble filling the room. As I said, a good DAC. Entry level would I say? Yes. And for a while. —Albert Simon whether you should consider one depends on your plans for it. If the source will be an Airport Express, a CD transport or a dedicated computer equipped with an optical output, you can expect good performance at low cost. If you want to listen to highresolution files, however, you would need a proper USB connection. The Brik’s USB input doesn’t do the job, and it drops the quality below what I consider acceptable. Of course, I mean what I would consider acceptable for my main music system. If a couple of the Brik devices will be feeding your kitchen system or sitting next to your computer, you may be more forgiving. The optional power supply may make it sound even better. —Gerard Rejskind This is an astonishingly good DAC, but Most of us would agree that you usually get what you pay for. If you spend a lot you get a lot in return. If you don’t, you won’t. Well, once in a while a product comes along that gives a lot and costs only a little. Bass sounded the way it should, treble too. I kept listening for clues that this DAC was cheap, of mediocre quality, but I couldn’t hear any. When coupled with the Stello USB interface, it played Way Down Deep just the way Jennifer Warnes would like to hear it, and it presented the full orchestra almost as well as its more expensive counterpart. Even without the help of the Stello, it sounded better than was believable at this price point. At just half the cost of a first class ticket to a Rolling Stones concert in the Big Apple, this big little DAC is a steal of a deal. —Steve Bourke ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 49 Room Listening Feedback CROSSTALK The three music selections we used for this review were on a remote Mac Pro computer’s hard drive, streamed to a MacBook Pro via Wi-Fi (that sounds complicated, but operationally it just works). From the MacBook, a BIS Audio USB cable took the signal to our Stello U3 USB interface, then via an Atlas Mavros digital cable to a Moon 300D converter. That is how we now listen to most digital music. All three selections were from Red Book CDs. Two Power Filters Room Listening Feedback W e need hardly tell you that controversy swirls over the use of filters to be placed between your music or cinema system and your local power utility. You may be told the power is just fine the way it is, and any residual electrical interference that remains will be dealt with perfectly adequately by your product’s own power supply. Indeed, we know of amplifiers that include small filter networks right inside their chassis. We also know that the critics are blowing smoke. And we know that because we can hear the results for ourselves. If we remove the filtering from either of our music systems, we are horrified by the increased shrillness and harshness. What’s more, our eyes confirm what our ears tell us, for when we first added a filter to our cinema system, the next thing we had to do was lower the contrast on our plasma TV. Yes, filtering has that kind of effect. Not all filters, unfortunately, work well, or at all. Many are made of plastic and have unshielded cords, and are thus vulnerable to more spurious noise than they can possibly take out. Some include so-called surge suppressors, which can supposedly protect your system against events that hardly ever occur outside urban legends (see the sidebar, Conditioning Versus Protection, on page 52). Some have connectors that can be charitably 50 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine described as “dodgy.” Such “filters” are, unfortunately, in the majority. Our original reference system, in the Alpha room, still uses an Inouye SPLC filter, long out of production, as well as a Foundation Research LC-2 for the power amplifier. Both our Omega audio system and our Kappa cinema system are equipped with GutWire MaxCon Squared filters. We did the listening for the review of these two products on our Omega system. We listened first with our GutWire filter in place, then we listened again, substituting first one filter, then the other. There was a reason we made this an all-digital test. Digital components generate plenty of noise, which often propagates through the power wiring. And perhaps we should repeat a surprising anecdote we’ve written about before. At one time, our Omega system included a power bar that had cost perhaps $4 at Walmart, but that surely couldn’t matter, because none of the main system was actually plugged into it. It fed the little light over the turntable, and also a portable computer charger. We needed a longer cord, however, and we substituted an all-metal power bar along with one of our shielded power cords. Wow! Everyone noticed, without prompting, that a veil had been lifted from the music. That power bar had not been feeding anything vital, but its unshielded cable was crossing all the other cables. That was enough! The GutWire 4 Bar This filter looks very much like the MaxCon Squared it replaces, with four Hubbell outlets. The green dots on the outlets indicate their hospital grade rating, and the IEC jack is from Furutech. GutWire does not specify what is inside the device, other than to say that there are no series components that would limit current to a large power amplifier. The case is m illed alu m i nu m. GutWire says the filter uses “ERPi (Improved Electron Rectification Processing) Level 2.” We’re not certain what that could mean, since if you rectify AC you get DC. GutWire cites “extensive use of natural minerals like Binch-tan and Microcrystalline Quartz. Both minerals can release negative ions and far infrared (FIR) which helps to improve the flow and ‘cleanness’ of the AC current.” We should mention that the company also makes a titanium and germanium iPhone case with claimed health benefits. Just so you know. The 4 Bar costs $1099, about the same price as our MaxCon. Like the MaxCon, it has no captive power cord, and none is supplied, which means you’ll need to add your own, an extra expense. That’s not an item on which you will want to pinch pennies. We began with Carmen Lundy singing ’Round Midnight from her Self Portrait album ( JVCXR-0005-2). We listened to it with our older GutWire, and then we substituted the 4 Bar and listened again. The song sounded different, but we weren’t initially certain whether that difference was an improvement. Though the volume had been left untouched, both Albert and Gerard thought the Kingsound KS-010 Current Smoother This filter from China looks like a serious product, housed in a mauve anodized aluminum chassis with screwin spike feet and a captive power cord. It has six outlets to the GutWire’s four. Though they have no hospital-grade designation, they offer a tight connection, and inserting a plug into any of the outlets requires some force. Its power cord is both stiff and short. When we gave it a half twist in order to orient it so that the plug was the right way up, the unit flipped over! The version of the KS-010 we reviewed costs $595, but there is, fortunately, another version with the same model name but a longer cable (1.8 metres), available for $695. That $100 surplus may seem like a lot for just an extra length of wire, but it is expensive wire. Even at that price, though, the Kingsound still comes in well below the price of nearly all other power filters. W hy spiked feet on a box that contains no audio circuitry? That’s presumably to stabilize it against ambient vibration, and it is what you would want to do with an amplifier or digital player as well. In an electronic circuit, any joint is potentially microphonic and can generate noise if it moves. Broadband noise contains higher frequencies, which can propagate from one conductor to another. The spikes may or may not make a difference, but including them is good practice. Kingsound says the device does not contain the usual resistors and coils that might limit current. So what is in it? The documentation mentions only “the same technology found in advanced medical equipment and voltage regulating principles normally used in laser devices.” That’s more than a little vague, but it’s all we were able to find out. The power cord, as already noted, is captive, and it is not the usual offthe-shelf AC cabling. It is made from OCC single-crystal copper with double shielding, cryogenically treated (we can’t vouch for the usefulness of this last feature, but Kingsound doesn’t charge extra for it). The wall plug is a Furutech, with conductive surfaces of pure copper, not the usual brass, nickel, etc. Though the KS-010 has six outlets, they are daisy-chained, which means that there is a shorter path to the one nearest the power cord than to the one at the other end. That was where we plugged in our Moon W-8 power amplifier, which would require all of the current the KS-010 could pass on. With everything plugged in, we let it all warm up for 10 minutes and listened once more to our three selected recordings. The opening of ’Round Midnight was superb, with plenty of detail and wonderfully clear lyrics. Yet there was something wrong. The bottom end was constrained, almost anemic, and everything seemed smaller. Kingsound claims that the KS-010 doesn’t limit current, but our W-8 demands a lot of current. We left most of our gear, including the Moon P-8 preamplifier and 300D DAC, connected to the Kingsound, but plugged the amplifier directly into the Hubbell duplex outlet in the wall. And that made all the difference. The orchestra had returned to its normal size, and Carmen Lundy’s voice had once again found all of its warmth and smoothness. Her lower tones had more natural resonance. We hung on her every word. “This is almost like the reference,” said Steve. We cont i nued w it h t he Doug McLeod Blues song, and once again we were pleased with what we heard. His acoustic guitar sounded lively and realistic. McLeod himself had wonderful presence, and his voice was clear and expressive. Rhythm was strong. Were the lyrics actually easier to follow than they had been with our MaxCon filter? Both Gerard and Albert thought they were. “The guitar had less punch when it was slapped,” said Steve, “but the lyrics were better defined. It’s a matter of emphasis.” ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 51 Room Listening Feedback song sounded louder…too loud, in fact. One result, however, was that some of the fine details in Lundy’s voice and in the strings were more apparent. “Certain syllables were too prominent,” said Gerard, “and they began to annoy me. The sibilance was more pronounced as well.” Steve, by contrast, liked the “bigger and fuller presentation,” and preferred the 4 Bar. Albert also praised the more airy and dynamic sound obtained with the 4 Bar. We continued with Doug McLeod’s Blues number, Run With the Devil from Come to Find (Audioquest AQCD1027). Gerard noted right off that the song seemed louder than it had been with our MaxCon filter, even though the MaxCon, like the 4 Bar, has no currentlimiting elements. Some syllables were more prominent, as with the first song. Steve found the sound more forward. The increased apparent loudness (which, we must stress, is due to a subjective effect) also brought advantages. McLeod sometimes lets phrases tail off, making his final syllables difficult to hear. With the 4 Bar, we found the text easier to follow (and it is worth following). His guitar was even more percussive, and we mean that as praise. “The guitar is palpable,” said Albert admiringly. The final piece was Norman Dello Joio’s Fantasy on a Theme by Haydn for wind band (Klavier K11138). This is an impressive recording, with percussion that can shake the floor and your whole body. Gerard found the woodwinds a little too forward with the 4 Bar, but really the performance was outstanding with both filters. Neither Albert nor Steve found the differences significant. As you can see, the new GutWire is only a little different from the old one. But we had a challenger waiting. Conditioning Versus Protection If we mention AC power conditioner to most people, they think of a very different device that is much more common: the surge protector. The two are not the same, and in some ways they are opposites. The rationale behind the surge protector is that there may be power “surges” (quick rises in line voltage beyond the usual voltage) that can destroy your expensive equipment. A surge protector looks like an ordinary power bar, but contains some sort of magic circuit that will either moderate a surge in some unknown way or else “take a bullet,” sacrificing itself to save your other gear. Fortunately, such surges are rare, and that’s putting the worst face on it. When was the last time you lost a refrigerator to a “power surge”? Huge power surges can result from lightning strikes, but the resulting voltage will usually be high enough to leap across several centimetres, and will bypass any protective circuit. Our lawyers would like us to add that if you live in certain vulnerable places, especially rural areas, you may see more power surges than city people would. The other thing you should know is that the typical surge protector is of dreadful quality, and will make you think you’re listening to a $200 boom box. With the final wind band piece, we were unanimous: the Kingsound KS-010 is a high-class piece of gear. The impact of the tympani was huge, even greater than with the reference filter (perhaps plugging the W-8 directly into the wall would be a good idea there too). Impact aside, there seemed to be improved definition of the woodwinds, possibly because there was no veiling to hide them. “The woodwinds sound entirely natural,” said Gerard. “They’re magnificent.” Final conclusions Both filters sound very good, and either one can make your system sound its best. The Kingsound has some obvious advantages over its rival: more outlets, the included high-grade captive cord, and spiked feet. Disadvantages include its inability to handle a power amplifier the size of ours, and a power cord that, in its cheaper version, is too short to be useful. You are no doubt aware that there are many power conditioners on the market, at widely divergent prices. Some are protection circuits rather than filters, and — unless you live out in the country at the top of a treeless hill — you’ll want to avoid them. An acceptable filter will have outlets offering a tight connection, and enough of them to accept all the products you need to feed. It will have a large, shielded power cable with a high-grade wall plug that has proper mechanical connections, not a cheap molded plug. Or, of course, it may have no cord at all, letting you make your own choice. Last but not least, it will have to actually do something. Something good. That should go without saying, but don’t count on being able to determine that by reading the literature. Room Listening Feedback CROSSTALK At only half the cost of the GutWire 4 Bar, the Kingsound might turn out to be a bargain. Let’s see now: it has inputs for power cords, it has a sleek, streamlined look that I like. I like its color too. How about its function? No problem for detail, and the bass performance rang true. The music provoked a visceral response, similar to what I remembered from the reference line conditioner. The GutWire 4 Bar is close in performance to its older sibling, which happens to be our reference. Both of these conditioners are high-calibre products, and either one can improve the overall performance of a high-end system. —Steve Bourke We should never underestimate the importance of good, clean power. The process of testing it is never simple, however, since any unit designed to do the cleaning stands in its own way. 52 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine When I hear details and improvements that I had never noticed before, without losing the music I knew, I conclude that the unit is more transparent than the previous one. That happened with the GutWire as I became aware of a richer orchestral texture, lyrics that became clearer and an image that appeared to be even more convincing than the reference. And yet, even if it sounded different, I also loved the music played through the Kingsound. I felt, more than heard, a good sense of balance through the pieces that we listened to. All the elements that I appreciated above were present, but less obviously so. It didn’t make a point of sounding better, it just let the music flow. And, seemingly, very close to the reference. —Albert Simon I’m bothered by the poor quality and quantity of information available for both of these devices. Poor documentation is common for audio cables, and it is often due, at best, to development that has been done largely by ear, or, at worst, because the cables have been made from unicorn tears and fairy dust. A power filter should be a little more straightforward. So if you ask me how the GutWire and the Kingsound work, I can’t tell you. I presume the designers know, but in fact they may be a little vague on the details too. But what you want to know is what happens when you plug your gear into one of these and you listen to music. In both cases, good things happened. Or, more accurately, bad things didn’t. I liked the 4 Bar less than its predecessor, but it really doesn’t restrict current. The Kingsound couldn’t deliver all the current demanded by our very large amplifier, but it otherwise equalled and perhaps even outperformed the more expensive GutWires. If you get it with the longer power cord, I recommend it. —Gerard Rejskind Radar For THIS MAGAZINE IS INTERACTIVE! Your Turntable H ow do you know whether your turntable is turning at the right speed? With most turntables it doesn’t matter, because if the speed is wrong you can’t change it. We’re rather in favor of correct speed being baked-in anyway, but sometimes it’s not. These two devices can allow you to check the platter speed. What you do with the information is then up to you. Of course, you don’t need an expensive device to read the speed of a turntable platter. The simplest speed-check ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 53 Room Listening Feedback Yes, we know the SpeedNic is a one-trick pony, but so are Triple Crown winners. W hy wouldn’t your fixed-speed turntable be going at the right speed? It might not if it is having traction problems. Can it be that the drive belt is slipping? If so, the drag of the stylus in a highly modulated groove can slow it down intermittently. The SpeedNic can confirm it, after which you’ll do what you have to do. Fortunately, neither of our turntables (a Linn LP12 and an Audiomeca J-1) showed any detectable speed variation on either the 33 or 45 r/min speeds (the SpeedNic has a setting for 78 r/min as well). Our J-1 turntable actually does have variable speed control, and the SpeedNic made adjustment easy. Just for fun, we also tried it on an old directdrive table with variable speed. Setting the speed was easy, much easier than with the turntable’s own neon-lit strobe display. Playing a busy groove or putting extra weight on the platter had no visible effect either. Because the strobe disc has such clear markings, any speed error would be obvious. There is no external power supply, since the SpeedNic does not depend on the power-line frequency to generate its stroboscopic light. It runs in fact on batteries, namely three alkaline C cells. We wished there were a proper battery door on the unit, but in fact the batteries are accessible only by removing four Philipshead screws from the bottom plate. That’s a clear inconvenience, though It work in three ways. LEDs draw little current, and the unit In the table of contents, click on an articleused title,only a few seconds at a is typically and you are whisked right to theThe article. time. batteries can thus be expected In the list of advertisers on the to second-last page, last for years. device is just clickaon cardboard an ad name, circle andwith go right to theSpeedNic ad itself. is wonderfully wellThe strobe patterns on it, oftenThen included clickwith on an made, ad, with a substantial cast aluminum the andturntable. your browser You illuminate will take you it with rightato case the advertiser’s page. anodized inWeb either silver or black. lamp (preferably neon, or something elseto circle Remember when you’d have little Its price of numbers $399 reflects its luxurious fit that can go on andon offaquickly). card you However would then in? You won’t buy one for looks andmail finish. the 60 Hz (or 50 Hz Doesn’t in most thatofseem the world) like a long time ago? For a store that sells and alone, though. frequency doesn’t mesh well with, say, 33 sets up turntables, it is clearly a must. and a third r/min. The two SpeedNic It may also be useful for anyone with a devices include a beautiful aluminum turntable that does not have fixed speed, strobe disc, but also a quartz-controlled like our Audiomeca. It could even have LED light that will allow an accurate a permanent place next to the turntable reading. LEDs, like neon bulbs but itself. It’s a handsome product that will unlike incandescents, turn on and off make a good-looking turntable look even instantly. better. Samsung Boom Box Room Listening Feedback I f you associate Samsung with either smartphones or (as we do) top-grade TV sets, you’ll see this device, the DA-E750, as something (as Monty Python would say) completely different. Re facin henis nisl iustrud enim aute duis dignisc iliscipissi. Tum veliquat ulpute dolore volore facipsum esequat. Ut lan veliquat praese facilit lutpat nibh euguero ea feuguer suscing enismod dolorero odiamco rtiscil lamconsequat wismod modion vel ulputat. Utpation utpat augait am, core tisi. An hendreet nonsenim dit, ver sustrud dunt utet autem quam, sis augue magniam consequat adipis adiam, consed te ming esent loborper iure commodio commodit lum zzriure vullumsan henim iustin utatum vel ilis aut loborperilla feum do odolore commodolore dolore dolesto eu feu feu feuipsu scipit ad molorem ex ero odolobore dolobortie digna conullaor si bla consecte et exerit lum alismolore ming esent vullamc onullan henisl ute core vent volor si. Sumsandre con hent ilit nim nis accum nissequam ero eraestrud dolore ese dolore dolutat, volobore diat praestismod te facilla facil inci blan et aliquis ciliquiscil dignis am quis niamet nisse eniamet, sis nibh eraesen dionum zzrilla feuipis modolut adip euis dolessi. Iquametuerat nullamc ommolore con utatuer ostinit nos eugiam nos adionsed euisi ex eril ilismod te te mod et adionse quissent aliquisi te doluptat ing enit 54 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine ea alis accumsan velessectem dolorpe rostrud dipis nonsenisi. Iril iure molobor sustismod molore mincilit acing er accum v ulput in utat, quat ad eril doloreet lan euismol ortinim digna autpat lobor sectetum quamconulla commy niation sequatie el ip ea augait, consequam adionsectet alis ex exer sum zzriure eugiam iriurerit ad eros dit alit num del ullutpat, sisisl et et volorper si blam, quatem init, consequi bla coreet, vent iriusci bla feu feuipis modolore dolesse conulla feuis adit laor ilit lutpatin el in velisci ncilla facinibh eugait adipit nibh et nis nonsed magna feummod do coreros eugait il ex eugait wisi ex et num quisim aut atum del del dolobore eros endigniatue dolor secte ex eugiat. Illa corperostrud tisi. Rud doloreet wis alit ut lum in heniscidunt aut ing et lorper sequis non ut ilit Summing it up… Brand/model: Samsung DA-E750 Price: C$600 (street price) Size (WDH): 45 x 24 x 15 cm Connectivity: Bluetooth 3.0/Apt-X, Airplay, AllShare, Apple and Samsung docks Rated power: 20 watts/channel (main), 40 watts (woofer) Most liked: Stunning looks Least liked: Digital volume control reduces resolution Verdict: A tweak away from perfection lore facilis sequat. Duis ad dolor adiam quatiscidunt praestie er ametummod tat. Agna feuipisl essequis accum in utat. Andigna feuguer sustrud dolore conum ex et enisit prat vulputat iure dunt verit lutpat nullam velesto commolortie dolorpe riurem zzrit, senit nonsequis nibh er sum nim aliquis at accumsa ndrercipsum vent nullam, venis nim ipisim irit num euisis nisl ing elit wis adionullamet praestrud tie consequatue faccum autet, quis aliquat irilismolore exerat acidunt dolesto ex er incilis essim numsandrem verosto eummy nim velendre er ing euis nonulla faccumm olortionulla feuipsum eu facipis cipit, volobore erillaor in utpatie vel iustisl dipisim zzrillutetue corpera esendit ipisi blandrer susci te magna feugait vel ut iniam, velis amcore facilisl erit venit augait lute tem ing ercilit, velisci liquatuer il utatue consequat. Cil et veraessisl utat, sed tio dionsendipit nit aliquisi eu facincidunt lobor iure do ero dignit ullaortion ute feugiat. Lorem eum iurer iure tatue modigna feugait eros nisl utatum ip el ex eu feui eu facipsusto ea faccums andignis dit illaore do odit ilis dipit do euis eui te feugait niamcom modolor perilluptat. To commy nim iustio duipis num nostrud magna facip euis exerosto dolor sequipit augait lor se commodo lobore dolore conse conumsandit aliquisci tet lore tio eugait ad magnit utpat la feum nisl exercil lutatio consed tatem zzrilit aliquam quat utpat wisit praestie feuisim num do od exer augait duisse et lumsan etuercilisit nonsectet wissi blamcon utpat verostio et wisi tetueros nos autat lutat prat, commy nullamet adip esto delis dignisl dolorpe rcilis eum eu feu feugiam zzrit utat, con elenisi. Commod dolestrud te te euis alis niamconsed eummod te tet ing exerili quatummod dolute tem zzrit at alit, con ut iusto dit nos accum nummodiam, quamet, sequiscipit accum adiat volorem nos aliquatuerit iusto con velenit ilit luptat. Od tat lor sim nisci tat at ut iril eum vullaor se ex enim dignim digna commodolore commy num veniam dolut wiscipit exercil ut ilis eum non volessim dunt wisl do do commod magniat. Ut wisisim zzrit nonsequatie magnit nos nonsed delenim. THE AUDIOPHILE STORE ATLAS HYPER SPEAKER CABLES INTERCONNECTS ATLAS HYPER SYMMETRICAL Oxygen-free continuous cast (OCC): each strand is a single copper crystal. Two internal conductors, plus double shielding (copper Mylar plus braided screen). ORDER: AHS-1 Hyper Symmetrical, 1m, $425, AHS-2, 2m, $539 ORDER: AHSB-1 Balanced, single crystal XLR, 1m, $725 ATLAS ELEMENT A big winner in one of UHF’s blind tests of speaker cables is Hyper 2, an oxygen free stranded wire in Teflon dielectric. Plus connectors (add Eichmann Bayonet bananas, $99.95/set, two sets needed for AH2, three for biwire), or Furutech, as shown, $85/set). Hyper Biwire is Hyper 2 with an added set of solid core wires for the highs. ORDER: AH2, Hyper 2 cable, $34.95/metre ORDER: AHB, Hyper Biwire cable, $54.95/metre ATLAS ICHOR SPEAKER CABLE We did a blind test, and this supposed starter cable wiped the floor with a much more expensive one. Which we dropped. And then they improved it further with the Integra connector, which is noncompressing and solder-free. ORDER: AELI-1, 1 m pair Atlas Element Integra, $99 55 EICHMANN BULLET PLUGS The first phono plug to maintain the impedance of the cable by using metal only as an extension of the wire. Hollow tube centre pin, tiny spring for ground. Two contacts for soldering, two-screw strain relief. Gold over copper. Got silver cable? Get the unique Silver Bullets! ORDER: EBP kit 4 Bullet Plugs, $77.95 ORDER: EBPA kit 4 Silver Bullets, $154.95 EICHMANN CABLE PODS Minimum metal, gold over tellurium copper. Unique clamp system: the back button turns but the clamp doesn’t. Solder to it, or plug an Eichmann banana into it, even from inside! ORDER: ECP, set of four posts, $119.95 CONNECTOR TREATMENT Continuous-cast single-crystal cable, ready for biwiring. It costs just $235 per meter of double cable (a 2 m pair has 4 meters of wire). We suggest adding the Eichmann Bayonet bananas, $99.95 per set of 4, or Furutech connectors, $85 per set of 4. PIERRE GABRIEL SILVER UHF’s reference systems still include some of Pierre Gabriel’s silver interconnects and speaker cables. Now they’re back, with a superb silver interconnect, fitted with WBT’s superb nextgen silver locking connectors. Also available with copper nextgen connectors. SINGLE CRYSTAL JUMPERS Not biwiring? Dump the free jumpers that came with your speakers. Atlas jumpers are made from single-crystal copper, gold-plated spades. ORDER: ACJ, four single crystal jumpers, $99.95 DIGITAL CABLES ORDER: PGI-1, 1 m interconnect pair, silver nextgens, $995 ORDER: PGI-2, 2 m interconnect pair, silver nextgens, $1595 ORDER: PGIC-1, 1 m interconnect pair, copper nextgens, $879 MAVROS OCC TOSLINK OPTICAL DIGITAL The best we’ve found yet, though we’re still looking. Add the mini-TOSLINK adapter for Airport Express or computers with hybrid jacks. ORDER: TD-1.8 TOSLINK cable, 1.8m length $22.95 ORDER: TD-3 TOSLINK cable, 3m length $29.95 ORDER: TMT mini-TOSLINK adapter, $3.95 ATLAS MAVROS CABLES We’ve adopted them for our Alpha system, which sounds better than ever. This is a four-wire monocrystal cable with porous Teflon dielectric, available with OCC spades, as shown, or with rhodium-plated locking bananas. We can upgrade to WBT nextgen locking bananas. CONNECTORS EICHMANN BAYONET BANANAS ORDER: AMBCu-3, 3 m pair, OCC spades or bananas, $2999 ORDER: AMBCu-5, 5 m pair, $4800 ORDER: WBT, upgrade from rhodium bananas to WBT nextgen locking bananas, $130 per set of four (3 sets needed for biwiring) WBT makes banana plugs and spades for speaker cables, all of which lock tightly into any post. All use crimping technology. These nextgen connectors are far superior to previous versions. This was our long-time reference, originally selling for $399. We now have a limited stock at a drastically reduced price. ORDER: AOD-1.5 digital cable, 1.5m, $239 This is our new reference digital cable. We recommend it for the best systems. ORDER: AMD-1.5 digital cable, 1.5m, $599 SPEAKER CABLES WBT NEXTGEN CONNECTORS ATLAS OPUS DIGITAL ATLAS MAVROS DIGITAL Truly terrific, a pair of these connects our phono preamp to the preamp of our Omega system. Single-crystal copper. ORDER: AMI-1, 1 m Mavros interconnect pair, $1499 ORDER: AMI-2, 2 m Mavros interconnect pair, $2100 DeOxit (formerly ProGold) cleans connections and promotes conductivity. It comes in a squirt bottle even for connections you can’t reach. NASA likes it, and so do we. ORDER: PGS, can DeOxit fluid, $43.95 The Eichmann Bayonet banana uses a minimum of metal, and tellurium copper at that, but clicks tightly into any binding post with spring action. For soldering or crimping, or both. ORDER: EBB kit 4 Bayonet bananas, $99.95 www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html ORDER: WBT-0610 Kit 4 angled nextgen bananas, $160 ORDER: WBT-0610Ag Kit 4 nextgen silver bananas, $310 ORDER: WBT-0681 Kit 4 nextgen spades, $160 ORDER: WBT-0681Ag Kit 4 nextgen silver spades, $310 The high-tech minimum metal “nextgen” phono plugs. Easy to solder, with locking collar. Silver version available. ORDER: WBT-0110, kit 4 nextgen copper plugs, $190 ORDER: WBT-0110Ag, kit 4 nextgen silver plugs, $300 FURUTECH CONNECTORS Rhodium-plated banana tightens under pressure. Installs like WBT banana. The spade installs the same way too.. ORDER: FTB-R, set of four bananas, $85 ORDER: FTS-R, set of four spades, $85 TWO CABLES INTO ONE JACK Need to feed two preamps into two amps? This solid Y-adapter (two jacks into one phono plug) is gold over brass, with Teflon dielectric. ORDER: FYA, one pair Y adapters, $20 56 THE AUDIOPHILE STORE SILVER SOLDER MOON PHONO PREAMPS This is a lovely solder, from the company that makes Enacom line filters (which we also like). Wakø-Tech solder contains 4% silver, no lead. ORDER: SR-4N, 100 g solder roll, $59.95 Simaudio has done it: come up with a world-class phono preamp that does magic. The 310LP (formerly the LP5.3) is one of the best available. Adjustable MM/MC. ORDER: Moon 310LP, silver (black available on order), $1599. ANALOG PRODUCTS Special price on interconnect, one per 310LP order. ORDER: Hyper Symmetrical, 1m, $425, for $265 ORDER: Hyper Symmetrical, 2m, $539 for $399 ORDER: Hyper balanced, 1m, $725, for $535 ORDER: AMI-1, 1 meter Mavros, $1499, for $1199 ORDER: AMI-2, 2 meter Mavros, $2100, for $1749 LONDON REFERENCE Yes, we can supply the awesome London Reference phono cartridge that we have adopted as a reference. Other models on special order. This unique cartridge has a line contact stylus, and an output of 5 mV, right for an MM preamp. ORDER: LRC cartridge, $4695 Even more astonishing: the 110LP includes much of the 310LP technology, still offers MM/MC, but costs only a fraction. Lively and musical, it’s difficult to match. ORDER: Moon 110LP, $599 (silver, black if desired) Special price on interconnect, one per 110LP order. ORDER AEL-1, Atlas Element, $99.95, for $59.95 GOLDRING ELITE If you have limited funds and you want an MC cartridge with a line contact stylus, this is a great choice. It's a detuned version of the very expensive (but discontinued) Excel we still own. ORDER: GEC cartridge, $745 NOTE: The Moon preamps are shipped set for moving magnet setting. We’ll reset it to your specification so you won’t have to. TURNTABLE BELT TREATMENT What this is not is a sticky goo for belts on their last legs. Rubber Renue removes oxidation from rubber belts, giving them a new lease on life. But what astonished us is what it does to even a brand new belt. Wipe down your belt every 3 months, and make analog sound better than ever. ORDER: RRU-100 drive belt treatment, $18.95 J. A. MICHELL RECORD CLAMP Clamp your LP to the turntable platter. We use the J. A. Michell clamp, machined from nearly weightless aluminum. Drop it on, press down, tighten the knob. ORDER: MRC Michell record clamp, $75 ORDER: MRC-R clamp for Rega and short spindles, $85 LP RECORD CLEANER MORE ANALOG… TITAN STYLUS LUBRICANT Amazing but true: dabbing a bit of this stuff on your stylus every 2 or 3 LPs makes it glide through the groove instead of scraping. Fine artist’s brush not included, but readily available in many stores. ORDER: TSO-1 Titan stylus oil, $39.95 ZEROSTAT ANTISTATIC PISTOL A classic adjunct to a record brush is the Zerostat antistatic gun, especially in dry weather. Squeeze the trigger and release: it ionizes the air, which becomes conductive and drains off the static charge. By the way, it works for a lot more than LP’s. No batteries needed. Good for LPs, jamming printers, and anywhere static is a problem. ORDER: Z-1 Zerostat antistatic pistol, $94.95 LP SLEEVES Keep your records clean and scratch-free. Replace dirty, torn or missing inner sleeves with quality Mobile Fidelity sleeves, at an attractive price. ORDER: MFS, package of 50 sleeves, $30 VINYL ESSENTIALS TEST LP Concentrated cleaner for LP vacuum cleaning machines. Much safer than some formulas we’ve seen! Half litre, mix with demineralized or distilled water to make 4 litres. ORDER: LPC, $19.95 EXSTATIC RECORD BRUSH The Super Exstatic. Includes a hard velvet pad to get into the grooves, two sets of carbon fibre tufts. We use it every time! ORDER: GSX record brush, $36 This precision-made German test record lets you check out channel identification, correct phase, crosstalk, the tracking ability of your cartridge (it’s a tougher test than the old Shure disc was) and the resonance of your tone arm and cartridge. When we need to test a turntable, this is the one we reach for. ORDER: LP 003, Image Hifi Test LP, $48.95 CLEANER POWER KINGSOUND CURRENT SMOOTHER MoFi WET/DRY BRUSH STYLUS CLEANER We’re often asked how we clean the stylus on our cartridge. The Enzow Zerodust gets used after every play. Its gummy surface sucks dust from the stylus, and washes under the tap. ORDER: Enzow Zerodust, $66.95 The Super Exstatic (shown above) is the best dry brush we know, but if your LP needs a wash and you don’t have a vacuum machine handy, this is the one to have in hand. Dampen it with a good record-cleaning fluid like our own LPC. ORDER: MFB record brush, $36 ORDER: MFB plus LPC (4-litres), $46 ORDER: Replacement kit for MFB, $36 www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html Economy priced, but astonishingly effective —we wouldn’t run our system with less. We had been waiting eagerly for a power filter that actually worked and didn’t have a price in four digits. This is it. A solid cast-metal body houses six high-grade AC outlets (not hospital-grade, but offering wonderfully tight contact). The 1.8-metre OCC (single-crystal) captive power cord is cryogenically treated and fitted with a pure-copper Furutech plug. NOTE: The photo shows a unit with a shorter and less practical power cord. It would cost less, but we don’t recommend it. ORDER: KS-010, Current Smoother $695 THE AUDIOPHILE STORE UHF 14 POWER CORD UHF14 POWER BAR Most power bars knock voltage down, and generate more noise than a kindergarten class. The UHF14 doesn’t. It features a 1.5m 14- gauge shielded cable, Hubbell hospital-grade fourplex, and Furutech gold-on-copper wall plug. ORDER: UHF14-PB, $239 Need it longer? Add $20 per metre extra MORE POWER TO YOU Better access to electrical power. Change your 77-cent duplex outlets for these Hubbell hospital-grade outlets. Insert a plug and it just snaps in. A tighter internal connection as well. The cheapest improvement you can make to your system. ORDER: AC-DA Hubbell duplex outlet, $23.95 ORDER: AC-D20 20A duplex, red color, $28.95 INSTANT CIRCUIT CHECKER When we put a quality AC plug on our kettle, boiling time dropped by 90 seconds! One of the best AC plugs we have ever seen is the Hubbell 8215 hospital-grade plug. It connects to wires under high pressure, and it should last forever. ORDER: AC-P2, Hubbell 8215 cord plug, $25.95 Amazingly good at a much lower price are these two cord plugs from Eagle. Male and female versions. ORDER: AC-P1 Eagle male cord plug, $5.95 ORDER: AC-PF Eagle female cord plug, $5.95 Why do big name DVD players come with those tiny two-prong plugs for their cords? A good shielded power cable will do wonders! ORDER: DVD-A, GutWire adapter, $39 UHF/ FURUTECH POWER CORD We were so pleased with the performance of our UHF14 cable that we wanted to hear it with the upscale Furutech connectors. Wow! Pure copper IEC connector and copper/gold wall plug. ORDER: UHF14F-1.5K, 14 gauge power cable kit, $149.95 ORDER: UHF14F-1.5 14 cable, assembled, $174.95 GUTWIRE G CLEF POWER CABLE It has 24/192 resolution on coax, optical and asynchronous USB. The full review of version 1 is in UHF No. 89. The review of this version is in issue No. 93. To sweeten the deal, we’re offering bundles on our two Atlas digital cables, in the favored 1.5 m length. By getting the bundle, save on an Atlas Opus cable (usually $239). ORDER: 300D V.2, $2200 ORDER: 300D v.2 + Opus digital cable, $2350 ORDER: 300D v.2+ Mavros digital cable, $2600 With the purchase of a 300D, get the UHF14F shielded power cable with Furutech connectors (assembled, one per purchase). Instead of $174.95, pay just $124.95. ORDER: UHF14F-1.5 (bundled only), $124.95 AN IMPORTANT NOTE We still have stock of the older 300D, which is our reference. The main difference is in the USB input, which is now asynchronous.. A factory upgrade is available for $800. A MORE AFFORDABLE DAC Its conversion circuit is identical to that of the superb 300D. We were amazed to find that, on some recordings, it sounded much like its bigger brother. The front panel is silver, but we’ll supply it in black on request. Get it in a bundle, and get a bargain on the interconnects you’ll be needing. ORDER: 100D converter, $649 ORDER: 100D plus Element 1m cables, $699 ORDER: 100D plus Hyper Symmetrical 1m cables, $899 SUPER ANTENNA MkIII Multiple shielding, including external electrostatic shield connected to a clip. Used by UHF. Length 1.7 m, longer cords on order. G Clef 2 has 195 conductors, 3 shields providing 98% shielding. ORDER: GGC G Clef, Square 1.7m, $385 Making your own power cords for your equipment? You’ll need the hard-to-get IEC 320 connector to fit the gear. ORDER: AC-P3 10 ampere IEC 320 plug, $9.95 ORDER: AC-P4 15 ampere Schurter IEC 320 plug, $18.95 IEC ON YOUR DVD PLAYER No budget for a premium cable? Make your own! We use several ourselves. Foil-shielded, to avoid picking up or transmitting noise. Assembled or as a kit. With Hubbell 8215 hospital-grade plug and Schurter 15 A IEC 320 connector. For digital players, preamplifiers, tuners, and even medium-powered amplifiers. ORDER: UHF14-1.5K, 14 gauge power cable kit, $74.95 ORDER: UHF14-1.5 14 gauge cable, assembled, $99.95 Need it longer? Add $20 per metre extra This is the one with the big IEC connectors whose contacts are rotated the other way. It’s for certain large power amps. Marinco 20 amp hospital-grade wall plug, which fits only a 20 amp wall outlet. Available with a 15 amp Hubbell wall plug instead. ORDER: UHF14-20-1.5 cable, assembled, $99.95 HOSPITAL-GRADE CONNECTION BETTER DIGITAL MOON 300D v.2 DAC 20-AMPERE POWER CORD Plug it into an AC outlet, and the three lights can indicate a missing ground, incorrect polarity, switched wires — five problems in all. The first thing we did after getting ours was phone the electrician. ORDER: ACA-1, Instant Circuit Checker, $21 57 THORENS TURNTABLES AND GOLDRING CARTRIDGES AVAILABLE ON LINE www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html The Super Antenna is our best-selling store product of all time?! We designed it years ago for our FM tuner, then realized how well it worked with off-air television. It also works wonderfully well with digital TV. We use four of them ourselves. How is it done? Our antenna has no stupid rotary switch to muck things up. It uses a high-grade video transformer, and with a low-loss multipleshielded 75 ohm cable and gold-plated F connector, it has low internal loss. It covers digital TV bands as well as FM. ORDER: FM-S Super Antenna, MkIII, $59.95 58 THE AUDIOPHILE STORE SUPPORT SYSTEMS THE SUPERSPIKE It’s blue, and it’s a sort of modelling clay that never dries. Anchor speakers to stands, cones to speakers, and damp out vibration. Leaflet with many suggested uses. ORDER: AT-2, Audio-Tak pack, $10 TENDERFEET Machined cones are wonderful things to put under speakers or other audio equipment. They anchor it mechanically and decouple it acoustically at the same time. Tenderfeet come in various versions: tall (as shown) or flattened, in either anodized silver or black. Tall Tenderfeet have threaded holes for a machine screw. If you have a fragile hardwood floor, add the optional Tendercup (shown above) to protect it. ORDER: TFG, tall silver Tenderfoot, $18 ORDER: TFGN, tall black Tenderfoot, $23 ORDER: TFP, flat silver Tenderfoot, $15 ORDER: TFP, flat black Tenderfoot, $17 ORDER: TCP, silver Tendercup, $15 ORDER: TCPN, black Tendercup, $17 ISOBEARINGS ARE BACK! Long discontinued, this product from Audioprism is back. Of the many anti-vibration products we have tried, this is the one that is by far most effective for both vertical and lateral vibration. (Unfortunately, some of the most famous ones don’t work at all.) Each Isobearing consists of a small ball and a cup to receive it. There are two models, each with a weight rating. The rating indicates the maximum weight each Isobearing should bear, but for optimum performance it should bear at least half of its rated weight. Use three or more Isobearings, placed according to the weight of the different sections of the amplifier, digital player, etc. We now use Isobearings on our DVD player, and we’re glad they’re back. ORDER: ISO-M, single Isobearing, 2 kg/4.4 lbs $25 each ORDER: ISO-G, single Isobearing, 7.5 kg/17 lbs $40 each AUDIO-TAK AN ON-THE-WALL IDEA This is unique: a sealed unit containing a spike and a cup to receive it. It won’t scratch even hardwood floors. For speakers or equipment stands, on bare floors only. Four sizes of threaded shanks are available to fit speakers or stands. ORDER: SSKQ, 4 Superspikes, 1/4” shank, $75 ORDER: SSKT, 4 Superspikes, 5/16” shank, $75 ORDER: SSKS, 4 Superspikes, 6 mm shank, $75 ORDER: SSKH, 4 Superspikes, 8 mm shank, $75 WHAT SIZE SUPERSPIKE? A good ruler will let you figure it out. The stated size is the outer diameter of the threaded shank. Then count the threads: 1/4” shank: 20 threads/inch 5/16” shank: 18 threads/inch M6 (6mm) shank: 10 threads/cm M8 (8mm) shank: 8 threads/cm OTHER SUPERSPIKES We have also have a Superspike foot (at right) that replaces those useless feet on CD players, amps, etc., using the same screws to fasten them. And there’s a stick-on version (not shown) for other components. Need to fasten a speaker securely to the wall? Nothing beats the Smarter Speaker Support for ease of installation or for sheer strength. And it holds the speaker off the wall, so it can be used even with rear-ported speakers. Easily adjustable with two hands, not three, tested to an incredible 23 kg! Glass-filled polycarbonate is unbreakable. Screws and anchors included, available in white only. ORDER: SSPS-W, pair of white speaker supports, $29.95 TARGET WALL STANDS We keep our turntables on these, secure from floor vibrations, wonderful for CD players, amplifiers, and all components. ORDER: VW-1 Target single-shelf wall stand, $225 ORDER: SSKF, 4 Superspike replacement feet, $80 ORDER: SSKA, 3 stick-on Superspike feet, $50 FOUNDATION SPEAKER STANDS The ultimate loudspeaker stand, made from patented high-density material. There is nothing deader. Available in Canada and US only, Stands will be drop-shipped to your address by Focus Audio via UPS. ORDER: FFA one pair 24” Foundation stands, $1495 ORDER: VW-2 Target dual-shelf wall stand, $280 AUDIOPHILE RECORDINGS, RECOMMENDED BY UHF STAFF REFERENCE RECORDINGS Tutti (HDCD, SACD) A terrific symphonic sampler from Reference, with dazzling music by Bruckner, Stravinsky, etc. Also available as RR’s very first SACD release. Wow! 30th Anniversary Sampler (HDCD) A collection of excerpts from recent Reference albums. Yerba Buena Bounce (HDCD) The (terrific) Hot Club of San Francisco is back, with great music, well-played, wonderfully recorded by “Professor” Johnson! Crown Imperial (HDCD) The second chapter of the famous Pomp&Pipes saga, with the Dallas Wind Symphony, in a set of perfectly recorded pieces in glorious HDCD. Organ Odyssey (HDCD) Mary Preston, the organist of Crown Imperial, in a dazzling program of Widor, Mendelssohn, Vierne, and others. Beachcomber (HDCD) Fennell and the Dallas Wind Ensemble. Includes Tico Tico, A Chorus Line, and a version of 76 Trombones you’ll remember for a long time. Serenade (HDCD) A collection of choral pieces, wonderfully sung by the Turtle Creek Chorale, with perhaps the best sound Keith has given them yet. Trittico (HDCD) Large helping of wind band leader Frederick Fennell doing powerhouse music by Grieg, Albeniz, Nelhybel, etc. Complex and energetic. Nojima Plays Liszt (HDCD) The famous 1986 recording of Minoru Nojima playing the B Minor Sonata and other works is back…in HDCD this time! Fennell Favorites (LP) The Dallas Wind Symphony: Bach, Brahms, Prokofiev and more. Fireworks on this rare Reference LP. Nojima Plays Ravel (HDCD) Nojima’s other hit disc, now also in glorious HDCD. Jazz Hat (HDCD) Pianist Michael Garson, in re-releases of some of his famous recordings Garden of Dreams (HDCD) David Maslanka’s evocative music for wind band. www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html Blazing Redheads (LP) Not all redheads, this all-female salsa-flavored big band adds a lot of THE AUDIOPHILE STORE red pepper to its music. Felix Hell (HDCD) The young organ prodigy turns in mature versions of organ music of Liszt, Vierne, Rheinberger and Guilmant. Huge bottom end! American Requiem (HDCD) Richard Danielpour's awesome Requiem mass is all about war, and about the hope for peace too, with a dedication tied to 9/11. World Keys (HDCD) Astonishing young pianist Joel Fan amazes with music from all the world, including that of Prokofiev and Liszt Ikon of Eros (HDCD) Huge suite for orchestra and chorus, by John Tavener. Inspired by Greek Orthodox tradition. Overwhelming HDCD sound. Say It With Music (CD) Margie Gibson sings Irving Berlin in what may be one the greatest jazz vocal recordings of all time. And she’s right in your living room! Growing Up in Hollywood Town (XRCD) The Amanda Albums (CD) How did they do it? The two complete McBroom recordings, Growing Up in Hollywood Town and West of Oz, on one terrific CD I’ve Got the Music in Me (CD) This was originally Sheffield’s LAB-2 release. If you haven’t heard Thelma Houston belt out a song, you’re in for a treat. Kodo (CD) A Japanese neo-folk group plays astonishing music, including a 400pound drum that can take out a woofer. Or a wall! Harry James & His Big Band (Gold CD) Harry said he would have done this recording for free, because he sounded better than ever. Tower of Power (CD) This high-energy big band was originally recorded directly to disc. The new CD has been mastered from the original LP, not the digital tape copy. OPUS 3 Test Records 1, 2 & 3 (SACD) A blast from the past! Here are 14 cuts from the samplers that launched Opus 3. They sound better than ever, too. Swingcerely Yours (SACD) An SACD re-re-release of tracks from superb vibraphonist Lars Erstrand, from 1983 to 1995. Long overdue! Autumn Shuffle (SACD/LP) Ugglas plays a number of different guitars, and borrows from jazz, Blues, and (yes!) country. Piano, organ, trombone, bowed saw, etc. Showcase 2005 (SACD) The latest Opus 3 sampler, with Eric Bibb, Mattias Wager, the Erik Westberg Vocal Ensemble and lots more, in glorious SACD. Just Like Love (SACD/LP) The newest from Eric Bibb, less oriented to Gospel and more to Blues. Bibb’s group, Needed Time, is not here, but he’s surrounded by half a dozen fine musicians. A nice recording. SHEFFIELD Drum/Track Record Beyond (SACD) The second recording by the versatile guitarist Peder af Ugglas (who also did Autumn Shuffle, below), who plays every instrument there is: jazz, rock, blues, country. From Sweden??? Organ Treasures (SACD) All those showpieces for big organ you remember hearing through huge systems…only with all of the power and the clarity of Super Audio. 4.1 channels, plus 2-channel CD. PLUS THESE HDCD RECORDINGS: Pomp&Pipes (HDCD) From the Age of Swing (HDCD) Swing is Here (HDCD) Copland Symphony No. 3 (HDCD) Medinah Sessions, two CDs for one (HDCD) Ports of Call (HDCD) Bruckner Symphony No. 9 (HDCD) Ein Heldenleben (HDCD) The King James Version (CD) Harry James and his big band, live from the chapel! Unique Classical Guitar Collection (SACD) An SACD, mastered from analog, of some of Opus 3’s long-discontinued classical guitar LPs. Terrific! Comes Love (HDCD) Another disc by the terrific Swedish Jazz Kings, led by saxophonist Tomas Ornberg, proving again Sweden understands jazz. The sound is luminous, sometimes dazzling. It’s Right Here For You (HDCD) Is there, anywhere, a better swing band than The Swedish Jazz Kings (formerly Tömas Ormberg’s Blue Five)? Closer to Kansas City than to Stockholm, they are captivating. Test CD 4 (SACD) A sampler of Opus 3 performers, clearer than you’ve ever heard them before. Hybrid disc. Test CD 5 (HDCD) Another of Opus 3’s wonderful samplers, including blues, jazz, and classical music. A number of fine artists, captured with the usual pure Blumlein stereo setup. A treat. Showcase (SACD/LP) Available as a hybrid SACD/CD disc, or a gorgeously-cut LP, with selections from Opus 3 releases. Good Stuff (DOUBLE 45 LP/HDCD/SACD) As soothing as a summer breeze, this disc features singer Eric Bibb (son of Leon), singing and playing guitar along with his group. Subtle weaving of instrumentation, vivid sound. Spirit and the Blues (DOUBLE 45 LP/CD/SACD) Like his father, Leon Bibb, Eric Bibb understands the blues. He and the other musicians, all playing strictly acoustic instruments, have done a fine recording, and Opus 3 has made it sound exceptional. Tiny Island (SACD) If you like Eric Bibb and his group Good Stuff as much as we do, pick this one up. 20th Anniversary Celebration Disc (HDCD) A great sampler from Opus 3. Includes some exceptional fine pieces, jazz, folk and classical. The sound pickup is as good as it gets, and the HDCD transfer is luminous. www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html 59 Levande (CD) � The full recording from which “Tiden Bara Går” on Test Record No.1 is taken. Believe it or not, this great song isn’t even the best on the album! A fine singer, doing folklike material…and who cares about understanding the words? Concertos for Double Bass (CD/SACD) � This album of modern and 19th Century music is a favorite for its deep, sensuous sound. And the music is worth discovering. It is lyrical, a delight in every way. Across the Bridge of Hope (SACD) An astonishing choral recording by the Erik Westberg Ensemble, famous for its Musica Sacra choral recording. Musica Sacra (HDCD/SACD) Test Record No. 4 (LP) PROPRIUS Now the Green Blade Riseth (CD/SACD/LP) Religious music done a new way: organ, chorus and modern instruments. Stunning music, arranged and performed by masters, and the effect is joyous. The sound is clear, and the sheer depth is unequalled on CD. The new SACD version is the very best SACD we have yet heard! Cantate Domino (CD/SACD/LP) This choral record is a classic of audiophile records. The title selection is stunningly beautiful. The second half is Christmas music, and includes the most stunning version of O Holy Night we’ve ever heard. Antiphone Blues (CD) This famous disc offers an unusual mix: sax and organ! The disc includes Ellington, Negro spirituals, and some folk music. Electrifying performance, and the recording quality is unequalled. Antiphone Blues (SACD/HDCD) This is the Super Audio version, with a Red Book layer that is HDCDencoded. The best of both worlds! Jazz at the Pawnshop (LP/CD/SACD) Jazz with legendary, nearly perfect sound, famous in audiophile circles for years. The LP is double, and includes extra tracks. Jazz at the Pawnshop 2 (CD/SACD) From the original master, another disc of jazz from this Swedish pub, with its lifelike 3-D sound. Now a classic in its own right. Good Vibes (CD) The third volume of Jazz at the Pawnshop. And just as good! Sketches of Standard (CD) ANALEKTA Violonchello Español (CD) I Musici de Montréal comes to Analekta, with a stunning album of Spanish and Spanish-like pieces for cello and orchestra. Vivace (CD) Classical or rock? Claude Lamothe plays two cellos at the same time in an amazing recording of modern compositions. Pauline Viardot-Garcia (CD) Soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian steps into the role of 19th Century singer and composer Pauline Viardot so convincingly that listening to her is like going back in time. One of the best classical recordings of all time! Romantic Pieces (CD) How does James Ehnes manage to get such a sweet sound from his 60 THE AUDIOPHILE STORE Stradivarius? Czech pieces from Smetana, Dvorak and Janacek. The playing is as glorious as the tone, and the sound is sumptuous. Cantabile (CD) The Duo Similia is made up of striking blonde twins, who play flute and guitar. Familiar airs from Mozart, Fauré, Elgar, Ravel, lots more. Fine listening. Nota del Sol (CD) The Labrie twins are back, with a delightful recording of flute and guitar music by Piazzola, Pujol and Machado. Joyous works. One-man band St-Onge plays dozens of instruments — scores for fourteen films which never existed outside of his imagination. Fun pretext, clever, attractive music that makes you wish you could see the films! MOBILE FIDELITY LPs HI-RES MUSIC (FOR DVD PLAYERS) My Aim Is True Yes, the original Elvis Costello album, back on quality vinyl. Brazilian Soul (24/96 DVD) Guitarists Laurindo Almeida and Charlie Byrd, plus percussion and bass, in an intimate yet explosive recording of samba and bossa nova music. Great! Jazz/Concord (24/96 DVD) It's 1972, and you have tickets to hear Herb Ellis, Joe Pass, Ray Brown and Jake Hanna at the Concord Jazz Festival. You won’t ever forget it. You can be there, with this high resolution disc that goes in your DVD. Fantasia (CD) A third, gorgeous, recording by the twins, on flute and guitar. Fritz Kreisler (CD) Possibly the best recording of Kreisler’s delightful violin music: James Ehnes and his Strad bring a new magic to this fine disc. French Showpieces (CD) Awesome violinist James Ehnes, with the Quebec City Symph. takes on Saint-Saëns, Berlioz, Chausson, Massenet, and more. Handel (CD) Superb soprano Karina Gauvin is joined by the Toronto chamber ensemble Tafelmusik in a series of glowing excerpts from Handel’s “Alcina” and “Agrippina.” The sound is smooth and lifelike, with an acute sense of place. Little Notebook of Anna Magdalena Bach (CD) Over 30 delightful pieces, most by Bach himself. Soprano Karina Gauvin’s voice is mated to Luc Beauséjour’s harpsichord work. The sound is deep, detailed and warm, truly of audiophile quality. Rhythm Willie (24/96 DVD) Guitarists Herb Ellis and Freddie Green, with bassist Ray Brown and others. This is an uncompressed 24 bit 96 kHz disc that can be played on any DVD player. Awesome! Trio (24/96 DVD) Pianist Monty Alexander with Herb Ellis and Ray Brown. “Makes CD sound seem as if it’s coming through a drinking straw.” Playable on any DVD player, uncompressed. Seven Come Eleven (24/96 DVD) Herb Ellis and Ray Brown again, but this time with guitarist Joe Pass (he and Ellis alternate playing lead and rhythm), and a third guitarist, Jake Hanna. This is a live recording from the 1974 Concord Jazz Festival. Santana This is the one with the lion on the cover, remastered from the original sereo master, pressed on 180-gram vinyl. Whites Off Earth Now The 1986 album by the Cowboy Junkies, recorded on two-track with the legendary Calrec microphone and its 3D sound. Don’t Cry Now Linda Ronstadt’s 2008 LP, with I Can Almost See It, Desperado, etc.. Simple Dreams Linda Ronstadt from much longer ago, 1977: It’s So Easy, Carmelita, I Never Will Marry, etc. Prisoner in Disguise Linda Ronstadt from 1975: Love is a Rose, Tracks of My Tears, I Will Always Love You, and more.. Frank Sinatra Sings for Only the Lonely No one ever did the late-night blues better than Old Blue Eyes. Check out the songs: Willow Weep For Me, Blues in the Night, Ebb Tide… Sinatra and Strings With Don Costa’s lush orchestra, Sinatra sings Night and Day, Misty, Stardust, All Or Nothing At All, and Yesterdays. Oh, and lots more. Nice and Easy Sinatra sings love ballads on this famous recording: How Deep is the Ocean, Fools Rush In, Try a Little Tenderness, and Dream.. Vivaldi: Motets for Soprano (CD) The wonderful soprano Karina Gauvin tackles the gorgeous but very difficult vocal music of Vivaldi: two motets and a psalm. Soular Energy (24-96 DVD/ 24-192 DVD-Audio) Perhaps the world’s greatest bassist, the late Ray Brown, playing with pianist Gene Harris, whom Brown called one of the greats. The proof is right on this 24/96 recording, made from the analog master. Side 2 has a 24/192 DVD-A version. AUDIOQUEST KLAVIER La Fille Mal Gardée (XRCD) A fine ballet with the Royal Ballet Company orchestra, from the original 1962 Decca recording. Exceptional Sonatas for Flute and Harp These same great artists with sonatas by Krumpholz and Damase, as well as Spohr and Glinka. Oh yes, and a spectacular solo harp version of Ibert’s hilarious Entr’acte . Film Spectacular II (XRCD) The orchestra of Stanley Black plays some of the greatest film music of bygone years. From the original Decca Phase 4 tape. Mississipi Magic (CD/SACD) The legendary Blues, Gospel, rock and world beat singer and musician Terry Evans, in an energetic recording we loved. Come to Find (CD) The first by Bluesman Doug McLeod, as impressive as the second, and no Blues fan should resist it. You Can’t Take My Blues (CD) Singer/songwriter Doug MacLeod and colleagues present one of the most satisfying Blues records ever made. Unmarked Road (SACD) The third disc from the great Blues singer and guitarist Doug McLeod is every bit as good as the first two. Obseción (CD) The Trio Amadé plays Piazzola, Berstein, Copland, and Emilion Cólon…who is the trio cellist. The Colón and Piazzola is definitely worth the price of admission. Lifelike sound. Hemispheres (CD) The North Texas Wind Symphony with new music by contemporary composers who know how to thrill. Some of the best wind band sound available. Bluesquest sampler (CD) SILENCE Styles (CD) Is this ever a surprising disc! Violinist Marc Bélanger worked up these string études for his music students, but they actually deserve to be put out on a gold audiophile disc! The more strings he adds, the better it gets. Fable (CD) Easygoing modern jazz by Rémi Bolduc and his quartet, on this gold disc. Some exceptional guitar and bass solos. Musique Guy St-Onge (CD) Norman Dello Joio (CD) This contemporary composer delights in the tactile sound of the wind band, and the Keystone Wind Ensemble does his music justice. So does the sound, of astonishing quality! PURE PLEASURE LPs Duke Ellington 70th Birthday Concert (LP) A double 180-gram LP set, recorded live in England Includes Take the ‘A’ Train, Satin Doll, Perdido, many others. After Midnight (LP) A mono double-album of Nat King Cole’s greatest performances, with his own trio. Includes Sometimes I’m Happy, Caravan, It’s Only a Paper Moon, Route 66, You Can Depend on Me. A great classic, available on premium vinyl once more. www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html FIRST/LAST IMPRESSIONS Mozart: Sinfonia Concertante (XRCD) Igor and David Oistrakh with the Moscow Philharmonic, in a glorious 1963 recording, from the original master tape. Artistry of Linda Rosenthal (HDCD) The great violinist Rosenthal plays favorites: Hora Staccato, Perpetuum Mobile, Debussy’s Beau Soir, etc. Suite Española (XRCD) The Albéniz suite, gorgeously orchestrated by Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, who conducts the New Philharmonia. Beautifully remastered from the original 1963 tape. Audiophile Reference IV (SACD) A stunning sampler, with recognizable audiophile selections you have never heard sound this good! Songs My Dad Taught Me (HDCD) Jazz pianist Jeremy Monteiro and three other musicians, with a retro collection of unforgettable tunes. Café Blue (HDCD) Gold HDCD version of jazz singer Patricia Barber’s 1994 classic, an audiophile underground favorite. THE AUDIOPHILE STORE 61 Neil Diamond: Serenade (CD) Just eight songs on this European CBS disc, but what songs! I’ve Been This Way Before, Lady Magdalene, Reggae Strut, The Gift of Song, and more. Glowing sound too. Ballade Pianist Jackson Berkey plays Debussy, Rachmaninoff and Satie on a Baldwin SD-10 grand. We Get Requests (CD) An amazing 1964 Verve disc of Oscar Peterson with bassist Ray Brown. FIM has brought it back on a silver CD that appears to be XRCD in all but name. MISCELLANEOUS Christmas (LP) The original Fresh Aire Christmas album from Mannheim Steamroller, and one of the best ever made. Windsock Some of the best New Age orchestral music on an audiophile label, this suite was written and arranged by Rick Swanson American Gramophone Sampler III Once a staple of audio shows, these tracks from Mannheim Steamroller[s Fresh Aire series are a prime example of Chip Davis’s awsome “Baroque’n’Roll.” Sources (CD) A wonderful recording by Bïa (pronounced Bee-yah). She’s Brazilian, lives in France, recorded this terrific album (in 5 languages!) in Montreal. Just her warm voice and guitar, plus stunning percussion. All We Need to Know Jazz singer Margie Gibson’s first album since Say It With Music, on Sheffield. No one sings the way she does! (NOW OUT OF STOCK) La mémoire du vent (CD) The original recording by Bïa, in French, Portuguese and English. If you love her second one, don’t hesitate. Urban Surrender Ric Swanson again, with a fascinating suite for orchestra, and sometimes choral voices. Classica d’Oro (CD) Some of the classical world’s most important heritage, on 50 audiophile-quality gold CDs, at just over $2 per CD. Fine artists from Germany, Austria, the UK, Eastern Europe. Listen to excerpts on line. Daydreams Music for finding your inner self, with guitarist Ron Cooley, and a good-sized little band. The title says it, though. Blues for the Saxophone Club (HDCD) Swing jazz pianist Jeremy Monteiro, with guest artists, including saxophonist Ernie Watts. The HDCD sound is explosive! Through the Lens The Checkfield group (John Archer and Ron Satterfield) in a classic New Age mix of acoustic and synth music. My Foolish Heart (CD) A collection of live and studio pieces by Monteiro and other musicians, notably saxophonist Ernie Watts. Carmin (CD) The third by Bïa. Different this time, with more money for production, but it has been spent wisely. Superb songs, gloriously sung in Portuguese, French and the ancient Aymara language. Coeur vagabond (CD) Bïa sings French songs in Portuguese, Brazilian songs in French. A delight, as usual from this astonishing singer. Nocturno (CD) Some are saying that this is Bïa’s best and most touching album since Sources. See if you agree. You won’t be disappointed. RED INDICATES RECORDINGS USED IN UHF EQUIPMENT REVIEWS Payment by VISA or MasterCard, cheque or money order (in Canada). All merchandise is guaranteed unless explicitly sold “as is.” Certain items (the Super Antenna, the EAC line filter, and most standard-length cables) may be returned within 21 days less shipping cost. Other items may be subject to a restocking charge. Defective recordings will be exchanged for new copies. HERE’S HOW TO CALCULATE YOUR SHIPPING COST: IN CANADA: up to $30, $2.10, up to $60, $3.00, above $70 not counting taxes, free. In Canada shipping costs are taxable. TO THE USA: up to $30, $3.00, up to $60,$4.20, above $60, 5%. TO OTHER COUNTRIES: up to $30, $5.40. Up to $60, $9.00. Above $60, 10%. Magazines, books and taxes are not counted toward the total. BRAND MODEL DESCRIPTION PRICE EACH QUANTITY TOTAL PRICE TOTAL COST OF ACCESSORIES ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY MAGAZINE COST OF RECORDS ON OTHER SIDE OF THE PAGE 270 rue Victoria, LONGUEUIL, Québec, Canada J4H 2J6 Tel.: (450) 651-5720 FAX: (450) 651-3383 Internet: www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html E-mail: uhfmail@uhfmag.com SHIPPING COST (SEE ABOVE) TOTAL COST BEFORE TAXES 13% HST (NB, NS, NF, ON, PEI) 5% GST (rest of Canada)____________________9.97% TVQ (Québec only)____________TOTAL______________ On the other side of this page, circle the number of each of the records you need. On the coupon above, add in the list of accessories, calculate the total, and add shipping and all applicable taxes. All prices are in Canadian dollars. Include a cheque or money order (Canada or US only), or include your credit card number (VISA or MasterCard), expiry date and signature. Note that prices may fluctuate, and the current price always applies. We are not responsible for typographical errors. If a price drops after we go to press (yes, it does happen), you will be credited for any overpayment. � VISA � MasterCard � Cheque or money order CARD NUMBER________________________________EXP. DATE_____________SIGNATURE________________________________________ NAME______________________________________ADDRESS_______________________________________________APT._____________ CITY_________________________________PROV./STATE___________________COUNTRY__________________POST. CODE_____________ www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html 62 THE AUDIOPHILE STORE VINYL ALBUMS 30th Anniv. Celebration After Midnight (2 LP) American Gramaphone III Autumn Shuffle Ballade Blazing Redheads Cantate Domino Christmas Daydreams Ellington 70th B’day (2 LP) Fennell Favorites Frank Sinatra: Only the Lonely Good Stuff (2 LP) Heart like a Wheel Jazz at the Pawnshop (2-LP) Jazz Trio Just Like Love Louis Armstrong Plays Handy My Aim is True Nice and Easy Now the Green Blade Riseth One Flight Up Painting Signs Prisoner in Disguise Rainbow People Santana Showcase Simple Dreams Sinatra & Strings Spirit and the Blues (2 LP) Takin’ Off Test Record No.4 Through the Lens Trittico Urban Surrender Vinyl Essentials (test) Whites Off Earth Now Windsock Spirit & the Blues (SACD) CD19411 24.50 LP22060 35.00 Swingcerely Yours CD22081 24.50 W782 48.00 Tchaikovsky: Symph. #6 (SACD) 5186 107 29.95 AG366 20.00 Test CD 4 (SACD) CD19420 24.50 LP22042 27.95 Test Records 1-2-3 CD19520 24.50 AG37112.00 Tiny Island (SACD) CD19824 24.50 RR-26 25.00 Trio (Audio DVD) HRM2008 24.95 PROP7762 38.95 Tutti (SACD) RR-906SACD 24.00 LPAG198415.00 Unique Classical Guitar (SACD).CD22062 24.50 AG36812.00 Unmarked Road (SACD) AQ1046SACD 29.95 60001 48.00 Whose Truth, Whose Lies? AQ1054SACD 29.95 RR-43 25.00 1-326 34.75 RED BOOK COMPACT DISCS LP19603 47.95 20th Anniversary Celebration CD19692 21.00 CLP-7049 26.00 30th Anniversary Sampler RR-908 16.95 7778-79 65.00 Alleluía AN 2 8810 21.00 LP8401 22.95 An American Requiem RR-97CD 16.95 LP20002 27.95 Antiphone Blues 7744CD 21.95 CL591 48.00 Artistry of Linda Rosenthal FIM022VD 27.95 1-329 34.75 Bach Sonatas, violin & harpsi. AN 2 9829 21.00 1-317 34.75 Bach Suites, Airs & Dances FL 2 3133 21.00 PROP9093 38.95 Beachcomber RR-62CD16.95 BLP-4176 26.00 Best of Chesky & Test, vol.3 JD111 21.95 PPAN004 48.00 Beethoven Symph. 5 & 6 AN 2 9891 21.00 1-306 34.75 Blues for the Saxophone Club 26-1084-78-2 21.95 LP7723 22.95 Bluesquest AQCD105221.95 1-30334.75 Bossa Nova JD129 21.95 LP2100022.95 Bruckner: Symph. No.9 RR-81CD 16.95 1-321 34.75 Café Blue 21810 21.95 1-313 34.75 Café Blue (HDCD gold) CD 010 39.95 LP19401 47.95 Cantabile AN 2 9810 21.00 CLP-7050 26.00 Cantate Domino 7762CD 21.95 OPLP9200 27.95 Carmin ADCD1016321.00 AG788 12.00 Classica d’Oro (50 gold CDs) GCM-50 119.95 RR-5232.00 Come to Find AQCD1027 21.95 AG600 12.00 Come Love CD19703 21.95 LP003 48.95 Companion 2296321.00 1-292 1-292 Coeur vagabond ADCD10191 21.00 AG68712.00 Concertos for Double Bass OPCD8502 21.95 Copland Symphony No.3 RR-93CD 16.95 HIGH-RESOLUTION MEDIA (SACD, DVD, ETC.) Drum/Track Record 10081 21.00 Across the Bridge of Hope CD22012 24.50 Ein Heldenleben RR-83CD 16.95 Antiphone Blues (SACD) 7744SACD 37.95 Fable SLC9603-222.00 Audiophile Reference IV SACD 029 40.00 Fantasia AN 2 9819 21.00 Autumn Shuffle (SACD) CD22042 24.50 Felix Hell RR-101CD 16.95 Beethoven/Mendelssohn 5186 102 29.95 Film Spectacular II XR24 070 35.00 Beyond (SACD) CD22072 24.50 French Showpieces FL 2 3151 21.00 Brazilian Soul (DVD) HRM2009 24.95 Fritz Kreisler FL 2 3159 21.00 Cantate Domino (SACD) PSACD7762 29.95 From the Age of Swing RR-59CD 16.95 Conc. for Double Bass (SACD) CD8522 24.50 Garden of Dreams RR-108 16.95 Good Stuff (SACD) CD19623 24.50 Gitans Y22503524.95 Jazz at the Pawnshop (3-SACD)PRSACD7879 90.00 Good Stuff CD19603 21.95 Jazz at the Pawnshop 2 (SACD)PRSACD7079 37.95 Good Vibes PRCD9058 21.95 Jazz/Concord (DVD) HRM2006 24.95 Growing up in Hollywood Town LIM XR 001 38.95 Just Like Love (SACD) CD21002 24.50 Handel FL 2 3137 21.00 Mississipi Magic (SACD) AQSACD1057 24.95 Harry Belafonte 295-037 19.95 Musica Sacra (SACD) CD19516 24.50 Harry James & His Big Band 10057-2-G 24.00 Now the Green Blade Riseth PRSACD9093 29.95 Hemispheres K1113721.00 Organ Treasures (SACD) CD22031 24.50 Infernal Violins AN 2 8718 21.00 Rhythm Willie (Audio DVD) HRM2010 24.95 It’s Right Here For You CD19404 21.95 Seven Come Eleven (DVD) HRM2005 24.95 I’ve Got the Music in Me 10076 21.00 Showcase (SACD) CD21000 24.50 Jazz at the Pawnshop PRCD-7778 21.95 Showcase 2005 (SACD) CD22050 24.50 Jazz at the Pawnshop 2 PRCD9044 21.95 Soular Energy (DVD/DVD-A) HRM2011 24.95 Jazz Hat RR-114 16.95 www.uhfmag.com/AudiophileStore.html Jazz/Vol.1 JD3719.95 Keep on Movin’ AQCD1031 19.95 Kodo 12222-221.00 La Fille Mal Gardée XR24 013 38.95 La mémoire du vent ADCD10144 21.00 Les matins habitables GSIC-895 21.00 Levande OPCD791719.95 Leyrac chante Nelligan AN 2 8815 21.00 Liszt-Laplante FL 2 3030 21.00 Little Notebook of Anna M. BachFL 2 3064 21.00 Masters of Flute & Harp KCD11019 21.00 Medinah Sessions RR-2102 16.95 Mendelssohn: 2 Violin Conc. FL 2 3098 21.00 Mozart Complete Piano Trios AN 2 9827-8 27.50 Mozart: Sinfonia Concertante XR24 069 38.95 Mozart: Soprano Arias FL 2 3131 21.00 Musica Sacra CD19506 19.95 Musique Guy St-Onge SLC9700-2 22.00 Musiques d’Europe centrale 88001 24.95 My Foolish Heart 26-1084-92-2 21.95 Neil Diamond: Serenade 465012-2 16.95 Nocturno ADCD1022721.00 Nojima Plays Liszt RR-25CD 16.95 Nojima Plays Ravel RR-35CD 16.95 Non-Stop to Brazil JD29 19.95 Norman Dello Joio K11138 21.00 Nota del Sol AN 2 9817 21.00 Now the Green Blade Riseth PRCD9093 21.95 Obseción K1113421.95 Opera for Two FL 2 3076 21.00 Organ Odyssey RR-113 16.95 Pauline Viardot-Garcia AN 2 9903 21.00 Pomp&Pipes RR-58CD16.95 Ports of Call RR-80CD 16.95 Rio After Dark JD28 19.95 Romantic Pieces FL 2 3191 21.00 Sans Domicile Fixe 19012-2 24.95 Say It With Music CD-36 21.00 Serenade RR-11016.95 Sketches of Standard PRCD 9036 19.95 Songs My Dad Taught Me FIM0009 27.95 Sources ADCD1013221.00 Spirit and the Blues CD19401 19.95 Styles SLC9604-222.00 Suite Española XR24 068 38.95 Swing is Here RR-72CD 16.95 Swingcerely Yours CD2208 24.95 Telemann Sonatas for 2 Violins FL 2 3085 21.00 Test CD 5 CD20000 21.95 The King James Version 10068-2-F 21.00 Tower of Power 10074 21.00 Trittico RR-52CD16.95 Tutti (HDCD) RR-906CD 16.95 Ultimate Demonstration Disc UD95 20.00 Villa-Lobos FL 2 3051 21.00 Violonchelo Español AN 2 9897 21.00 Vivace AN 2 9808 21.00 Vivaldi: Motets for Soprano FL 2 3099 21.00 Vivaldi: Per Archi FL 2 3128 21.00 We Get Requests K2HD 032 38,95 World Keys RR-106 16.95 Yerba Buena Bounce RR-109 16.95 You Can’t Take My Blues AQCD1041 21.95 Violin hand-built by Albert Courchesne, lent to UHF, and photographed by Albert Simon Software iceman. The iceman impressed me most, with his hooklike tongs that seemed an extension of his arm, allowing him to lift great blocks with astonishing ease. I would think of those characters in pirate stories, with hooks for hands. Among these passersby was my favorite: the fiddler. Dressed in a dark suit with a glistening white starched collar and a black tie, he wore dark glasses and a hat, which he would place on the ground when he was ready to play, revealing his slick black hair. A spiritual ancestor of today’s subway musicians, he would play passionately a few classical pieces for a tiny audience, and with luck he would find a few coins in his hat. Despite my tender age, I thought his eyes reflected all the sadness of the world. Was he a talented musician without a job? I recall him with emotion as I write, thinking he had never had the chance to play with a great orchestra as he might have deserved. When I look back on my childhood, two musical instruments play a large role: the piano and the violin. The latter had belonged to one of my uncles, and it awaited the opportunity to recover its voice. As it rested atop our mahogany piano, what dreams it evoked in me! The violin is surely the most expressive of all the bowed instruments, capable of filling you with nostalgia, making your feet dance, producing sounds that alternate between plaintive and joyous. The Magic of the Violin T he alleyways of the world’s g reat cit ies have always been the playground of their youngest citizens. Outdoor stairways soaring high above their heads, the mysterious sheds, back gardens of unplanted sod are the theatres of their innocent games and playacting. The alleyways of my own childhood were special. There I would find farmers hawking their wares at the top of their lungs, along with the ragman and the by Reine Lessard The beginning Must we suppose that the violin is the product of countless experiments across the centuries? Can we say that its genealogy is at once diffused and diverse? Though many music historians cite its long development, is that not like saying that the agora of ancient Athens was the precursor of the Internet? So what? Does the violin have many cousins, as some researchers claim? Or did it appear fully-formed, by spontaneous generation? The violin, it must be said, is at once archaic and contemporary. Four and a half centuries’ worth of musicians ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 63 aces, with their grandiose architecture and opulent interiors, reflect the financial ease created by the newborn phenomenon of international commerce. In all things there is a flamboyance reflecting the wealth resulting from seemingly endless expansion. The rich — royalty, nobility and high clergy — show their wealth by filling their palaces with the most sumptuous furnishings and decor. In Italy, inspired by Antiquity, the arts are borne to a level unequalled in human Is it really the same instrument? history by such as Michelangelo, at once GET THE COMPLETE VERSION! All musical instruments throughout painter, sculptor, You’ll have noticed that this free architect and poet, history have undergone major and often Raffaelo Sanzio, known as Raphael, version of UHF Magazine surprising transformations. might painter and Leonardo da is notYou quite complete. Butand youarchitect, can well ponder what the medieval Vinci, painter, architect, sculptor, invengettrumpet the complete version has in common with the much more torfor and$4. author. from Maggie powerful modern trumpet, Click whosehere, valvesand away Butwe while go!most of the arts take their allow it to change key. Or what a late 18th cue from ancient Greece and Rome, century piano, whose sound board would music is an exception. Only in literary not have survived Beethoven’s energetic references can we find any hint of what playing, has in common with the piano- music was like 20 centuries ago. We can forte that followed it, to say nothing of suppose that the ancients used some the modern piano? What of the guitar? form of musical notation, but if it existed And what of percussion, which changed it has been lost. Thus music must be radically over time? Some instruments reinvented as it is imagined to have been. have vanished completely, such as the Of course, it is fashioned in the spirit recorder, replaced by the f lute, the of the new times: flamboyant. There is clarinet, the bassoon and a growing a search for new sounds. With powerwoodwind family, its role relegated to ful brass added to the orchestra, string period music. instruments also needed a louder and The violin alone is nearly unchanged. brighter sound, lest they be drowned out. The violins of Amati, Guarneri and In southern Europe, between the Stradivari are the same instruments Adriatic and the Mediterranean, lies found in modern symphony orchestras, Italy. In the north of Italy, at the foot of having barely evolved. the Alps, is Lombardy. In Lombardy are But where did it come from, this the cities of Cremona, Milan and Venice. prodigious instrument that alone can In one of those cities, there lives a certain rival the female voice, to which it is man, perhaps a musician, or possibly often compared, able to express the most an engineer, though that is but a guess. varied emotions? How to explain that, What we know for sure is that he is a after its invention, instrument makers luthier of genius. One day, this luthier seemed so satisfied with their work that invents and makes the first violin. they sought neither to improve it nor to If his name is unknown, so is the year replace it, content merely to imitate it? of his invention, though it is thought to Was it so very perfect? have been around 1520. The chronicles I believe that the answer is yes, that of the time have left us not a phrase, not the violin was, one day, invented in its a word, to mark such a seminal event. final and perfect form, as though noth- Yet we do know that the violin appeared ing could ever be added. in its final form, to be perfected over two centuries by such men as Amati, Italy, forever Italy Guarneri and Stradivari. Let us look back to the spirit of In Brescia, around the middle of renewal that washed over the end of the 16th century, lives a luthier named the 15th century on the eve of the pre- Gasparo da Saló, who, with his student Baroque period. The Renaissance pal- Giovanni Paolo Maggini, attempts to Feedback Software and music lovers have contemplated it, adored it, made it sing, drawn from it dances, laughter, sobs, reverie. Four and a half centuries’ worth of experts have failed to elucidate the mystery surrounding its unknown inventor, its date of birth, its creation in its nearly final form. I shall reluctantly turn to conjecture. I shall however stay with the basics: the violin and its rapid rise. 64 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine transform the viol into a sort of rudimentary violin. The viol has six metal strings and two sound holes whose two ends curve in the same direction. Its evocative sound has little power. Da Saló, born in 1540, creates a bowed string instrument that looks not unlike the violin we know. It will be called the viola da braccio (literally a viol braced on the arm), but it is not yet a violin. At about the same time in Cremona, Andrea Amati — 20 years older than de Saló — founds a school for luthiers and builds instruments with four strings, instruments we would recognize as violins. In fact, the oldest surviving violin was built in Cremona by Amati himself. That can lead us to believe that he came into possession of the secrets of this mysterious genius of Lombardy. Perhaps he somehow found plans for the instrument, or even had the chance to hold in his hands the precious object he would later reproduce. But he himself is not the inventor of the violin, and that has been proved beyond doubt. We can say, however, that he was the first famous luthier of Cremona. With the gift of an extraordinary acoustical sense, he worked diligently to find the right balance between the instrument’s acoustical and aesthetic qualities. He perfected his violins by seeking out the right woods, and by importing from the Orient, by way of requires the warmth of the sun to set the lacquers, and that is is why they are behind on their deliveries. The violin ordered was probably made by one of The violin’s rapid rise The violin has a stupefyingly broad Amati’s two sons, both master luthiers. range of expression, It can produce a They develop a style that will remain tone that is at once sustained and varied, until Stradivari later makes changes that as only the human voice could previously will lead to the modern violin. A member of the illustrious Amati do, and its sound is remarkably powerful. At its beginnings, its loud and strident dynasty, A ndrea’s grandson Nicoló sound offended the influential, which is (1596-1684), distinguishes himself by to say the nobility and the high clergy, the meticulous care he brings to his who found it vulgar. But impoverished violins, whose finish and sound are of musicians playing for local festivities great beauty. Among his many students quickly saw its advantages and were are A ntonio Stradivari and A ndrea eager to acquire the new and inexpensive Guarneri — the second will found his instrument. Beating time with their feet, own dynasty, ending with Bartolomeo they played on public squares and in tav- Giuseppe (1687-1745) and Giuseppe del erns, providing a magnificent alternative Gesù. Nicoló will die in his 50’s, leaving behind some 250 violins, of which some How Maggie to the poor viol, which struggled to make Works beenhave survived. itself heard out of doors. UHF is, and has 150 The technical, acoustical forand many aesyears, Del Gesù, though he will follow the of his master, experiments with thetic challenges of a print the new, magazine. largerButexample we know multiple variations in the dimensions, orchestras and the increasingly more and vast more con-audiophiles and other elements. Over cert halls required louder want instruments. to read it onarchitecture their time he makes the sound board less Pressing the violin into computer service became or iPad.a And they’re convex necessity, and that necessity willing finally to save won money too.and lengthens the sound holes, that his violins play louder. The extra over the critics. Thus Click the violin here,began and let so Maggie explain how tobyget power the fullof del Gesù’s Guarneris charms its meteoric rise which — stimulated a number of great violinists, including for $4. opera — accelerated toward version an apogee Though Paganini owns more And we mean PDF no instrument had ever reached in so a Paganini. than one Stradivarius, he has a particular versionofwithout rights short a time. This invention the 16thdigitl century took but a few management decades to you attain can fondness transfer tofor the Guarneris — undera status that is unmatched — the device I would of say your standable choice. considering the power of his unmatchable — rising from mere folk playing — and he owns the most famous instrument to first instrument of the of them, known as El Canon. (We should note that a contemporary violinist, the orchestra. Evidence? In all accounts of the age, late Yehudi Menuhin, also preferred a it is said that in 1560 Charles X, the Guarneri for playing certain works. A king of France, commissioned Amati Guarneri from 1729 is shown on this to make him 38 bowed instruments, page.) That said, the greatest luthier of them including six violas, eight cellos and 24 violins. Such was the reputation this all — greater than Nicoló Amati, greater instrument of Cremona enjoyed even than Guarneri del Gesù — eclipsing all in faraway France, for Cremona was others, is Antonio Stradivari (1644?the world centre of the luthier’s art, its 1737). He builds not only violins but violins selling for twice the price of those also cellos and violas. His instruments from Brescia, and that would continue. outshine all others in the perfection of their form, the amplitude of their sound, Why? This anecdote says it all. Galileo (1564-1642), the famous and the incomparable varnish used to astronomer, through the good offices of protect them from the ravages of the a monk, orders a violin for his nephew years. No wonder musicians and collecbut becomes worried as time passes tors today are willing to bid awesome with no sign of the instrument. In an sums to obtain a Stradivarius. The true artisans of modern violinexchange of letters, one of the monks explains to his impatient client that the making have taken this immortal megaperfection of an instrument of Cremona star as their model. Venice, the ingredients to make his lacquers. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 65 Software Before starting his studies with Nicoló Amati, Stradivari is already an accomplished sculptor, despite his youth. In Cremona, luthiers and artists live in the same district. Fascinated by the violin, he knocks at his neighbor’s door one day. Nicoló quickly sees his young student’s immense potential, with skills far above those of his other apprentices. In the first years of his apprenticeship, Stradivari is influenced by his illustrious master and makes only Amati models, violins that are known today as “Amatized” Stradivaris. No doubt because of the excellence of his work, he has labels printed bearing the inscription Alumnus Nicolai Amati. After his teacher’s anyone else: some 1200 violins, as well as altos and cellos. Nearly 500 of these instruments have survived, though most have been modified to conform to modern standards. Inevitable though those changes were. we can only regret that we will never hear the sound of the philes: two designers can use the original instruments. same loudspeaker configurations or Two of Stradivari’s sons, apprentices death in 1684, Stradivari the same amplifier circuits and obtain in their father’s workshop, died not long lightly modifies the dimensions of the very different results. In the same way, a after him. The youngest, little interested violin, making the sound-board even master luthier may have all the required in violin-making, sold the instruments less convex, accentuating the curve of talents, have access to the finest woods, and remaining violin parts to a collector the waist, and slightly straightening find the ideal varnish, and imitate per- who was one of the master’s admirers. the sound holes. He works tirelessly to fectly the proportions of the Stradivarius Some of his tools and gauges are today improve his creations, and through his violin, but what he makes will not have in the Cremona Museum. But the master knowledge of chemistry he pays great the same perfection. Violin-making is left few clues to his techniques, aside attention to the varnishes with which science, yes, but it is first of all art. And from some sketches of violins with inlaid he finishes his instruments. genius. wood, which he had built occasionally. His reputation extends beyond the In the 19th century, a collector-dealer enters our story, buying a considerable borders of his country, bringing him Where are they now? orders from all over, for which he is Some of these antique violins are in number of violins, some already famous. of course well paid. He is prolific until museums. That’s the case of del Gesù’s His name is Luigi Tarisio and he lives 1698, when his wife dies, leaving him El Canon, at the Palazzo Municipale of in Milan. He is a carpenter by trade, and his with six children. Dejected by the loss Genoa. The School of Violin and Viola of the woman he loves, he stops making Makers also keeps a number of antique work takes him into homes across Italy. violins and sells his house. instruments in the Palazzo dell’Arte, as Though not himself a violinist, he has One day, however, he meets a woman do a number of cultural institutions in boundless passion for the instrument. 20 years his junior, and finds both love England and elsewhere in the world. The Each time he sees a violin in a home, he and renewed creative ardor. She will Lady Blunt, the Stradivarius shown on purchases it, often for a trifling sum. He bear him five children, and he will give this page, was sold for nearly £10 million becomes one of the top experts on the himself to his art with renewed passion. for Japanese earthquake relief. violin and quickly builds up a phenomWe are now in 1700. A hundred and The most famous and most contro- enal collection. Among these jewels of fifty years and much water have flowed versial of all the violins of the Golden the art of Cremona is a 1716 Stradivarius under the bridge since the time of Age is The Messiah. Stradivari had never he purchased from its owner, the Count Andrea Amati. Ever in quest of perfec-Yes,sold we it getand asked, constantly, it had never been played. Cosio de Salabue. Happy though Tarisio is amid his tion, Stradivari regards each instrument what we will be 1904 reviewing in ourkept next issue. Since it has been like a sacred know reviews are essential. as a new opportunity to improve And his we relic in the illustrious Hill Collection at treasures, one day he decides to sell equipment reviews are nothing if not plentiful.It some of them. Gathering them in a art. Reducing the convexityBut a few mil- the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. Readers long toldthe us that what makes UHF in large burlap sack, he walks from Milan limetres, or refining the shape of thehavehas spent intervening centuries to and them are the other articles. sound holes, he gives each ofparticularly his violins valuable museums private collections, and it to Paris, arriving dusty and filthy. Not taking the time to freshen up, he walks Articles about ideas,remains about the nuts andcondition. bolts of the technology, a unique timbre and ever greater visual in pristine about and film, beauty. His art is at its peak, and betweenand also Why didmusic Stradivari refuse to sell into a luthier’s workshop and opens his are the now and his death in 1737 he will sign his which this violin or very allowreasons it to be played? That bag. The luthier watches him, agape, wondering how this filthy character systems to exist. greatest creations. It is his goldenfor age.our lovingly-created remains an enigma. Not that stop publishing reviews. Violin-making in Cremona takeswe thewill ever I can’t resist thehardware temptation of can have come into possession of such world by storm, continuing its extraor- mentioning the famous Red Diamond, treasures. Judging the book by its cover, dinary development until the death of a Stradivarius violin that may have he offers a nominal sum for the violins, Stradivari at the age of 93. His instru- inspired François Girard, the young and Tarisio naively accepts. “I have several more like these at ments, so perfect in their own time, are director of The Red Violin, a hit with still suited to modern music. moviegoers and music lovers alike. I home,” he tells the buyer before leaving. Montreal luthier Jules Saint-Michel can’t tell you which private collector On the way home the truth hits him: he told me some years ago that no one had acquired it after it had passed through didn’t get a fair price for his instruments ever bested Stradivari. A luthier might the hands of several illustrious virtuosos, because he looked so pitiful. He decides do less well, or try to do as well, but but I know that Stradivari built it in 1732. to return to Paris, this time dressed to doing better is impossible. Throughout his long life, Stradivari the nines. A year later we find our man in Paris The idea will be familiar to audio- built more string instruments than Software Feedback NOT JUST HARDWARE REVIEWS! 66 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine WHY A FREE ISSUE sound of a violin that was so sweet and fine that it was heart-rending. We looked at each other. Impossible! They’ve managed to make this good a recording, with a sound so perfect even in the high notes? We peeked through the doorway and saw…Angèle Dubeau with her Strad! You may say that without the talent of the artist even a Stradivarius will sound banal. No doubt, but in the hands of a master it is the quintessence of the art. Many of the great instruments of the Golden Age are still around, played by great violinists who either own them or have them on loan. Certain philanthropic collectors do lend out their instruments, happy to hear them singing once more in the hands of a master. The late violinist and collector Isaac Stern regularly lent out his classic instruments to talented but impoverished violin students. That is admirable, though it no doubt leaves the young violinist in perpetual insecurity, never knowing when the instrument that is “an extension of his being” may be taken from him. The anatomy of the violin The modern family of bowed instruments is composed of the violin, the viola, the cello and the double bass. Similarly-shaped, the four instruments are built in the same way, differing only in size and of course tonal range. Don’t be fooled by the apparent simplicity of the violin. This tiny and lightweight instrument contains over 70 different parts, shaped and glued together by hand. And don’t be fooled by the similarity in appearance to that ancient instrument, the viol, whose sound is familiar to those who have seen the film Tous les matins du monde. Seen from the front the two instruments do look similar, but then you notice the differences. The most obvious difference is that the viol has six strings and the violin only four. Unlike the violin, the viol has frets, like a guitar. The viol’s sound box is larger, and though its sound is rich, it doesn’t carry, whereas the violin’s sound is both clear and powerful. The viol’s body consists of a convex sound board mounted onto a flat and rigid box to make a simple resonant ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 67 Software Feedback once more, where he becomes friends violins that are the most eagerly sought with a man named Vuillaume, certainly after for their sound and their beauty, but the greatest French luthier of his day. also because they are so well preserved. Now and then, Tarisio brings him That last point greatly influences the instruments, never failing to add, “I have price. at home one of Stradivari’s most famous Closer to home, the Canadian vioviolins. It belonged to the Count Cosio linist Angèle Dubeau has an authentic de Salabue. It was built in 1716, and it Stradivarius of 1732 that, some years has never even been played.” Intrigued back, was at the centre of a hotlyand eager, Vuillaume and other luthiers contested legal battle from which she hope to see, at last, the mysterious violin. emerged victorious. She had purchased One day Vuillaume’s son-in-law, it from another fine violinist, Arthur a famous virtuoso, tells Tarisio: “You Leblanc, when she obtained her masters know, your violin is like the Messiah. in music at the age of 15. Her precious He is always prophesied, but we never instrument, “Arthur,” had undergone see Him arrive.” minor alterations long before she bought Time passes, and one day Vuillaume it: its neck was lengthened, and its sound hears of the death of Luigi Tarisio. board reinforced to improve resistance We remember when a number of competitors Hastily gathering all the money he can. to increased string would tension. Nearly all putto onMilan. line only only the image and the table he hies himself Tarisio had cover antique instruments haveof been similarly lived by himself in a room in which contents. he modified. allowed no We visitors. would It was tell them there that you he don’t go fishing without bait.detractors Dubeau replies to some died, alone, aSure, violinwe clutched live from to his what chest. you who spend through ourreputations site and of certain claim that the th That violinthe is The pages Messiah, of our the print name issue.18 But century you could master spendluthiers days are overthat will remain. reading material blown, for free. and she adds her voice to those Vuillaume Wesets think outthat’s to find theTarisio’s only way who we can consider convince the you violins of the of the Golden heirs, and for his entire fortune of 80,000 UHF difference, Age to be supreme: francs — an of why enormous you might sumwant for the to trust us“Awith ll the thetop future solo of violinists your play or home theatre exceptional system. instruments, Stradivaris or time — he buys not onlymusic The Messiah We have readers onstored every continent Guarneris, except either Antarctica. bought or borrowed. but also Tarisio’s other violins, Mostorofeven themindiscovered usthe on opportunity line. to play other any which way, in drawers a I’ve had read a lot of our excellent free material. violins, including a Vuillaume, stable. The collection isThey worth millions And then theyand joined I very us.much enjoyed them, but a even then. Cer t a i n ex per t s cha l lenge t he Stradivarius — I mean an instrument authenticity of The Messiah, claiming built in Stradivari’s mature years — is it is a copy, the real one having been unsurpassed. It has an infinitely large lost. Oh, the fantastic stories told about palette of colors. It is perfect on every the famous violins and violin-making in string. Its low notes are velvet, its high notes are pearls.” Cremona during the Golden Age! She adds: “You know, an ear that is A word about the theft of string instruments, especially those of Cre- trained to recognize different sounds can mona at its peak. How do you fence a tell a Stradivarius from another violin. Stradivarius or a Guarneri? In most If I gather a group of music lovers in a cases, the thieves are found and the room and I play them the same piece instruments returned to their rightful on different violins, they can tell which violin was the Stradivarius. owners. “A violinist’s instrument is an extenEach year, the world’s capitals are the scene of violin auctions, which of course sion of his being. For my part I have attract not only eager musicians but also tamed my violin, and it has tamed me, collectors and speculators. The prices because a violin of such quality requires fetched by the violins of master luthiers special care. It can be capricious. For of the mid-17th century to the death of instance, it’s very sensitive to changes Stradivari have continued to soar. But it in temperature and it is quite fragile.” is the precious violins of the 18th century Some years back, we had dropped that dominate these filled events. Even by her record producer to pick up some if Guarneri del Gesù’ instruments reach discs, and while we waited we heard, exceptional prices, it is the Stradivarius coming from around the corner, the Software Feedback body. The vibrations of the strings are transmitted by the bridge to the sound board, whose own vibrations are accentuated by the resonance of the body. Two gracefully sculpted holes let the sound escape. In the viol they are C-shaped, whereas in the violin they are longer, in the shape of a cursive ƒ. The longer sound holes let t he v ibrat ions t ravel along the grain of the wood. But there are even more basic dif ferences, for the violin is a remarkable acoustical invention. The violin’s body is a hollow box with two resonant faces, not just one. The front face is the sound board, convex in shape and reinforced by a bar. The rear face, also convex, looks nearly identical. Both are thin, t hei r c u r ved shapes helping to resist t he pressure of the bridge and the internal soundpost. The two are joined by the ribs. A thin and rounded wood piece, the bridge, elevates the strings above the surface of the sound board. Because of the near symmetry of the chassis, the acoustical energy transmitted to the sound board by the bridge is then retransmitted to the back by the soundpost, a tiny movable piece that seems of little significance but is in fact essential to the sound (its French name is l’âme, which means “the soul”). The soundpost is a small pine cylinder pressed between the sound board and the back, which the luthier inserts and positions very precisely through a sound hole of the completed violin. The vibration of the two interacting panels sets up a threedimensional sound field. This acoustical phenomenon gives the violin not only its sonic energy, but also the richness and warmth that is at the very heart of its power over the emotions. 68 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine Scroll Tuning pegs Fingerboard Neck Sound board Rib Back Waist Sound hole Purling Tail piece Making a violin requires great skills, including remarkable manual dexterity, solid technical mastery and an authentic passion for the instrument and the art of violin-making. Even in our age of unprecedented technological advances, it is unthinkable to build a quality violin by industrial methods. It requires a cycle of aging of the woods, followed by lacquering. The lacquers must be applied in several coats, each given time to harden before the next is applied. The wood must dry over time, perhaps even a number of years. Strange as it may seem, the first luthiers knew by intuition and by empirical knowledge gleaned through countless experiments what modern acousticians have confirmed scientifically about the design, the mastery of shape, its acoustical aptitudes and the choice of woods. Maple is used for the back, the ribs and the neck, ebony for the fingerboard, the tailpiece and the tuning pegs, and pine for the soundpost, the sound board and its reinforcing bar. The spruce pine originally used came from the Alps of Lombardy, which may explain Cremona’s place at the heart of violinmaking. Pine for modern violins mostly comes from Switzerland and Germany. The violin of the future? I shiver with horror to think that the violin nearly vanished in the very first century of its existence. History speaks of the diseases, the Black Plague and cholera, that deciBridge mated the population of much of Europe between 1630 and 1650. Nicoló Amati was the only survivor of the master luthiers of that time. On his shoulders rested the future of the violin. His premature death would have meant the death of the violin as well, and the entire development of music would have changed. As already noted, the height of the bridge was reduced several times to let the violin to play louder. In the early 19th century, the tuning of the orchestra was raised, with middle A migrating from its traditional frequency of 416 Hz to 440 Hz, requiring a stronger sound board bar and a longer neck to prevent the increased string tension from actually breaking the instrument. More recently, since the War, the tuning has been increased even further to beyond 440 Hz, in order to make the orchestral sound “brighter.” That, I believe, shows a lack of respect for the composers and also poses a danger for the human voice and the instruments of the orchestra. Union agreements signed by the musicians of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra — and reportedly other orchestras as well — contain a clause limiting middle A to a maximum of 442 Hz, in order to protect the instruments. Not every orchestra member is the elements of geometry. And that he had talent as a sculptor…for was that not his first métier? The indispensable bow You can’t write about the violin without mentioning the bow, since, to state the obvious, one cannot exist without the other. Yet for a long time musicians considered the bow a mere accessory. If it broke, they shrugged and replaced it. That has changed. If the origin of the violin is shrouded in mystery, we can say the same for the bow. What were the first bows made of, and to play what instruments? We can imagine that they were rather simple. Bows had already evolved by the middle of the 18th century, and though they were made in the luthier’s workshop they would be the creation of the assistant, not the master. Small wonder that the makers of the bows in the 17th and most of the 18th century are quite unknown. But in the second half of the 18th century the Tourte family of France enters the stage, and the bow undergoes profound transformations. The Tourtes take the art of bow-making to such a summit that their creations will remain unmatched. The son, François Xavier, is known as the “Stradivari of the bow.” We mustn’t ignore the contributions that violinists themselves made to the development of the bow. Modern bowmakers still call on the best virtuosos to evaluate the quality of the bows they make and the value of their ideas for new innovations. For centuries, horsehair has been preferred for bows, especially white horsehair, which is long, sturdy and fairly easy to find. Attempts to substitute synthetic or metallic materials have been fruitless. Laymen, of which of course I am one, may be surprised to learn that some musicians take more care in choosing their bows than their violins, because the bow determines the play of the violinist’s muscles. Some even pay more for the bow than for the violin! Over the past few decades, the cost of high-quality bows has shot into the stratosphere. A good bow is as much a work of art as a good violin, and you need a small fortune to afford a good Tourte, just as you need a large fortume to acquire a Stradivarius or a Guarneri. The singing wood Alive, I was mute. Now that I am dead, I sing softly. So said one day a tree, become a violin. The words are not mine, and they are translated from Latin, but I am making them mine, with apologies to the conservationists. Used with discernment, the wood of a tree is a powerful tool in human hands. The paper and the boards from our forests are the source of our means of survival, communication and the arts. And that includes the creation of sublime musical instruments. Since the Baroque period, through the Classical and Romantic eras, the violin has been at the heart of the development of Western music. It is present in folk, jazz, chamber music, and of course classical orchestral music. Can we imagine a chamber or symphony ensemble without one or more violins? Is it not the violinist who, before each concert, gives the note to which all the other musicians tune their instruments? Apart from the conductor, the first violin is the only musician who enters the stage alone, to the applause of the already charmed spectators. The pitiless passage of time has left no signs of age on the violin, which has lost none of its sonic beauty nor its power to bewitch us. Ancient but never old, it is irreplaceable. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 69 Software Feedback fortunate enough to own a Stradivarius, but all play instruments of great value. Will we one day see a priceless violin snap in two, or a singer’s voice irremediably damaged, all to serve a conductor’s whim? As for some future violin, built to be strong enough to sustain even greater string tension, Jules Saint-Michel rejected the idea. “No one will invent a new violin for that. Luthiers are conservative to the depths of their souls. Like the violinists who aspire to play like Paganini, luthiers dream of making a violin as good as those of Stradivari, who took his art to the zenith.” What may help to explain the unique sound of the Stradivarius is its incomparable varnish. Matching that varnish is the ideal of every luthier. Research has given us the formula for the varnishes he used, and we know how he applied it, but knowing the formula isn’t everything, just as knowing a great chef’s recipe doesn’t mean you can cook as well as he can. No two cooks will ever achieve the same results. I have concentrated on the famous Italian masters and mentioned the great French luthier Vuillaume, but other immensely talented luthiers could also be found in Switzerland, Germany, Hungary and all the way to Scandinavia, where master luthiers still make fine instruments today. Each violin is unique, just as each living being is unique. Even a moderately practiced eye will distinguish between one violin and another. The trees whose wood is used may have grown in different climates, but even two pieces of wood from the same source cannot be identical. As for varnishing, it is an art that rests more on the luthier’s skilful hand than on the actual composition of the varnish, and so the final finish is characterized by the style and the ability of each luthier. Another distinctive sign is the scroll, the spiral form at the end of the neck. Of course it has no influence on the sound, but each luthier brings great care to its shape. It is said that Stradivari’s superb scrolls indicate that he was familiar with Software Reviews Steve Bourke, Albert Simon and Gerard Rejskind From the New World Hamelin/Youth Orch. of the Americas Fidelio FACD029 Albert Simon: Fidelio recorded this album during a live performance at the Domaine Forget in scenic Charlevoix, Quebec. Two tube microphones were used and a dCS converter provided the amazing resolution of 24 bits/352 kHz DXD in the Xtract HD process. This is, in short, a set of high-definition files, ready for transfer onto a computer hard drive. I should add that both this recording and the Holst (the next review) are also available as conventional CDs. I find it important to mention all that before talking about the music itself. There are tons of recordings available of Dvorak’s Symphony From the New World, but I’ve never heard one that sounded like this and, in this case, the quality of the sound and the recreation of the venue are an integral part of the joy of listening to this popular symphony. I was instantly transported to the fifth row when the first notes of the Adagio introduction appeared on the right side of the stage, played by the violas and cellos. Dvorak was asked to be director of the new National Conservatory of Music in New York City in 1892. He stayed only three years in the US, always longing for his Czech homeland, even spending part of his summers with his countrymen in Spillville, Iowa, a small town known as a Bohemian settlement. Premiered at Carnegie Hall on December 16, 1893, the symphony is said to have been composed partly in New 70 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine York and partly in Iowa, inspired both by Black folk songs and by Longfellow’s poem Song of Hiawatha. The romantic melodies — which seem to have more in common with his native Bohemia than the Americas — flow abundantly throughout the work and would sound familiar to most music lovers, having been played in countless circumstances. Neil Armstrong even took a recording of this symphony to the Moon on Apollo 11. Three of Dvorak’s students contributed to the popularity of the English horn tune in the Largo when, 30 years later, they fitted it with a “Negro Spiritual” text. The most famous one, often referred to as a hymn, remains Fisher’s Going Home. Listening to the majestic opening of that Largo on horns, trumpet and trombone reaching from centre back on the large stage, I put aside all my speculations and waited for the tender and noble tune on the English horn. Sheer beauty! It was a tad faster than I am used to — after all, Dvorak did change his original Adagio to Largo. But no matter. I was there, in the middle of the fifth row, and that was quite an experience, all the way to the last coda and bursting applause. But wait, this work is not the only one on this album, aptly subtitled Musiques du nouveau monde (note the plural). There are two other interesting pieces by contemporary composers, Danzon no. 2 by Mexican composer Arturo Marquez, and Bootlegger’s Tarantella by Canada’s John Estacio. The danzon is a traditional Cuban dance that became popular in Mexico during the 1940’s. Its charm lies in the contrast between an easygoing theme and a vivaciously syncopated rhythmic one, and you can “see it all happen” on stage in this lavish version. Such energy and enthusiasm from those young performers in the Youth Orchestra of the Americas, conducted by Jean-Pascal Hamelin. The Bootlegger’s Tarantella is an overture to John Estacio’s opera Filumena, which premiered in 2003. It is a little gem, starting with a startling bang and developing in a cascade of fascinating themes and rhythms, reminiscent of some movie scores. It swells and flows like a joyful stream bounding over glistening rocks. A happy ending to a sensational album. Holst: The Planets Buzz Ensemble, Mélanie Barney Fidelio FACD028 Albert Simon: The deep low growl of the organ opens the stage in a sombre mood, guided by the shining brass hovering above it. War is on the way. Mars has risen defiantly, and his march is a relentless crescendo, exploding into a shattering climax. This arrangement of The Planets is a delight. The organ and the brass blend with such fluidity that I couldn’t help imagining an underwater dance between a whale and dolphins. Venus, the Bringer of Peace is a soothing balm on the wounds of Mars, and the interwoven textures of brass and organ seem to float airily above the wide stage. Recorded in Montreal’s St-Viateur d’Outremont Church, whose organ dates from 1913 and was totally restored in 1991, it lets you hear and actually feel the huge space where the performance took place. Proof that the 24 bit/96 kHz Xtract HD process was carried out impeccably. four-channel surround DSD. The four microphones are quite close together, and the stereo/surround effects depend on the precedence of arrival of each sound, and not on mere volume differences. For a number of years, Kimber has been demonstrating his recordings in large, heavily-damped rooms at shows such as CES and RMAF in Denver. If you like what you hear, you can buy some of the performances on SACD. This is one of those SACDs. The young Taiwanese pianist Fan-Ya Lin came to study music in Ogden, Utah, even though three other conservatories, including Juilliard, had accepted her. Ogden just happens to be where Kimber Kable is located. Still in her early 20’s, she has a remarkable maturity. On this superb recording she takes on some challenging works, including a piano transcription of Bach’s Toccata in C Minor (not the famous one for organ, but unmistakably Bach) and Beethoven’s appropriately-titled Appassionata sonata. She certainly does have the passion of youth. She can play with effortless power when power is required. You can’t play Chopin the same way you play Beethoven, however, but in three Chopin works, a Nocturne, an Étude and a Ballade, she has the sensitive touch that is needed. I had heard an excerpt from this recording on K imber’s ow n fourchannel installation, and I was sold. This SACD is similarly superb, both musically and sonically. Remarkable as they are, IsoMike recordings are not Ray Kimber’s bread and butter, though. Buy this recording, and every penny will go to one of the charities Ray supports. Emerging Fan-Ya Lin IsoMike 5604 Gerard Rejskind: Ray Kimber is best known for the audio cables that bear his name, but he has other passions in his life, beyond wires, and indeed beyond ordinary commerce. One of those passions is IsoMike, a recording method introduced a decade ago that used a pair of microphones on either side of a large cardioid-shaped baffle. In 2006 he began to record in Janitsch: Sonate da camera vol. 1 Notturna ATMA Classique ACD2 2595 Steve Bourke: A quiet Saturday afternoon was the perfect time to enjoy these Baroque sonatas. Four of the five are in minor keys, and all of them cast two different types of oboe, the standard and the d’amore, in the leading roles. They are a pure delight. The mood for the most part is on the serene side of melancholia. Bold and aggressive it surely is not. Melancholy does not have to mean unhappy though, and the unusual oboe d’amore is of particular interest. The oboe d’amore’s voice is created thanks to the narrower bore of the hole drilled through its length. Today it is seldom heard as a regular member of the symphony orchestra, and for no good reason. The standard oboe usually takes the d’amore’s parts, robbing the audience of an opportunity to hear a wonderful instrument. Its deep, musky timbre deserves to be experienced more often than it is. Johann Janitsch, composer of these sonata da cameras, studied law before deciding on a career in music. In spite of his vocational switch, he enjoyed a high level of success, becoming a member of Frederick the Great’s court orchestra, where he played the double bass. Thanks to the orchestra’s short season, from December to February, he had enough extra time to compose pieces for the following year. These Quadro sonatas were created for another purpose altogether. Every Friday Janitsch invited amateur musicians to join him and several other members of the court orchestra for the simple joy of making music together. The sonatas were generously composed by Janitsch to enrich this regular gathering. In so doing he began to democratize Berlin’s culture. Musicians from the Prussian middle class rubbed musical shoulders with the court elite. Amateurs and professionals alike must have been impressed by the quality of Janitsch’s sonatas, because 250 years later everyone, from every background, has access to their beauty. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 71 Software Feedback Holst wrote The Planets during World War I and initially called it “a series of mood pieces.” He later considered it a progression of life, starting with Mars, a tormented beginning, Jupiter, the “prime” of life, Saturn (said to be Holst’s favourite movement), the mature years, and Neptune, the mystic, shrouding the end of life. For those interested in the ancient symbolism of astrology — not the ridiculous daily horoscope — it is important to note that Holst had Alan Leo’s book The Art of Synthesis in his library, and he may have been introduced to this influential astrologer at that time. Regardless of the origins of this work, I was truly impressed by Enrico O. Dastous’ sensitive arrangement for organ and brass. It is a natural, as if it had to be written for this combination of instruments. A nd the wonderful interpretation by the five musicians of the Buzz Ensemble was perfectly right and balanced in each movement. Mélanie Barney handled the organ with superb virtuosity and gave it the sweet touch of a breath when a subtle yet solid foundation is needed. It leaves me wanting to hear it again. Right now. Feedback Software can, but that is because they have not heard either live. I have, and they sound nothing like what you are likely to hear on this or any other recording of this tired warhorse. This one is worse than most, however. The EMI recording is from 1972, the period when studios were using “hot” tape formulations that turned out to be short-lived (see Not Made to Last in UHF No. 90). This sounds as though it may be a CD mastered from a sixth- or seventhgeneration tape. It is gritty and distorted even in the long orchestral introduction. long before we get to the ordnance and the bells. The recording includes two much better Tchaikovsky pieces, the overture to Romeo and Juliet,and the Marche Slave. But frankly, who cares? Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture Previn/London Symphony Orchestra Hi-Q HIQXRCD7 Gerard Rejskind: We are all pretty much aware that not every note that came from the pen of Tchaikovsky (or Mozart or Beethoven or Brahms) is of equal value. Tchaikovsky was responsible for numerous deathless masterpieces, but he also wrote for money, as most composers are compelled to do. The 1812 Overture, commemorating the defeat of Napoleon’s Grand Army by the Russians (with the help of a harsh winter, poor supply lines and disease), was an example of political composing. Tchaikovsky wrote it long after the fact, with a premiere in 1882 in Moscow. It was commissioned for the consecration of the Temple of Christ the Redeemer, which was a memorial to Napoleon’s Lucky Lucky defeat. Patricia Deslauriers Trio In this musical recounting of the Silence GSOCD-5227 long battle, in which only a small frac- Gerard Rejskind: Before I get to the tion of Napoleon’s half million Where soldiers do the music, questions let me for introduce the cast of survived, there are some our obvious famous anachFree Advice characters. sectionPatricia come from? Deslauriers is a noted ronisms. La Marseillaise, Our readers which sendTchaithem toMontreal us at uhfmail@uhfmag.com. jazz bassist. Guy St-Onge kovsky used to represent The the questions, French, is and Quebec’s our answers, most prolific composer, may appear the magazine, and musician. or both. He can play was banned in Napoleon’s time. on As line, for inarranger don’t reply a number by mail, of instruments, and even the Russian national anthem,We which andnot weyet don’treleased give it for a CD freeon which he played more is used as counterpoint, it had if you thatcase, your question than twonot dozen be made of them. public. He also owns a been written. This is request not, in any We dosoask for your wonderful name and studio city. and mastering suite set Tchaikovsky’s best work. If it is often Ask on away! a quiet lake in the Laurentians, the recorded today, that is because modern technology has made it easy to add what studio where this recording was made. was problematic in the 1880’s, the sound The music is that by Richard Desjardins, of live cannons and the clanging of the best known as a singer. His are the kinds bells of Moscow. It is, in short, a hi-fi of songs whose words you actually listen to, be they about love or various social showpiece. Or it would be if there were a hi-fi issues. He is also, however, an excepsystem in existence that could reproduce tional tunesmith, and this trio, which the sound of either cannons or bells. also includes drummer Paul Brochu, Some audiophiles believe that theirs transposes the tunes into a jazz setting. This isn’t the first time Richard Desjardins’ music has been covered. French singer Francis Cabrel, some years back, did his own version of Desjardins’ Quand j’aime une fois j’aime pour toujours as a country song, of all things. A good song is a good song, and they are the raw material for this excellent album. In many jazz groups the bass is purely a rhythm instrument, like the drums. However, in the first song, 335 Nord, Deslaurier’s bass carries the melody, with chords from St-Onge’s piano highlighting the tune and Brochu’s drums adding the subtlest of subtle effects. Throughout the album, Deslauriers and St-Onge alternate as soloists. The arrangements are often intricate, but you never lose track of the melody, which is a mark of good jazz. Heard detached from the words, these truly are exceptional melodies. Jenny was a superb love song, and remains very fine in this jazz instrumental interpretation. Tu m’aimes-tu, the song that first made Desjardins famous, is delightfully intricate and is well handled here. The recording is on St-Onge’s own Silence label, which has in the past released several gold audiophile-quality CDs. Like earlier Silence discs, this one too sounds natural and delightful. GET FREE ADVICE! 72 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine Live at Montreux (DVD) Miles Davis Eagle Records music stars redo their older hits — but Miles Davis was not in the habit of looking back. He made it a rule throughout his career never to return to earlier material, no matter how much money he could earn by doing so. As an audio-visual panorama of Miles Davis’ various visits to the Montreux Jazz Festival, this is an important historical document. As pure entertainment, it is no less valuable. There’s a Time Doug MacLeod Reference Recordings RR-130 Gerard Rejskind: Doug MacLeod says that early in his singing career, he was not yet certain about this choice of calling, and he found himself sitting on a curb in Norfolk, Virginia, with Ernie Banks (the Bluesman, not the baseball player). He told Banks he didn’t know whether he had the right to sing the Blues, because he had never picked cotton or known any of the hardships that are in the background of the great Bluesmen. “You ever been lonely?” asked Banks. “Yeah.” “You ever been hurt? Scared? Needed money? Needed lov ing?” “Yeah.” “That’s the Blues too, son. Write about that.” And he has taken that advice to heart across more than 20 albums, including several audiophile-quality discs for Audioquest Music. Now he’s landed at Reference Recordings. Resident engineer Keith O. Johnson, justly famous for some of the world’s greatest classical and jazz recordings, has created his first Blues album. You would expect this to be Doug MacLeod’s best-sounding album, and of course it is, but I would argue that it is in fact his best album ever. In technical terms it seems disarmingly simple, without the omnipresent overdubbing and sound processing that have done so much to make the words “high fidelity” such a travesty. On a cavernous soundstage at George Lucas’ Skywalker Ranch, MacLeod sat down with bassist Denny Croy and drummer Jimi Bott, and just played and sang. This is not a two-microphone purist recording, because Johnson cares only about the results he wants, and he takes whatever is needed to get them. He puts us right there, in front of the musicians. And we don’t want to leave. MacLeod uses several different guitars, which are identified in the booklet, which also includes pictures of the instruments. The emphasis is on his lyrics and guitar work, with solid backup by Croy’s bass and percussion accents by Bott that are often subtle and delicate. This album is different from most Blues albums you may have heard. I recognized one earlier song, Run With the Devil, which was on the Come to Find album. This time, MacLeod has dropped the “walking” rhythm of the earlier version in favor of a delivery that is nearly conversational. It’s different, but it works. Some Blues singers are almost painfully earnest, but MacLeod’s songs have always had more than a little humor to them. The Up Song is a play on the many ways the word “up” can be used, and it is anything but a downer. On My In-laws are Outlaws, MacLeod claims poetic license, “which they tell me is just a little less important than a fishing license.” The Entitled Few could have been a campaign song for the recent US presidential election — I leave you to guess which candidate might have liked it. MacLeod returns to the tradition of the talking Blues for Dubb’s Talkin’ Religion Blues. In that song, MacLeod gets into a discussion with a preacher who warns him he’s bound for hell unless he believes what the preacher believes. On the first run-through of the CD, I played that one several times in a row. I can think of but one reason not to order this wonderful HDCD album, and it is this. Reference is promising a two-disc vinyl version. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 73 Software Feedback Steve Bourke: Miles Davis once said that “the beginning and the end is everything. You’ve got to start and stop gracefully.” Starting he surely does on this amalgam of nearly two decades of appearances at the famed Swiss festival, but he takes his own sweet time. The first five minutes offer up just his electric bassist, playing a two-beat. The camera catches Miles flashing two fingers in a signal to his bandmate, but we have not yet heard a single note from his trumpet. Percussion arrives to keep the bassist company. Davis is hunched over, seemingly preoccupied. Still no music has emerged from his instrument. I am starting to lose patience. Finally, the stuff that helped to make him a jazz hero and pop icon arrives. A hesitant, melancholic stream of notes leads towards more empty musical space, but it is the very space that draws us in. Suspense in music, the kind more often associated with great theatrical drama, floats in the air around the trumpeter. Get on with it, come on. I want more of that. Davis never does disappoint all the way through these highlights. Though his styling starts to become familiar, it is never, ever predictable. I am tempted to compare him to John Scofield, though I prefer Davis’ approach. He makes music the listener can step into. Too often a jazzman’s dominating virtuosity separates him from his audience, pushing it away from what could have been an emotional connection. Miles Davis’ jazz is democratic, not elitist, not too proud. He gives us music at a pace that makes it accessible to almost everyone. It welcomes us into his jazz universe, with no spaceship needed for the voyage. Says Robben Ford, one of Davis’ guitarists, “Miles’ music has the sparseness of the blues. His use of space is uncanny. Nobody has as large a field to explore.” Along with his style and considerable substance, Miles delivers one other bonus inside this Montreux retrospective. He reprises some of the earlier compositions that he and Gil Evans developed together. This time he has Quincy Jones and a full orchestra behind him. So what, you might think, lots of Rainy Days and Mondays, I Need to Be in for DVD, then for Blu-ray, and even for Love or We’ve Only Just Begun, you’re in mobile phones. It now has an extension for a surprise, and I suspect a happy one. of its video sound technology, with Karen’s warm and solid lower register the awkward name of Dolby TrueHD commands attention, and the emotional with Advanced 96k Upsampling. This impact of the songs is often overwhelm- admirable concert by the San Francisco ing. The age of the ballad will never be Symphony is among the first releases over, no matter the current fad, and no with this new process. Film sou nd is pret t y much all one sang a love ballad the way she did. I could argue with the choice of recorded with a digital sampling rate of the 20 songs on this Japanese-made 48 kHz, just above that of the Compact gold album. For instance, I would have Disc. A good Blu-ray player or A/V We remember when a number of Me competitors included Desperado and Don’t Cry For receiverwould will increase that to 96 kHz put on line only the cover image table of What more can Dolby Argentina, andonly left off Calling Occupants of and by the upsampling. contents. Interplanetary Craft. However, this col- bring to the table? We would them thatserious you don’t go fishing Let’s without lection hastell a much more problem. be bait. clear on one thing: you Sure, wethe liveCD fromis what spend through ouradd siteinformation and Though billedyou as “K2HD,” can’t that was never the pages ourkHz print issue. Butayou spendindays with 24-bit of 100 mastering, disccould captured the original recording. Early reading material forwas free. upsampling was done in the crudest way, can be no better than the tape it We think from. that’sThe the only wayCarpenters we can convince you of the mastered original by repeating each sample once (films UHFpoint difference, LPs were smooth to the of glossi- work the same way: each frame is shown of whybut youthis might us with the future of your a rate of 48 frames per ness, discwant has to an trust exaggerated twice to simulate music or home theatre system. edge that makes listening a chore from second). Modern digital upsampling is We have Antarctica. about five readers songs in.on every continent except done by interpolation: generating an Most alternative, of them discovered usa onestimation line. The obvious if you have of what the “missing” sample They read a lotofofthe our free material. turntable, is to find some original should have been. Dolby claims to have then joined LPs. Otherwise,And there arethey earlier Car-us. an interpolation algorithm that is more penters CD releases that might be more precise than what your own system could satisfying than this one. possibly do on the fly. The San Francisco Symphony was part of the city’s rebuilding effort after the devastating earthquake and resulting firestorm of 1906, and it celebrated its centenary in 2011 with this gala concert. Over the years it has had several conductors who can reasonably be termed legendary, including Pierre Monteux, Josef Krips and Seiji Ozawa. In 1995 it snared the excellent Michael Tilson Thomas from the London Symphony. He is of course on the podium for this gala. An orchestra needs to be good to rise to the challenge of a work such as Benjamin Britten’s Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra, because every instrumental section gets a solo. The slightest weakness will be easily noticed. It is clear that the San Francisco is a thoroughly 100th Anniversary (Blu-ray) homogeneous orchestra. Under Thomas’ San Francisco Symphony confident direction and firm pacing, it SFS Media shines. Gerard Rejskind: Dolby has come a The major work of the evening is long way from the technology that made Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto, with it famous all those years ago, tape noise Itzhak Perlman as soloist. It seems odd reduction. It developed surround sound, to recall that other musicians of the time first for older media such as VHS, then were scandalized by this concerto. It was Software Feedback WHY A FREE ISSUE Carpenters Gold Karen and Richard Carpenter A&M 5328998 Gerard Rejskind: They were brother and sister, Karen and Richard Carpenter. He arranged and sometimes wrote the songs, and she brought her warm and expressive voice to hit after hit. They achieved extraordinary success, releasing 10 albums, not counting the posthumous ones, and amassing three Grammy awards as well as 15 other nominations. Can it possibly be 31 years since Karen died suddenly at the age of 32 from complications due to her lifelong anorexia? After the first two Grammies they won in 1970, Carpenters (they preferred not to use “the” before their name) produced a record-breaking run of hits. Yet their very success made them a target for hipper critics, just as Céline Dion’s success has attracted hatred. This was the age of rock music, with untrained voices bellowing over guitars and percussion. Punk rock debased the musical currency further. Carpenters’ ballads were out of sync, as though they had been born too late. Richard Carpenter blamed their label, A&M, for projecting an overwhelmingly wholesome image of them in an increasingly chaotic popular music world. I would argue that he contributed to the problem with his anachronistically lush arrangements, with massed strings and nostalgic piano. It didn’t help that, toward the end, their repertoire contained more and more retro songs from decades past, such as Please Mr. Postman and Jambalaya. But no matter. If you have never listened attentively to Karen Carpenter’s expressive mezzo-soprano voice singing 74 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine expected that, before a soloist begins, is a great old Peugeot. I have a friend in there will be an orchestral introducBeverly Hills who has one.”). He is taken tion, with the exposition of the main to a party where these long–departed themes, on which the soloist will present luminaries are to be found, sometimes variations. In this case, the solo violin wandering from party to party. Chamis the first instrument you hear, and it pagne flows. Gertrude Stein even offers does its own exposition, thank you. Of to read the manuscript of his novel and course, most concertgoers care little critique it. about technical cavils, and the concerto That’s where the film begins to has become a favorite of the Romantic derail, and the problem lies in Allen’s repertoire. Perlman has a total mastery script. I’m aware that he got an Oscar of the concerto, and he makes his 1714 for it, but it contains fatal errors that Stradivarius sing with a warmth and just keep on coming, and once I had smoothness that serve the beauty of the noticed them I could no longer suspend concerto flawlessly. my disbelief. Gil talks more like a hack There are two other works on the screenwriter than a novelist, and his 21stprogram: Aaron Copland’s well-known century patter would have been incomBilly the Kid ballet suite and a thoroughly prehensible 90 years earlier. Start with forgettable Short Ride in a Fast Machine the first paragraph of his manuscript: (not short enough, if you ask me). beguiled by the city of the title. Among “What was prosaic and even vulgar to Since this is an anniversary concert, those under the spell of Paris is Gil one generation has been transmuted by the Blu-ray includes a historical docu- (Owen Wilson), a successful Hollywood the mere passing of years to a status at mentary. You can of course go right to screenwriter who would rather be a nov- once magical and also camp.” The word the music if you wish. elist. He falls head over heels in love with “camp” in this context is archaic today, It’s difficult to be sure what contri- the City of Lights, prepared to move a sign of terrible writing, but would have bution the Dolby upsampling system there because his literary heroes, such as been gibberish in 1920. Yet the line is makes to the pleasure of the experience, Ernest Hemingway, did. He is in Paris greeted with approval. He seems to be but the sound is among the very best I with his fiancée Inez (Rachel McAdams), rooted back in the 1960’s. “I’m pretty have heard from Blu-ray. I should also who does not share his enthusiasm, good at picking up vibrations,” he says. Yes, we asked, constantly, mention the sharp film work. As soon as and warns himget that she can never live He refers to his fiancée as “sexy,” which we will reviewing in ourNor nextdoissue. an instrument or group of instruments what Hemingway greets at face value, and anywhere butbe the United States. Andparents, we know reviews aretoessential. begins to play, the camera is there, Inez’s who have yet forgive adds that “there’s a bit of a disconnect But equipment are nothing the if not with the big things.” When Hemingway without a millisecond of delay. You can, France for reviews having “betrayed” USplentiful. have We longcan toldguess us that what makes UHF asks him whether he has read his book of course, simply listen without lookingReaders over Iraq. that sending particularly them are the other (which would have been A Farewell to at the screen, but the taut visuals add out the valuable weddingtoinvitations would be articles. Articles ideas, about the nuts and bolts of theArms), technology, Gil exclaims that “I love all your immensely to the understanding of theabout premature. and isalso music film,In works.” Hemingway doesn’t react to this workings of the complex and wonderful Allen no about stranger to and fantasy. which are the very reasons machine that is the symphony orchestra. Sleeper he travelled a century into the misplaced statement, nor does anyone for ourand lovingly-created to exist.ask what he means by having “panic Need I add that I recommend it future, in Everything systems You’ve Always Not that we will publishing hardware attacks” or being “a Hollywood hired highly? Wanted to ever Knowstop About Sex he played a reviews. sperm. In this film, Gil (clearly an avatar hand.” If we suppose Gil writes the way Midnight in Paris (Blu-ray) for Allen himself) is a young writer who he talks, Gertrude Stein might well Owen Wilson, Marion Cotillard falls in love with Paris and mysteriously have advised him to have his manuscript Sony Pictures returns every night to the 1920’s, where translated into English. Curiously, many of the worst anachGerard Rejskind: It is common to say he meets his cultural heroes, Hemingthat it has been many years since there way, Gertrude Stein, F. Scott and Zelda ronisms are not found in Allen’s original has been a good Woody Allen film. It Fitzgerald, Cole Porter, Picasso, Jean script, and thus were added later. On is every bit as common to say that a Cocteau, and a gregarious yet solemn the other hand, Stein’s advice, in the mediocre Woody Allen film is better young woman named Adriana (Marion original, is laden with anachronisms to than a good film from most directors. Cotillard, who for once does not need the breaking point, and Allen wisely took Is this, finally, the Woody Allen film we to hide her French accent). Adriana them out. Owen Wilson began to irritate me were waiting for? Yes and no. has lived with Picasso and Utrillo, and Yes, because there is a lot to love in he quickly learns to prefer her to his well before the film’s midpoint. We know he is a stand-in for Allen, but he takes this imaginative story, and especially in uncultivated fiancée. its setting. No, because…well, we shall Gil’s nightly time travel always hap- the opportunity to imitate the Woody see in due time. pens the same way: at exactly midnight Allen of the Annie Hall era. He does it Countless are those who have been he is picked up by an antique limo (“This effectively, but before the end I found NOT JUST HARDWARE REVIEWS! Software Feedback ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 75 Software Feedback him no more attractive than his appalling fiancée and horrible prospective in-laws. Which leaves us with…oh yes, we’ll always have Paris. Paris in the rain has never looked better. The Red Violin (Blu-ray) Samuel L. Jackson, Colm Feore Alliance Gerard Rejskind: Short stories can’t easily make a transition to the screen, unless they are fleshed out and the sauce is diluted to the point where it becomes watery. One device for putting together several short stories into a film is to link them together by some device. In The Yellow Rolls-Royce the device was a gaudily painted luxury car. In this one it is a violin. In truth, the Golden Age violins played by today’s top classical musicians are often more than three centuries old, and inevitably they have passed through many hands, picking up a history of their own. The stories that make up this film are linked by a violin, whose bright red lacquer makes it unique. The reason for the color is a mystery, though it will be explained before the film is over. The story is, however, rooted in the present. At an auction house in Montreal, a number of precious artifacts are being auctioned off, including the red violin of the title. There are several bidders, who want the violin for different reasons. As the auction progresses, the events in the violin’s life are told in 76 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine flashback, starting with its creation in 1681 in Cremona by a master luthier named Nicolò Bussotti. He is such a perfectionist that he carefully examines and lavishly praises a violin made by an apprentice, and then smashes it against his workbench. The red violin, born of tragedy, will be his masterpiece and will carry his legacy across the ages. We see it in several ages, though the transition from one to the other is seldom made explicit. It is played by a young orphan of exceptional talent but uncertain health, mentored by Georges Poussin, allegedly the inventor of the metronome. It somehow finds its way into the hands of a Roma violinist. It becomes the inspiration of Frederick Pope, a dashing Romantic-era violinist, a cross between Paganini and Liszt. It finds its way to China at a dangerous time for musicians, Chiang Ching’s Cultural Revolution. Finally, there it is in a Montreal auction house. An American expert on the Golden Age of string instruments, Charles Morritz (Samuel L. Jackson), identifies this red violin as the red violin, and of course that drives up the bids. There are many surprises I shall not reveal, but the film also leaves us with some philosophical questions. Is musical skill the same thing as artistic sensibility? Should a great art creation go to the one who can best appreciate it, and not merely to one who can afford it? Does art trump man-made laws? Director and co-screenwriter François Girard has chosen not to dub any of the languages of the film, which include Italian, German, English, French and Chinese, simply subtitling as necessary. Joshua Bell is the violinist we hear playing the Oscar-winning score by John Corigliano. The Red Violin was originally released over a decade ago on a dreadful DVD. This Blu-ray version, I need hardly explain, is a vast improvement. Skyfall (Blu-ray) Daniel Craig, Judi Dench MGM Gerard Rejsk ind: W hen was t he last time a Bond picture got an Oscar nomination? In fact it’s happened before. Goldfinger earned one for sound effects, and the dreary Thunderball got a nomination for visual effects. Sheena Easton won an Oscar for the song For Your Eyes Only, but that was 30 years ago. Not that Skyfall, the third film with Daniel Craig as Bond, has done that much better. For all the talk about being in contention for best actress and even best film, Skyfall got two Oscars, and one of those went to Adele for the title song. Of course, the Oscar is not the ultimate sign of excellence, even if does have the highest profile. Skyfall has been widely praised as the best Bond picture ever, and there is a good deal to the claim. It is grittier and more realistic, abandoning the illusion that its hero is indestructible and forever young. Craig is visibly older than he was the last time he starred in the role (the insolvency of MGM caused a long delay), and so he is no longer the debonair young Lothario. But then, the original Ian Fleming story structure is creaky in the joints too. An earlier Bond picture, shot independently, had a similar premise. In Never Say Never Again, an older Sean Connery is brought back to an MI6 which, like him, has aged. There is a new M, who has little time for the old double-0 nonsense, and sends Bond to a fat farm to “eliminate the free radicals.” In an economically-troubled Britain, there have been budget cutbacks, and even Q’s gee-whiz gadgets don’t always work. In Skyfall, M is still played by the admirable Judi Dench, but she is also winds up in a desk job. Well, a desk job isn’t as final as death, even if it sometimes feels that way, and the next director can always reverse the decision. Oh yes, Sam Mendes says he’ll be too busy to direct the next Bond film. We can only hope that “too busy” is code for “more money, please.” Romeo and Juliet Leonard Whiting, Olivia Hussey Paramount Gerard Rejsk ind: One crit ic has referred to this Zeffirelli production as the greatest film ever made of a Shakespeare play. In fact, it does not deserve that limitation. This 1968 movie is one of the greatest films of the 20th century, and since film began in that century, we could call it one of the greatest of all time. The play is of course about love. Though Shakespeare wrote it early in his career (it is at the centre of the magnificent Shakespeare in Love), it contains some of the Bard’s most poignant and beautiful poetry, polished as poetry rarely is. However, directors have all too often sought out older actors who were presumed to possess the experience to do justice to Shakespeare’s text. You can still find an audio version of Albert Finney and Claire Bloom reading the play. Despite their wonderful mastery of the text, they have no feel for the explosive emotions of two teenagers in love. What Franco Zeffirelli did was give emotion priority over the mechanics of the reading. The two protagonists were mere teenagers — Juliet was 12 according to the text — and so he recruited teenagers for the roles. Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey are barely older than the characters they are playing, respectively 18 and 17 when the film was released, younger when they were before the cameras. Their unbridled, unreasoned passion might ring hollow in seasoned Shakespearean actors, but it has the glow of truth in these bright-eyed youngsters. A youthful Michael York, who would play d’Artagnan in The Three Musketeers, is totally plausible as Tybalt, the hot-blooded teenager with more pride than judgement, ready to draw a sword at any imagined slight. Zeffirelli trimmed the text to make it more conversational, but did not change it — after all, Shakespeare knew what he was doing. He coached his young actors in the details of Elizabethan English. Even the rantings of the emotionally disturbed Mercutio (John McEnery) are made to sound like real talking rather than dead words on a page. The choreography of the deadly battles of young people on the streets of Verona — all too contemporary, alas — is masterful. All this is buttressed by a superb music score by the great Nino Rota. No, you can’t buy this masterpiece in Blu-ray, and even the aging DVD is difficult to find. I tracked down just a handful of copies in the US, none in Canada. Only a few copies are available in France, in PAL format, naturally. Why? I place the blame on today’s paranoia about what we are pleased to call child abuse. What studio today would dare relaunch a film in which two teenagers play a nude scene? Even when the film was first released in 1968, Olivia Hussey was not permitted into a cinema to see it, because (gasp!) nude breasts were shown briefly. Her own! Yet Shakespeare’s play is in fact about child abuse, the brutal forcing of a 12-year-old girl into an unwanted marriage under pain of death (faced with her refusal, her mother says, “I wish the fool were wedded to her grave”). The film should be on school curriculums… but don’t hold your breath. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 77 Software Feedback getting on (she was 77 when the film was made), and Whitehall is preparing to ease her out. She has made several mistakes. Her judgement call got agent 007 killed, and she lost a hard drive with the names of NATO agents to Silva (Javier Bardem), a psychotic version of Wikileaks’ Julian Assange. Of course, 007 is not going to stay dead, but he doesn’t come out of his ordeal in good shape either, and he needs retraining before returning “to the field.” He flunks every preparedness test there is, but M covers for him and he goes after Silva anyway. Silva, however, was once a double-0 agent himself and is one step ahead of him. Before setting out, Bond meets the new Q, who is disconcertingly young and regards Bond as he might his grandfather. Their meeting takes place in an art gallery, in front of a Turner painting showing a once-mighty warship being towed away for scrap. Judi Dench’s brilliant career, which included roles in Shakespeare in Love, Tea with Mussolini and Chocolat, is ending with this role, and the writers have wisely expanded it to the point of making her Bond’s co-star. There were rumors she might get an Oscar nomination, but the people behind the gold statuette have disappointed us before. As in any Bond film, a lot happens before the enemy is defeated. Bond will need all of Q’s clever gadgets and computer knowledge in the search. He will even resurrect the old Aston-Martin DB9 from Goldfinger, though we have seen it destroyed twice before. It still come with machine guns and an ejection seat, but no longer has a bulletproof windshield. In the Fleming books, Bond was an upper-class English gentleman, and Fleming initially opposed the casting of the Scottish Sean Connery (he did live to see Dr. No, however, and loved it). In a nod to that casting decision, the script does make Bond Scottish, and the dénouement takes place in the Highland manor where Bond spent an unhappy childhood. Skyfall does include one more happy casting decision: Naomie Harris as Eve, a younger double-0 whose panache nearly steals the film from Craig. We’d like to see her again, but at the end she Gossip&News Ask the Doc When this short feature was first published, in 1990, digital radio was “coming.” It’s long been here, but hardly anyone is aware of it, and 23 years later this satirical piece still stands. Doc, have you heard anything about this new digital radio that’s supposed to be coming? I’m sorry to say that, with my very busy practice and having to do rounds at the hospital, I’ve been falling somewhat behind in the literature. This isn’t in the literature, doc. There was a demonstration put on the other day for local notables and journalists. They all got on a tour bus, and they were given headphones so they could listen to an experimental digital radio transmission. An usual sort of leisure activity. As you know, we doctors prefer golf. It wasn’t a leisure activity. There was an engineer from the CBC who spoke. According to the newspapers, he said digital radio was the medium of the future, though he thought it would take quite a long time to come. Ah! Then perhaps it will arrive at the same time we begin commuting to work in personal jet helicopters. Personal jet helicopters? That prediction was made at the 1930 World’s Fair. They said it would come, though it would take quite a while. Then you don’t think digital radio is around the corner? Well, we are arriving at corners rather more frequently than we used to. You should see how many times a week I receive a prospectus for a new miracle drug. Is there any connection between that and digital radio? Well, new drugs frequently promise, or seem to promise, radical improvements to problems of which most doctors were not previously aware. Is that like digital radio? 78 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine Not entirely. There are stringent legal reg ulat ions on claims that may be made for drugs. Perhaps the same regulations should apply to digital audio prescriptions, but at the moment they do not. I s it possible to transmit radio digitally? Certainly. Wasn’t it demonstrated to journalists just the other day? But that was just a demonstration. Is it really practical? How can you transmit sound digitally? It should present little difficulty. At the moment we are already recording sound digitally. That is to say, we are recording only a list of data about the sound, and a digital circuit at the playback end of the chain uses the data to reconstitute the original sound wave, much as a doctor would use the data in a medical history to reconstitute the evolution of a pathology. Digital radio would work the same way, except that instead of recording the data on an optical disc, we would transmit it by radio. That sounds complicated. Preventing poliomyelitis was once complicated too, but now the technology is well developed. In the case of digital audio, not only do we know how to encode and decode digital sound, we have inexpensive integrated circuits for doing it. You mean that you could use an ordinary FM station to transmit digital sound? No, for the same reason you couldn’t record digitally on an LP. Assuming you As we enter our 31st year, we go back in time to UHF No. 27, and our satire section, “Ask the Doc.” use the same 44.1 kHz sampling rate as CD — which would seem logical — then you would need to send, in each second, 44,100 words of information, multiplied by the 16 bits in each word. That makes…ah… I have a calculator in my pocket, doc. It makes 705,600 bits. Thank you. I’m afraid that after my second pre-med year I was rather too busy with physiology and anatomy to have much time to practice mathematics. Of course, you have two channels of sound, and so you need to… So you have nearly a million and a half bits per second. I’m afraid so. Transmitting digitally is equivalent to transmitting a 1.5 MHz sound wave. It is rather beyond the capabilities of present-day FM stations. Digital stations will require rather more bandwidth, and bandwidth is as scarce as hospital beds. Is there any way around this? No doubt there is. Digital engineers are good at data compression, in which redundant information is eliminated. A telephone line with an audio bandwidth of 2.5 kHz can be used to transmit data at nearly 20,000 bits per second on the newest modems. That’s eight times better. So if you use the same techniques for digital radio, you would need a bandwidth of only… Only 176,400 Hz. I hope you didn’t mind me borrowing your calculator. With government restrictions on health care spending, it’s difficult to budget for new equipment. Will digital radio sound better? In the sense that digital discs sound better, yes. If you drive through a city with tall buildings, the error-correction circuits will be rather busy, but if the data can somehow be recovered, then the transmission will be noise-free. And if it can’t? We doctors are aware that you can’t save every patient. Will I live long enough to get digital radio, doc? Take off your shirt, and I’ll get my nurse to draw a blood sample. Industry News Simaudio Streaming Gossip&News Feedback It was in 2011 that Simaudio moved out of its rented quarters (two nearby sites, for business and manufacturing) and finally acquired its own building. We got an early tour (Simaudio and UHF are about a 15-minute drive from each other) some two months later. The company was barely settled in, and we were frequently warned to watch our heads and not trip over the tools. More than a year later, the building was finally completed and the press got the official tour. Simaudio CEO Jean Poulin is shown in the top picture in an assembly area. Nearly all assembly is done in-house, though circuit boards are “populated” (fitted with components) by another nearby company. The bottom picture shows Simaudio products awaiting shipments to various parts of the world, including (as you can see from the labels on the wall) Russia and Hong Kong. We were shown one gigantic space that was empty but for a wooden bench in the middle. It’s used to test Moon gear for electromagnetic emissions, to be sure it complies with international requirements, especially those of the European Union. The evening was also Simaudio’s opportunity to preview its new MIND audio streaming system (the acronym stands for Moon Intelligent Network Device). Unlike many other streaming systems, it uses your own home computer network to store music. Some audiophiles, including us, use a dedicated computer that is part of the music system. The MIND module replaces that extra computer. You connect it to your router via Ethernet during setup only, and after that it will stream over Wi-Fi. Simaudio recommends, as we do, a dual-band router, which can use the lesscrowded 5 GHz band. Control is done by a free iOS (iPad, iPhone, etc.) application. An Android version is promised as well. MIND doesn’t use iTunes, though it can use the iTunes library as a source. It can read the common audio formats, including WAV, FLAC and Apple Lossless. The first MIND module offered is the Moon 180, which connects via AES/EBU, S/PDIF or TOSLINK to the digital-to-analog converter of your choice. Future Moon DACs will have MIND compatibility as an option. With this new technology and its vast new space, Simaudio has grown to world-class proportions. Recently a Radio-Canada reporter visited us for an interview and glanced admiringly at our Moon electronics. He was astonished to learn that this globally-famous brand had its home not far from us. And not just its home. In an era that has seen so much manufacturing shifting to China, Simaudio intends to keep production where it has always been, in Canada. ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 79 Mac Sold This news is about McIntosh, not the Macintosh. The venerable American company once belonged to Clarion (yes, the car audio people, Heaven only knows why), who balked at spending the money that was clearly needed to keep the company afloat. It was sold to D&M Holdings, whose initials stand for its major brands, Denon and Marantz. D&M itself, once a Japanese company, got hawked ab out , however, and at one point belonged in part to Bain Capital. Yes, that Bain Capital. A nd it wasn’t a hands-off investment, either. It seems there are su its who t hink they understand… well, anything. Now it’s been sold again. The UHF Reference Systems Equipment reviews are done on at least one of UHF’s reference systems, selected as working tools. They are changed as infrequently as possible, because a reference that keeps changing is no reference. Gossip&News Feedback The Alpha system Our original reference is in a room with special acoustics, originally a recording studio, letting us hear what we can’t hear elsewhere. Main digital player: Linn Unidisk 1.1 Additional digital playback: CEC TL-51X belt-driven transport, Moon 300D converter, Apple MacBook Pro, Stello U3 interface Digital cable: Atlas Mavros 1.5m Digital portable: Apple iPhone 4S Turntable: Audiomeca J-1 Tone arm: Audiomeca SL-5 Pickup: Goldring Excel Phono preamp: Audiomat Phono2 Preamplifier: Copland CTA-305 Power amplifier: Simaudio Moon W-5LE Loudspeakers: Living Voice Avatar OBX-R Interconnects: Atlas Navigator All-Cu, Pierre Gabriel ML-1 Loudspeaker cables: Atlas Mavros with WBT nextgen banana connectors Power cords: Gutwire, Wireworld Aurora AC filters: Foundation Research LC-2 (power amp), Inouye SPLC The Omega system It serves for reviews of gear that cannot easily fit into the Alpha system, with its small room. Digital players: shared with the Alpha system Turntable: Linn LP12/Lingo II Tone arm: Alphason HR-100S MCS Pickup: London Reference Phono preamp: Audiomat Phono 1.6 80 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine Preamplifier: Simaudio Moon P-8 Power amplifier: Simaudio Moon W-8 Loudspeakers: Reference 3a Suprema II Interconnects: Atlas Navigator All-Cu, Atlas Mavros, Pierre Gabriel ML-1 Loudspeaker cables: Pierre Gabriel ML-1 for most of the range, Wireworld Polaris for the twin subwoofers Power cords: BIS Audio Maestro, UHF14, Wireworld AC filters: GutWire MaxCon 2, Foundation Research LC-1 Acoustics: Gershman Acoustic Art panels The Kappa system This is our home theatre system. As with the original Alpha system, we had limited space, and that ruled out huge projectors and screens. We did, however, finally come up with a system whose performance gladdens both eye and ear, with the needed resolution for reviews. The new buyer is Fine Sounds, the Italian company that owns Sonus Faber, Wadia Digital and Sumiko. It’s good to see McIntosh find a home with an actual high-end audio company. We will be following developments with interest. We can already see improvements. For decades, even Mac’s classic amps, like the MC275 above, came with those horrible little barrier strips that wouldn’t fit quality speaker cables. But check the picture. Better, huh? Thiel Sold Too Since Jim Thiel’s untimely death in 2009 at the age of 61, the speaker company had been run by co-founder Kathy Gornik. She hired a new engineering team to transform Jim’s many paper designs into reality, such as the CS3.7, shown here. HDTV monitor: Samsung PN50A550 plasma screen Source: Pioneer BDP-51FD Blu-Ray player, Apple TV Preamplifier/processor: Simaudio Moon Attraction, 5.1 channel version Power amplifiers: Simaudio Moon W-3 (main speakers), bridged Celeste 4070se (centre speaker), Robertson 4010 (rear) Main speakers: Energy Reference Connoisseur (1984) Centre speaker: Thiel MCS1 Rear speakers: Elipson 1400 Subwoofer: 3a Design Acoustics Cables: Atlas, Van den Hul, MIT, GutWire, Wireworld Line filter: GutWire MaxCon Squared All three systems have dedicated power lines, with Hubbell hospital-grade outlets. Extensions and power bars are equipped with hospitalgrade connectors. Now the company has been sold to a private equity firm based in Nashville. Bill Thomas replaces Gornik as CEO. ML In-Wall Is this bad news for Thiel fans (and we count ourselves in that number)? Thomas says the company will inject the capital needed to speed up research and get speakers to market faster. The Thiel facility in Lexington, KY, will remain, as will many of the existing staff. It’s clear that the new owners are taking a hands-on role. We also hope they know that progress can take time. In the meantime, Gornik and her daughter, Dawn Cloyd (who had been taking care of international sales), have found new homes with Quadrant Solutions. Quadrant makes permanent magnets and magnetic assemblies…in other That’s MartinLogan (as it is now words, they make parts for loudspeaker spelled), and this is one of the latest companies. It’s a little like going from models, the Helos 12 ($329 in Canada). Maggie Works making cars to making steeringHow wheels. If you associate the company with tall has beenelectrostatic speakers, this We wish them both well. UHF is, and high-end for many years, meant to go into the wall or the product, a print magazine. But we know ceiling, may surprise you. Or perhaps more and more not,audiophiles as this once exclusive brand long ago want to read it oninto theirthe vast spaces of the Big Box moved computer or iPad. And they’re Sony announced its new “4K” TV stores. to save money too.no opinion as to the relasets in Vegas, and it took willing the stage We have Click here, Maggie at NAB (the National Association of and tiveletquality of this speaker, but we do Broadcasters) to launch them, explain at least how have to getan theopinion full concerning in-wall versionand for $4. in the US. The smallest, the Bravia in-ceiling speakers. They’re fine we mean a PDF XBR-55X900A, will cost $5,000.And These for supermarkets and elevators, but we version not without digitl rights are LCD sets with LED backlight, ourselves wouldn’t touch them. plasmas (which Sony has management never made), you can transfer to thelines. device of your choice. with resolution of 3,840 x 2,160 Sony 4K ADL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Audiophile Store. . . . . . . . . . .55-62 Audiyo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 BIS Audio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Blue Circle. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 Charisma Audio. . . . . . . . . . . . .14 Clarity Cable. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Divergent Technologies. . . . . . . . . 8 Entre’Acte. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Europroducts International . . . . . . 15 Furutech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Keith Monks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Kingsound. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Liberty Trading. . . . . . . . . Cover 4 Living Voice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Maggie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13, 43 Manley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Moon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 Quad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cover 4 Sunn Mook Acoustics. . . . . . . . . .13 There is of course no consumer source for such high-resolution material, but Sony Pictures has announced a new line of “Mastered in 4K” Blu-ray discs. They’re ordinary 1080p high-definition films, but they’ve been mastered from 4K material. Well, all right, but has Sony seen the film Baraka? It’s mastered from 8K material, and it’s been available for years (it’s recommended, by the way). As we write this we’re still waiting for OLED sets, promised by several companies, including Sony. Simaudio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 Simon Yorke. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 Sonic Artistry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 The TV business is a dodgy one these days, and in March a rumor sprang up that Panasonic was dropping plasma TVs. Not so, for now at least, but the company will spend $2.7 million to “restructure.” We suspect that means job cuts. Super Antenna. . . . . . . . . . Cover 3 Thorens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 UHF Back Issues. . . . . . . . . . . . 39 UHF Books. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine 81 Feedback Gossip&News Whither Panasonic? ADVERTISERS H State of the Art ow loud should you listen to music? That’s a discussion you may have had many times, first with your parents, then possibly with your significant other, and perhaps with your neighbors. Is there such a thing as too loud? There certainly is. Too soft? Definitely. One goal of a high fidelity system is to reproduce, at home, the experience of being at a live musical performance. It follows that the music should be at the same loudness it would be if it were live. Now, I can already hear the objection: you can’t play it as loud because your living room is much smaller than a concert hall. That’s a misconception. The perceived loudness should be that of a live performance, and of course less acoustic energy is needed to produce it in a small living room than in Symphony Hall or Madison Square Garden. What happens if you listen at too low a level? If your source is the radio, probably not much. Stations compete to be the loudest on the dial, and so they use large amounts of dynamic compression, typically some 30 decibels or so. The result is that a (supposedly) soft passage will be a thousand times louder than it would be in real life. And so everything will be easily audible, but the relationship of the different sounds that make up the music will be pretty much squished. But the radio is not a real hi-fi source, except in exceptional circumstances, such as a live concert, and even then only if the engineers can keep their hands off the dynamics. Let us suppose that you are listening to a top-quality CD, LP or digital file, and that the sound is not compressed. What then? What then happens is that the softer sounds will be very soft indeed. It might not matter if you listen to rockers who have turned their guitar amplifiers up to “11,” but most music does include soft passages that will be several tens of decibels below max. In a real concert hall or other musical venue, you would hear them easily. At home, the answer is not so clear. 82 ULTRA HIGH FIDELITY Magazine by Gerard Rejskind Natural, unamplified music has a huge dynamic range. It’s true of a solo piano, and so you can imagine the range of a symphony orchestra or a jazz band. Some dynamic peaks will actually not have been recorded, because they consist of very brief, very loud spikes of energy. That may not matter, because a brief spike will be at such a high frequency it wouldn’t be audible anyway. Content at very low level is another matter. When you reproduce it, or attempt to reproduce it, you are between a rock and a hard place. There is of course the danger that a soft passage, especially in classical music, will disappear altogether. Play a symphony at background level, and some pianissimo passages will be barely above audibility. This may be true even if you have pristine hearing, because any home has background noise, originating from heating or ventilation, refrigerators, passing traffic, and all the sounds of everyday living. The difference between this background hubbub and the maximum loudness of the music is the real dynamic range available to you. STATE OF THE ART: THE BOOK Get the 258-page book containing the State of the Art columns from the first 60 issues of UHF, with all-new introductions. See page 6. It won’t just be just soft passages you’ll be missing, either. Certain important music-related cues are down in the dust, and it is these cues that let you hear the difference between two otherwise similar musical instruments, as well as harmony, depth, space and other elements that add immensely to the enjoyment of a recording. Yet it is possible to listen too loud. If you play music at louder-than-realistic levels, then of course you could actually damage your hearing, and ironically at such punishing levels you will perceive less, not more. Even at realistic levels, which I am of course advocating, you may be sabotaging your own pleasure. That’s because not all systems are capable of even adequate performance at concert levels, and indeed that’s one reason the best systems can be so expensive. That fact may not be obvious, because the ear can be easily tricked. If distortion is high, you’ll think the sound is loud. Do a test: turn the volume all the way up on a small radio. Loud, isn’t it? In fact it isn’t (a portable radio can work up a tenth of a watt when the wind is blowing the right way), but distortion makes it seem loud — that’s an established psychoacoustic phenomenon. Distortion will actually mask that precious low-level information. Some expensive hi-fi systems sound reasonably good at medium volume, but at loud levels begin to sound like…well, hi-fi. So how loud should you listen? I would recommend listening so that the loudest passages are at full concert level, or as loud as the system is capable of playing with low distortion, whichever is softer. Of course you’ll hear the most detail, including timbre and spatial cues, if the room is quiet. What happens if the maximum loudness at which your system sounds good is well short of concert levels? Well, you’ll be losing detail, and the quest for high fidelity is a quest to preserve that detail. A good system can play loud enough to let you hear all of the music. A great system can play that loud without sounding as though it’s playing loud. I’ve got cable. What do I need your Super Antenna for? You might well wonder, but a surprising number of cable and satellite subscribers are ordering it. The “HDT V” cable channels are mostly compressed. A lot! Put the Super Antenna on your T V’s second input, and get local over-the-air channels the way they are meant to be viewed! Ov er t h e y e a r s w e’ v e s ol d thousands. In this, the Super Antenna’s latest incarnation, we buy and rebuild a junk antenna. We add our own high- qualit y transformer and a luxurious l o w - l o s s m u lt i - s h i e l d e d cable with a 24K gold-plated F-connector. Its broadband design covers the digital HDT V channels plus the entire FM band. SEE THE SUPER ANTENNA MkIII at The Audiophile Store, page 57 Why do UHF readers start reading their magazines at the back? Countless readers have confirmed it over the years: when they get their hands on the latest issue of UHF, they open it to the last page. The reason all of them mention: Gerard Rejskind’s last-page column, State of the Art. Since the magazine’s founding, the column has grappled with the major questions of high-end audio. It has been acclaimed by readers around the world. Now, the columns from the first 60 issues of UHF have been brought together into one book. Each is exactly as it was originally published, and each is accompanied by a new introduction. Order your copy today: $18.95 in Canada or the US, C$32 elsewhere in the world, air mail included. Apollo April Music Atlas Cables Audes AudioPrism ESL 2912 Brik Audio DH Labs The second model in the ESL range, it employs six electrostatic panels, the inner two utilising a concentric rings of anodes used to create the point source image. While all electrodes receive the same music signal, each electrode area reacts slightly differently, so that treble frequencies appear to come from the centre of the speaker. Construction is of tensioned aluminum extrusions coupled to stainless steel support structures. Highest-quality components are used. Three types of protection systems protect the panels from damage. 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