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Don’t Let Size Fool You
Posted Sun Oct 14, 2007, 10:30 AM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
I really enjoyed the mellow sound created by the USB-input Benchmark DAC 1 and the Studio Electric T3 loudspeakers. The speaker, with its 87dB sensitivity and 4 ohm impedance, is distinguished by the 6.5" broad-band drive-unit, encased in a stainless-steel sphere, that handles frequencies from 50Hz to 4kHz. Although you can see the diminutive silk-dome tweeter in the photo, the side-firing 8" woofer, which handles the single octave from 2550Hz, is missing from view. Very, very nice.
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At Last, a New PS Audio CD Transport
Posted Sun Oct 14, 2007, 10:25 AM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
Barrows Wurm urged me to "take a picture because it’s beautiful." This is PS Audio's as-yet-unnamed, forthcoming transport. A replacement for the aged PS Audio Lambda used in their RMAF rack display, it should cost under $2000. Other components included the Power Plant Premiere ($2195), GCC250 class-D Control Amplifier ($3495), and DL3 DAC ($995).
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PSPower Done Right
Posted Sun Oct 14, 2007, 10:19 AM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
The sound in the large PS Audio room was impressive. Despite, at one point, my trying to listen to music over three conversations at once, the system on display,all PS Audio save for the Avalon Ascendant speakers and JL Audio subswas distinguished by its full midrange and inviting warmth. The sign on the poster behind the system"Perfect Power Without the Box"refers to the company’s forthcoming rack, which will have a power conditioner built into the bottom, additional power filters for every component, and the power itself carried by the tails of the rack. The initial plan is for an 11" wide rack designed for smaller, "lifestyle" components. (I’m one of those folks more concerned with having a life than displaying a lifestyle, but a chacun son gout). A desktop version is also planned.
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The Best is Yet to Come
Posted Sun Oct 14, 2007, 10:11 AM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
Ayre and Vandersteen are two companies whose products have achieved an enviable reputation for excellence. I was, in fact, blown away by my listening experience in the Ayre room at RMAF 2006, and looked forward to an equally enveloping experience this year.
Wisely occupying two rooms, which allowed for talking in one and concentrated listening in another, Richard Vandersteen and Ayre’s Steve Silberman seem to have opted for an industrial-strength display, far more Brooks Brothers than Yves Saint Laurent. As was the case with many of the recently set up rooms I entered on the first day of the show, the sound had yet to open up and mellow out. I’ve actually skipped discussing a few of the rooms I visited because saying anything other than “what pretty boxes you have on display” would do a disservice to what I trusthope, praywere sincere and informed attempts to create something wonderful out of a maze of circuitry. With Ayre and Vandersteen, however, I have no lingering questions. I look forward to making further acquaintance with the Vandersteen 5A mated with the Ayre MX-R monoblocks, the C-5XE universal player, the P5-XE phono stage, and the new KX-R preamp, which adjusts volume by changing the circuit’s gain rather than using the usual attenuator pot.
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VMPS? Yes
Posted Sun Oct 14, 2007, 10:06 AM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
I was impressed by the extremely full-range presentation of the VMPS RMD-60 loudspeaker ($9950/pair) paired with the VMPS Very Solid Subwoofer ($1850)especially with the system's admirable bass control. Part of the credit goes to Bybee special-effect Golden Goddess AC cables and speaker bullets, Bolder Cable interconnects and cables, the rest to the Eastern Electric M156 monoblocks (160W into 8 ohms, $7000/pair, based on the EL 156 pentode tube), and Bolder's Statement Level Modded Squeezebox 3 ($1300). If The Bolder Cable Company’s display sounded this good with brand-new amps that were not yet broken in, I look forward to hearing it again once everything is fully ready to strut its stuff.
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The Return of the Beveridge Electrostat
Posted Sun Oct 14, 2007, 9:55 AM ET By John Atkinson
Many years ago, in a conversation I was having with Peter Walker of Quad, I asked him if there was a speaker he'd wished he'd designed. "PJ" thought for a moment, then said he admired the Beveridge electrostatic, where a flat panel fires into a waveguide, thus allowing the panel to overcome its Achilles' Heel: the very limited horizontal dispersion resulting from its width.
Harold Beveridge, like Peter, is no longer with us, but his son, Rick, who worked with his father back in the day, has reintroduced the speaker. The 6'-tall G3, beautifully finished in a 20-coat lacquer, takes advantage of modern materials and construction techniques and was being very effectively demmed with Joule Electra tube amps, EMM Labs digital source, and Audience cables and power conditioning. The system, including two G3 woofer modules and a Bryston 10B line-level crossover, will initally sell for $50,000 but the price will increase to $84,000 after the the first five have been produced. (Two have already been sold.)
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The Real Thing, Courtesy of Zu Audio
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 9:25 PM ET By John Atkinson
After a hard day's morning presenting my hi-rez digital audio dems, I wandered into the Marriott's Atrium to sip on a Starbucks Grande Cafe Mocha. There I enjoyed some fine singing and guitar picking from Dan Weldon on the Zu Audio stand. The Utah cable'n'speaker company, whose modification of the classic Denon DL103D cartridge will be reviewed in the December issue of Stereophile, was presenting live music throughout the Show, with their high-sensitivity speakers used as the PA. Nice one, guys.
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A Thing for Circles
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 9:15 PM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
The delightful Gilbert Yeung of Blue Circle, minus the Mickey Mouse ears and Snake Oil display I encountered at the last Show, has a thing for circles. I'm not complaining. After seeing boxes upon boxes upon boxes, encountering a surfeit of circles is super. (I have a feeling someone is going to rake me over the coals in the comments section for that one.)
Gilbert’s smaller system, consisting of the DAR 100Wpc, stereo, class-AB, hybrid integrated amp equipped with the 6SN7 tube ($2995), the BC 501ob DAC ($7395), and Jean Marie Renaud Offrande Signature speakers ($6500/pair) had a very seductive, smooth center to its sonic presentation that tempted me to forget about all the other rooms left to cover.
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Proclaiming Potential
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 9:09 PM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
A definite eye-catcher, the $25,999/pair spherical Proclaim Audioworks DMT-100 speaker system features an external crossover that facilitates the ability to balance stereo output in difficult listening environments. (The crossover includes an L-pad bypass option to ensure "the cleanest possible signal path...for audio purists.") Each driver is independently mounted in a spherical enclosure cast from a proprietary high-density laminate. Fine-tunable for one's room, each driver can be adjusted up to 45° off-axis; they also afford up to 12" vertical and horizontal positioning flexibility for the tweeter and midrange modules. Daniel Herrington's babies, designed by ear, are so new that their sensitivity has yet to be measured.
Paired with Al Stiefel's excellent Red Rock 50W amplifiers, the Gamut CD1 and D3 preamp, and Kimber Kable, these speakers conveyed the special timbre of period instruments with unusual veracity. What I consider in some ways a work-in-progress, the speakers still transmitted something special in the bass and midrange rarely encountered in other rooms. I look forward to making their further acquaintance.
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Come Listen, My Friend
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 9:02 PM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
The sweet solidity of the violin beckoned me from down the hallway (which is far more than I can say about some of the rooms I visited). I was hardly surprised to discover that I had been lured by Edge Electronics. Paired with the Tyler Acoustics Woodmere II speakers ($8800 base price, 185 lbs each), the Edge System handled silences wonderfully. That may sound like a backhanded compliment, but I mean anything but. Playing the exquisite Elly Ameling singing Schubert to piano accompaniment, there was a stillness, poise, and grace amidst the living flow of her voice that I rarely experience from sound systems. (I experienced something similar one year in the Joule/Elrod room at CES). On display were the new Edge CD player, whose RAM circuitry is said to perform advance error correction, the G8 amp, and G2 preamp (available with optional battery supply). Actually, passive display was not what was intended. Shipping mishaps from the company's new base in Florida had actually destroyed some of the intended components, which were replaced by older versions of Edge's current models, which Steve Norber lifted from his home system a few miles away.
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Rivaling Mass Market Doo-Doo?
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 8:59 PM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
Toward the end of Day One, I encountered my Bay Area Audiophile Society buddy Jeff Wilson in the hallway. Jeff, a true music lover and long-time audiophile whose ears I trust, is about to open a showroom with Bob Kehn in Oakland, CA that will feature Magico, VAC, Silversmith, and other top-quality brands.
As a new dealer on the prowl, Jeff drew me to the Audiomagus room. There, the combination of extremely inexpensive Kingrex electronics (T-20 amp $250, preamp $360), Trends TA-10 Marquis Edition ($325), Lotus Acoustics DAC ($325), and teeny John Blue speakers ($600) was making far better sound than a lot of the stuff non-audiophiles pick up at chain stores. Of course, when Cain & Cain "Ben" speakers ($6700/pair) replaced the John Blues, the presentation rose to another dimension. Rather than revealing flaws in the inexpensive electronics, the double Cains enabled the system to sound so much better. The room also featured a lot of other extremely inexpensive electronics, not heard at the time of my visit. If they can approach the sound quality of the Kingrex gear, watch out!
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Tuning Matters
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 8:54 PM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
In a room tuned with the amazing Acoustic System Acoustic Resonators to sound good with the glass window exposed, Darren and Bonnie Censullo of Avatar Acoustics displayed a system distinguished by the kind of openness and air that some people would kill for. Products included the Abbington Music Research AMR CD-77 and AMR AM-77 ($8500 each, both outfitted with NOS tubes), Acoustic System Tango Speaker ($13,500/pair), Current Cable Powercord and interconnects, and a host of Acoustic Resonators. If you look closely, you may see one of the diminutive resonators ($200$2200) on the rear window. This is one system I hope to revisit if time allows. I’d love to hear some of these products in my own listening room, which is far bigger than the hotel suites into which most systems were shoeboxed.
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The Stuff of Dreams?
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 8:52 PM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
Having hosted an AudioKinesis speaker demo at my home for the Bay Area Audiophile Society (BAAS), I feel confident saying that Duke LeJeune is one of the dearest men in the business. Here he demonstrates his new 92dB-sensitivity, 16 ohm impedance, 170 lb Dream Maker ($9000/pair), whose "controlled-pattern, offset bipole configuration" is designed to control the relative level of reverberant energy density in the room. If that sounds like gobbledegook, the vivid presentation of the AudioKinesis/AtmaSphere combo, which was admirably clear in the higher frequencies, whet my appetite for more extended listening in the future.
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Luxman Returns to the US
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 4:37 PM ET By John Atkinson
Undoubtedly contributing to the excellent sound I heard from the Vivid speakers in the previous story was this neat 30Wpc class-A integrated amplifier, the L-590A II ($9000) from legendary Japanese brand Luxman, shown here sitting on the top of the stack of Weiss gear. On A Higher Note is now distributing Luxman in the US.
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New Distribution for Vivid Speakers
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 4:23 PM ET By John Atkinson
We first encountered the South African Vivid speaker, designed by B&W alum Laurence Dickie, at a CES a couple of years ago and was impressed with their clarity, dynamic range capability, and freedom from coloration and distortion. For whatever reason, the brand failed to get a foothold in the US, but it was announced at RMAF that Vivid was now being distributed by On a Higher Note. I sat down in the sweet spot and after listening to a rather nice recording of Aaron Neville singing "Save the Last Dance for Me," Philip O'Hanlon put on a DVD-A he had burned on his PC using the $49 Cirlinca program and was playing back on a Weiss Jason transport and Medea DAC, which On A Higher Note is also now distributing. Now there was a familiar soundit was the 24/88.2 master of my recording of the slow movement from the Mozart Clarinet Quintet, which I had completely forgotten sending Philip a few years back.
Except that the sound of Chad Kassem's Blue Heaven Studio was more tangible than I had ever remembered from when I had mixed the masters. Obviously the four-way Vivid K-1s were stepping out of the way of the music in a most satisfying manner.
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Balanced Wilsons Honor Frankie
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 4:06 PM ET By John Atkinson
I always make a point of seeking out a Wilson dem at Shows, and in the RMAF room run by Denver dealer Audio Unlimited, I encountered not one but two systems featuring Wilson speakers. The smaller system offered WATT/Puppy 8s driven by Balanced Audio Technology's VK53 CD player and $6000 VK55SE integrated amplifiercompared to its predecessor, this now uses 6BH30 input and driver tubes, sitting on tubed current sourcesand sounded sweet indeed. But the real reason to visit this room was to hear the mighty MAXX2s driven by BAT's new Rex three-chassis ultimate preamp, VK600SE solid-state monoblocks and the new Paganini three-box SACD playertransport, clock, DACfrom English company dCS. BAT's Geoff Poor put on Frank Sinatra's Nelson Riddle-arranged "What's New," which Geoff feels is the singer's finest performance. Wow! Mr. Sinatra was there in the room with us.
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Usher Dancer Be-718
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 3:57 PM ET By John Atkinson
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Walking to the Kimber dem, I heard the familiar sounds of the Beatles' "Come Together" coming from the open door of the Usher room. I had to go in. A pair of the Taiwanese manufacturer's Dancer Be-718 two-ways ($2795/pair) was playing the song, fed by the LP release of Love on an Oracle tonearm/turntable fitted with a Zyx Atmos cartridge, which in turn was feeding the Oracle Temple phono stage, Oracle DAC 1000 preamp, and Usher's R.15 amplifiers. Cabling was all JPS Aluminata. Considering the large room, the relatively small Dancers appeared to have no problem filling it with sound. This is a speaker that deserves review coverage in Stereophile, I feel.
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Scaling the (Green) Peaks
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 11:12 AM ET By Jason Victor Serinus
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I couldn't resist the wonderful sounds of Louis Prima coming from the Green Mountain Audio room. Paired with Jaton Corporation’s Operetta AP2140A 2-channel Distributor amplifier ($1000, 140Wpc into 4 ohms, 70Wpc into 8 ohms), whose "processing filter circle eliminates 99.99% of noise at maximum volume," the intriguing-looking Green Mountain Calypso loudspeaker ($10,000/pair for the next month or so before the price increases 1015%) was producing the kind of extremely smooth sound that draws you into the music. The speaker measures 8889dB sensitivity, and utilizes a simple, first-order crossover to achieve "perfect" time-coherence. The midrange and tweeter are also adjustable forward and back for optimal sound in the listening position. The entire system, including the speaker, was wired with Marigo wire. I constantly find that Green Mountain's innovative designs produce lovely sound. Expect a whole new line of smaller, less-expensive speakers to appear on the Green Mountain website in another month or so.
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Acoustic Sounds' Chad Kassem's Big Score
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 11:02 AM ET By John Atkinson
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One aspect of audio Shows that I love is the software pavilion, where audiophiles can browse new, old, are rare vinyl to their hearts' content. Acoustic Sounds’ Chad Kassem wanted to show me some of his new Analog Productions releases, but ended up telling me about his recent purchase of 30,000 sealed LPsone and a half 53' trailer's worththat had been in storage since 1981, the stash assembled by an eccentric collector long since passed away.
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Kimber, IsoMike, & the Fry Street Quartet
Posted Sat Oct 13, 2007, 10:46 AM ET By John Atkinson
"How often do you hear no limiting, no compression, no mixing, and no equalization? Recorded in DSD and played back the same way today" announced the blurb for Ray Kimber's IsoMike dem at RMAF. Inrigued, I entered the ginormous Ballroom F to be confronted by a system costing no less than $507,288! The six pairs of humongous Sound Lab ProStat 922 electrostats were joined by two pairs of a prototype speaker from Sony in Japan, all driven by no fewer than 8 Pass Labs X350.5 monoblocks. Source was Ray's latest four-channel DSD master files stored on a Genex hard-disk recorder and decoded by EMM Labs DACs. Kable was all-Kimber, of course.
Whether it was Robert Silverman performing a Mozart piano sonata or Denver's Blue Knights marching band performing Shostakovich outdoors, the sound was stunning in its realism. But my favorite was a new recording of the Fry Street Quartet performing a Beethoven String Quartet, on which the Sony speakers outperformed the SoundLabs in some ways. At the recording's end, Ray (left, in front of the right-front Sony) brought out the Fry Street Quartet, whom he has sponsored performing a live concert each evening of the Show.
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