Krell Evolution 202 preamplifier & 600 monoblock power amplifier Page 2

Each Evolution 600 has a single pair of high-quality T-type binding posts, best suited for bare wire (ha!) or spade-lug connections. They are a joy to use.

Whether you choose the silver or satin black color schemes, the fit'n'finish of the Evolution products is superb.

Evolution of a review
There were a few practical considerations in setting up the Evolution system. First, it's heavy. The 600s weigh 135 lbs each, and while I can lift 135 lbs in barbell form, I found it darned awkward to manipulate same in Evolution 600 form, with most of the weight behind the front panel. You'll need a friend to set them up—better yet, a dealer.

The Evolution components run hot, too—even the SACD/CD player. Krell delivered the Evolutions on the first day of 2006's heat wave, and they turned my living room into a sauna, forcing me to choose between listening to the Krells and running my air-conditioning. Fortunately, I did an end run around that problem by having an electrician install a dedicated circuit for the hi-fi.

If you can spend $55k on components, spend a few hundred more on a dedicated circuit to run them on. The difference was not subtle—I thought the Evolution stack was dead quiet before I got the separate line for the hi-fi. After, I heard far deeper into every recording. There was less noise, less grain, and more of everything else: space, dimensionality, and dynamics.

You probably think that by dynamics I mean the loud end of the spectrum. Well, I kind of anticipated that myself, but the Evolution 600s were already powering my system to levels that pretty much maxed out the room's acoustic ceiling. The differences I heard were at the silent end of the dynamic continuum—beyond the point that lesser systems define as silence. There's more stuff going on down there? I had no idea.

This was most noticeable with everything connected in CAST mode: Music was grain-free, liquid, detailed, and full of jump. Disconnecting the CAST interconnects and running the same components as balanced caused the Evolution system to sound ever so slightly rougher in texture, less detailed, and somewhat more curtailed at the extremes. Not a lot, but enough that I wanted to go back to CAST immediately.

CAST works—and it's addictive.

Evolution of a sound
Running the Evolution stack—including, for now, the Evolution 505 SACD/CD player—in CAST mode through the Canton Vento Reference 1 DC loudspeakers, I cued up El Canto de la Sibilla II, by Montserrat Figueras, La Capella Reial de Catalunya, and Jordi Savall (CD, Fontalis ES 9900). "Sibila Galaica," one of the little ditties of Alfons X (El Sabio), begins in total silence. Well not total—it's silence informed by the acoustic space of La Collégiale Romane du Chateau de Cardona. You think that's an unimportant detail? I might have too, but the Evolutions so clearly made that space one specific and unique space that it sure didn't seem unimportant while I was listening to it.

Then La Capella Reial de Catalunya began singing softly and Figueras' voice began soaring over it—once again, I was immersed not just in a gorgeous performance, but in a gorgeous performance happening in that singular acoustic, and being both defined by it and glorifying it.

Then they rang the bells. Holy crap—I nearly fouled myself. Those immense tolls—hitting peaks about 30dB louder than the singers—just about launched me out of my almost not-so-sweet spot. The Evolutions' vanishingly low noise floor may have defined the chapel, but their sheer grunt factor made that mad expostulation real. I've heard lots of stuff that excels at one or the other end of the dynamic range window but the Evolutions delivered the whole package.

Britten's Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes, performed by the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra conducted by Paavo Järvi (CD, Telarc CD-80660), also starts softly, but ebbs and flows dynamically throughout its entirety. Here I was incredibly aware of the precision of the Evolutions' re-creation of the chittering woodwinds and the low grumbling of the basses and cellos. This last was particularly impressive—most systems can't quite re-create the low-level, almost subliminally sensed perception of very softly played low strings in a big hall. With the systems I'm used to, even the very good ones, I need to turn up the volume to hear that—and then everything else is out of whack with reality. The Krells got it precisely—and uniquely—right.

Want to fry your ears with high-decibel rock'n'roll? The Evolutions did that, too, as clearly demonstrated by Stevie Ray Vaughan's Couldn't Stand the Weather (SACD, Indie 512). I don't mean just paint-peelingly loud (they can do that, but I can't—not for long), but the 600s did give that sense of physical/audible attack that live amplified music has, and that very little canned music delivers. And "Stang's Swang" swung.

Evolution of the Ayre
Substituting the Ayre C-5xe universal player meant leaving the realm of a pure CAST system, although the Evolution 202 did do an I/V conversion, thus allowing me to keep the 202 and 600s connected in CAST. However, switching to the voltage-domain Ayre did insert, as advertised, small amounts of grain—not so noticeable with Stevie Ray, but irritating with El Sabio. I love my C-5xe, and I suppose I was rooting for it a bit (perhaps not the most professional admission), but I wanted the Evolution 505 SACD/CD player back in the system. That couldn't happen, however, because I needed to keep that point of familiarity when I substituted the Conrad-Johnson CT5 for the Evolution 202 preamp.

Evolution of the tube
Why Conrad-Johnson's CT5 and not their ACT2? Well, partly because the CT5 is so close to the ACT2, and mostly because C-J had my ACT2 at the factory, preparing it for its third act, so it wasn't available.

The system of CT5, Ayre C-5xe, and Evolution 600 was really, really good, and very much what I'd grown used to before the Evolution system arrived at my house: dynamic, spacious, and tremendously easy to listen to. However, I felt it had added some things and removed others. Specifically, there was more noise and electronic texture in the sound, and less of that compelling below-the-noise-floor detail I'd begun to expect from the all-Evolution stack. Could I live with that system? Oh my gosh yes! As good as all of the Evolution components are individually, perhaps the standout—at least on its own—is the power amp, which has more muscle and fewer of the side effects of muscularity than pretty near any big amp I've heard...

Evolution of the hybrid
...including, I'm sorry to report, my reference Musical Fidelity Nu-Vista 300, which is itself quite a brute—not to mention one of the most linear-measuring power amps John Atkinson has ever had on his test bench. But the Evolution 600s were—you know this is coming, don'tcha?—quieter. No, I don't mean that the Nu-Vista hissed or buzzed (the C-J didn't either). I just heard deeper. Not only did acoustic spaces seem more distinct from one another and sounds more intensely embedded in them, but I could discern sounds and spatial cues more easily, particularly at the quiet end of the spectrum.

Let's face it—one thing that separates real live music from recordings is that we frequently have to mess with recordings' playback gain to hear stuff that, at a concert, we can effortlessly extract. That means turning up the quiet parts and turning down the loud parts, all so that we can stay in the same room with our electronic toys. The Evolutions are better at extracting those quiet cues than any device I've heard. They are scary real. And they were with every speaker system, large or small, that I connected them to.

I've lived with many Krell amps over the years, from the KSA-50 to the Krell Audio Standards to the FPB 600s. They've always been impressive, and there has been a clear progression from those early amps to the later models in terms of finesse, detail, and pace. The Evolution 600 put all of its forebears to shame.

Is it the best power amplifier I've ever heard? Quite possibly. Is that because I'm a Krell junkie? No. As good as Krell components have always been, I've always admired more than loved them. They've always been impeccably engineered, gloriously built, and not quite my cup of tea—they lacked, to my way of thinking, lovability.

Not this time. The low-level detail, sinuous pacing, and sheer power of the Evolution 600 amplifier captured music the way I hear it—and if the whole system is running CAST technology, you've got something that's very close to perfection squared.

Evolution of an idea
The Krell Evolution 202 preamplifier and Evolution 600 monoblocks are superb bits of kit. While taste always enters into such matters, I can't imagine any music lover not responding to their performance, which is darn nigh flawless. Yet buyers will have to accommodate the Evolution gear on a few levels. It takes up a lot of real estate—I had to completely rearrange my equipment supports several times before I had a scheme that supported everything without actually imposing on the soundstage (stacking the 600s between the speakers created an acoustic obstacle). It also consumes a lot of power and throws off a lot of heat.

Reality check: Am I really suggesting that the ne plus ultra of high-end sound starts with a system whose electronics cost $45,000, not including the source. Well, yes. It is an expensive system. I can't afford it, none of my friends can afford it, and perhaps few of you readers can afford it. But that doesn't mean that Krell shouldn't be making the Evolutions—or that you shouldn't buy them if you can afford them. The Krell Evolution components aren't flashy faceplates on empty boxes—those boxes are packed with expensive parts assembled beautifully, and the overall designs are based on extremely advanced thinking. They may be the best-engineered components I've ever experienced—and I thought I'd had some experience in that arena.

It's only money. I can say that because I don't have any, but if you can say it because you have lots, I can think of far less attractive luxuries to spend it on than the Krell Evolution components. As for the rest of us, Krell has a history of breaking new ground, then figuring out how to downscale it into more affordable components. That's what I'll be telling myself next month, when I go back to reviewing $139 amps.

COMPANY INFO
Krell Industries
45 Connair Road
Orange, CT 06477-0533
(203) 799-9954
ARTICLE CONTENTS

X