LATEST ADDITIONS
Phew—the audiophiles turned up for the Show
If a long line at registration is an indication of a show’s success—and it’s certainly one indication—then Home Entertainment 2007, held this weekend at the Grand Hyatt in Manhattan, could be pronounced a success by an hour after it was open to the public. The line was long enough that some people were grumbling—but their complaining stopped when they got in and had a chance see and hear all the neat stuff at the show. Exhibitors John Atkinson talked to at the end of the day seemed very happy with the turnout.
What'Chu Talking About, Wessles?
Huckleberry would really like to know.
Queen B
Bagheera is not amused.
HE2007 Finally Here!
Check out our blog coverage <A HREF="http://blog.stereophile.com/he2007/">here</A>.
Turn It Up!
<I>Invention & Technology</I> considers the electric guitar.
Pass The A1
Reissues. Hey, I don't care who you are, everyone has a guilty pleasure that's now been reissued on CD, possibly with bonus goodies. What's gonna happen to reissues in the big, new, all–digital, all–download, all–the–time world is an easy one: listeners will do the same thing they do with new records, download the tracks they want and leave the lesser tracks as scraps. Funny how it's now possible to think of cuts of meat and record albums in the same breath: bites of choice flesh you eat surrounded by bone, fat and gristle you leave. It must make musicians feel real good to see their collection eviscerated in this way. You can say it serves them right for filling out albums with lesser tracks but then there's that creeping alchemy that happens upon further listening when some of the tracks deep into the record become essential. How many album tracks have you grown fond of after repeated listens versus those that jumped out at you the first time you dropped the needle or pressed play?
Wil Wheaton: Geek in Review
If you only know Wil Wheaton as <I>TNG</I>'s Wesley Crusher, you ought to read his stuff on the web. He's smart and he's funny—and, in this column on Internet radio, absolutely spot on the money.