
LATEST ADDITIONS
Constellation's Big Switch: Smaller, Smarter Power
Fezz Equinox D/A processor
Digital's rapidly evolving technology made the next wave of DACs sound strikingly clear and quiet, with some touchy-feely hints of wetness to suggest a more natural transparency. Unfortunately, most of these newfangled wet DACs sounded like distilled water tastes.
For me, digital transparency didn't become truly wet, colorful, or naturalistic until I discovered NOS R-2R converters, which made midlevel four-figure DACs, like my Denafrips and HoloAudio, sound like bits bathed in luminosity. Very relaxed. Grainless. Ektachrome.
Lyngdorf Audio MXA-8400 8-channel power amplifier
Class-A Act: Gryphon’s Antileon Revelation Arrives
MBL's Marvels Make Munich Magic
A Net Win: Nordost Improves its Ethernet Switch
Moonriver Show Off Its 606 Integrated, Due in Q4
A Four-Cent Cigar and the Tyranny of Better
Robinson wasn't so much guarding his palate as preserving his contentment. A simple pleasure had settled into place, untroubled by ambition, and he knew to leave it alone.
I think about Robinson's four-cent stogie sometimes, usually when someone asks whether a $10,000 integrated amplifier really sounds five times better than a $2000 one. (Answer: No, it doesn't.) Or whether hearing a $12,000 DAC will ruin you for the $1000 unit you used to love. (My take: Very possibly.)