
LATEST ADDITIONS
Brilliant Corners #24: Consolidated Audio "Monster Can" & Fairchild 235 MC Step-Up Transformers
This means that aesthetics matter. During a recent trip to Japan, I found myself marveling at the many vintage audio components used in both public listening spaces and people's homes, and the high prices these meticulously restored devices command. I found many of them lovely, the patina of age only adding to their allure. In the West, where we believe in eternal progress, it's common to ask whether these components' performance is up to contemporary standards. "Sure, it looks cool, but how does it sound?" we might ask, as though the physical beauty of the gear is a distraction or, worse, a ploy. Recall the old audiophile joke about the initials of the design-forward Danish manufacturer Bang & Olufsen standing for "beauty only."
A Pleasant Surprise: Upstream Audio, Aesthetix, Clearaudio, Sonore
Audio Showcase: Harmonia Distribution, Harbeth, Fyne Audio, Prima Luna, Pathos, Sbooster, Kiseki
The Beatles in Mono According to Kevin
I'm even more pleased that it's all behind me."
Dave Dexter Jr. From his autobiography, PlaybackIt's almost too easy to make Dave Dexter Jr. the villain in the story of the Beatles' fumbled introduction to America. A devoted denigrator of rock'n'roll who thought it was a passing fad meant for the kiddies, and who also thought John Lennon played "lousy harmonica," he was just one of the many older music fans who were sure that Elvis Presley's hips had been a corrupting influence on America's youth, not to mention on good music.
The head of International A&R at Capitol Records, then owned by the UK's EMI, Dexter was no fan of British acts in general. He also turned down Manfred Mann, The Animals, The Yardbirds, and The Hollies.
A Sonic Oasis in Tampa: Audio Note UK, Soundlux Audio
Resolution AV Debuts Fyne Audio in Red Hook, Brooklyn, NYC
Rabbit Holes #15: King Oliver's (and Louis Armstrong's) Centennial
MoFi Electronics SourcePoint 888 loudspeaker
The SourcePoint 10 was the first MoFi speaker to be designed by Andrew Jones, whose earlier designs for KEF, Infinity, Pioneer, TAD, and ELAC had all taken up residence in Stereophile's Recommended Components listings over the years. The second of Andrew's designs for MoFi was the SourcePoint 8, which was favorably reviewed by Kalman Rubinson in September 2023. Priced at a competitive $1999/pair, the SourcePoint 8 also used a coaxial drive unit, but as the name suggests, the woofer diameter was 8" rather than 10". KR was also impressed by what he heard, writing that the SourcePoint 8 was a balanced, wide-range speaker that demonstrated how satisfying a small, relatively affordable loudspeaker can be.
Now we have Andrew Jones's third design for MoFi, the floorstanding SourcePoint 888, which costs $4999/pair.