
LATEST ADDITIONS
Spin Doctor #22: Cleaning LPs and the HumminGuru NOVA HG05
After entering the store and browsing for a few minutes, I mustered up sufficient courage to head to the counter with the second Zeppelin LP and ask to listen to it. All was musical bliss for a few minutes. Then just as I was really getting into it, about halfway through "What Is and What Should Never Be," the clerk decided I'd heard enough and rudely interrupted my listening session with a "get lost kid" look on his face. I surprised him by pulling out my lawn-mowing cash and buying the album. I pedaled home furiously, as fast as I could, and slapped my first LP onto the family Garrard Autoslim, which I wrote about in Spin Doctor #11.
Dynamic Sound Unleashed: BorderPatrol, Living Voice, Triode Wire Labs
Revinylization #62: Lou Donaldson
A lot of people turned to see who dared profane the label within earshot of beloved Blue Note president Bruce Lundvall and his staff, including the late Tom Evered. A gasp of recognition followed when it was discovered that those words had come from Lou Donaldson, one of the few original Blue Note bebop stars still out partying and playing music in the 21st century.
Hybrid Harmony: Advance Paris, PMC
EMM Labs DA2i D/A processor
Now arrive two new components, the DV2's twin successors: the DV2i, an "integrated" stereo D/A converter with a software-driven, high-resolution digital volume control, and the subject of this review, the DA2i, a straight D/A with no volume control. Both cost $35,000.
Integrating Excellence: Estelon, Vitus Audio, Taiko Audio, Sonorus Audio, Crystal Cable, Infinity, ART Audio, and RevOpods
Sonic Awakening: House of Stereo, Steinheim, T+A, Wolf Audio Systems, Synergistic Research
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."