LATEST ADDITIONS

VAC Renaissance Signature Mk.II preamplifier

I had a wonderful audio moment the other night. It was late in the evening, after a long day. I was standing in the middle of my makeshift listening room&mdash;Trish's dining room&mdash;and in spite of the fact that we were moving in just a few weeks, I'd just unpacked and set up my combo of <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//analogsourcereviews/498/">VPI TNT Mk.V-HR</A> turntable and tonearm with Grado Statement cartridge and dug a box of LPs out of the stacks in the garage. I cued up Dave Brubeck's <I>Time Out</I> (Columbia/Classic CS 8192), and the first notes of "Blue Rondo &#224; la Turk" froze me in my tracks.

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Music Industry's Legal Ramble

<I>The Monsters are Due on Maple Street:</I> In the 1960 <I>Twilight Zone</I> episode with this title, inexplicable power outages and celestial lights cause the citizens of an idyllic American town to accuse one other of being aliens. Fear feeds suspicion, hysteria turns to mayhem, and soon lynch mobs roam the streets and former friends are burning down each other's homes.

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Against the Dying of the Light, a new CD from Cantus

The combination of accessible world music and transparent sound featured on <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//features/465/"><I>Let Your Voice Be Heard</I></A>, the CD released in 2001 by male-voice choir Cantus, made it an audiophile favorite. <I>Stereophile</I> editor John Atkinson returned to Minnesota earlier this year to record Cantus for a second time. This time, however, the program was very different: an ambitious sequence of choral works illustrating a musical and poetic progression from grief and sorrow to consolation and joy, following the tragic events of September 2001.

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