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Spin Doctor #8: The Wand 14-4 turntable, and a Visit to SME
In prior screeds, I have discussed the category of turntable designers I like to call deep thinkers, who twist their brains to come up with fresh thinking about how to approach the task of playing a vinyl record. If there is a poster boy for deep thinkers, it's got to be Simon Brown.
Brown is based on the South Island of New Zealand. I'm thinking that being in such a far-flung part of the world must have given his head plenty of space to get creative. First, in 2011 he created The Wand tonearm, a striking unipivot design that features a fat carbon-fiber armtube nearly 1" in diameter (below). Art Dudley wrote about The Wand in 2019, and I highly recommend that you read his thoughts, especially about his struggles to set up The Wand.
Revinylization #49: Steely Dan's Aja
From 1972's Can't Buy a Thrill to 1980's closing act Gaucho, Bard sages Walter Becker (19502017) and Donald Fagen occupied a place in pop music as unique as their songs' references to "wild gamblers," "midnight cruisers," "bodacious cowboys," and a female protagonist who "prays like a Roman with her eyes on fire." Much later, Becker and Fagen returned to the studio, issuing Two Against Nature to an audience still hungry for their singular R&B-and jazz-based music.
The Truth Will Make You Odd
Q Acoustics 5040 loudspeaker
Gramophone Dreams #80: Mobile Fidelity Electronics MasterPhono
When I reviewed the Sentec, I owned three turntables and about 300 records. But phono stagewise, I was a beggar and a borrower, hoping a friend's phono pre or some review product would jump out of the deck and become my reference.
Re-Tales #38: Supply ChainsKeeping It Local
To remain profitable, many hi-fi companies have outsourced production to faraway countries with lower labor costs. That, certainly, is a legitimate way of doing business. Yet many other hi-fi makers have chosen to work with suppliers that are local, regional, or at least domestic. There are good reasons for doing so, those manufacturers maintain.
Some of the advantages are obvious. Local labor may cost more, but shipping what they make is much cheaper.
The Replacements' Tim: Let It Bleed Edition
Leak Stereo 230 integrated amplifier
Prior to this review, I had expectations about the product under review, the Leak Stereo 230 ($1695 with the walnut enclosure), based on, among other factors, price.
Brilliant Corners #10: Tron Electric Convergence Signature & PrimaLuna EVO 100 phono stages
For Koenig, this issue wasn't merely academic. Before making his name as head of Contemporary Records in Los Angeles, he had attended Yale Law School, worked as a screenwriter and producer at Paramount, and gotten blacklisted by the House Committee on Un-American Activities. At Contemporary, he set out to become a leading practitioner of the art of phonography.