Kalista DreamPlay One CD player Page 2

Although I don't care for remote controls in general, the Kalista's is noteworthy if only because its housing is made entirely of aluminum, and is formed with a pleasant-feeling ridge around its outer edge—it's reassuringly heavy. Its Mute button has no effect, leading me to assume there are other Métronome or Kalista products to which it corresponds; an unexpected bonus is a pair of buttons that diminish or increase the brightness of the display—though these are actually labeled Vol– and Vol+.

Listening
Here's the thing that set into motion such a difficult task: I chose for the DreamPlay One's maiden flight the album Looking Back, by the progressive bluegrass trio Phillips, Grier & Flinner (Compass 7 4342 2). As the first selection, an instrumental version of Bill Monroe's "Tennessee Blues," filled the room, I was impressed to a degree that seldom happens when I fire up a new piece of gear: In particular, I was genuinely surprised by the sheer sense of the presence of the acoustic instruments before me, especially Todd Phillips's double bass, which enters on a simple two-note kickoff (E2 to A1). Matt Flinner's mandolin and David Grier's guitar were similarly there, and the image of each instrument was of the right size, relative to the others and in absolute terms. I was reminded of the latter characteristic just a few measures later, when Phillips plays a deep E1 against the dominant chord: through the Kalista, his bass was identifiably big, not to mention resonant, not to mention unmistakably wooden.

918kalista.2.jpg

But it wasn't just the sound that impressed me—it was also the music-making. In "Tennessee Blues," it isn't until the middle of Flinner's third chorus as a soloist that bassist Phillips begins a steady two-notes-to-the-bar rhythm; through the Kalista, when the song reached that point, the increase in momentum—and excitement—was palpable.

I was so impressed that I at once dragged my heavy-ass Sony disc player back into the room for an immediate direct comparison. Through the Sony, the tempo of Phillips's bass didn't lag, per se—it simply lacked life. The comparison suggested, correctly or not, that the DreamPlay One was able to find and preserve all of the tiny randomnesses that otherwise go unnoticed—microdetails of timing and texture that, when finally, rarely heard, tell me: That's a human being making those notes.

918kalista.3.jpg

While the SCD-777 was still in my listening room, I used it to play cellist Pieter Wispelwey's recording of the Andante cantabile from Tchaikovsky's String Quartet 1, arranged for cello and string orchestra, from the "Red Book" CD layer of a 2001 SACD/CD (Channel Classics CCS SA 16501). I felt a decent level of involvement—about what I've come to expect with the Sony, after 17 years of ownership—and a sound that was minimally colorful and textured, with a slight upward tilt to its overall timbral balance. When I moved that disc over to the DreamPlay One, I heard improvements both sonic and musical: I can't say there was a better suggestion of the cello's presence in my room, as there'd been virtually none with the Sony—but through the Kalista there was fine presence and, again, a convincing sense of scale. The cello sounded more colorful and more (appropriately) resonant, and Wispelwey's playing impressed me as feeling more purposeful, driven, and expressive.

I followed up with the London Symphony Orchestra, under ?iven Fjeldstadt, playing Grieg's Peer Gynt suite, in a reissue of the great Decca/London recording (London/Classic Compact Discs CSCD 6049). With the Kalista player, out poured the colorful, tactile, limber Decca sound one associates with their famous SXL series of classical LPs. Once again I made a direct comparison with the Sony, and once again the Kalista allowed the music more dynamic nuance and force, the latter especially audible in the strings at the beginning of Dance of the Mountain King's Daughter. And the Kalista, despite sounding more tonally balanced than the slightly tipped-up Sony, provided considerably more detail throughout—most notably at the beginning of Arabian Dance, in which the cymbal on the downbeats was easier to hear. From that point forward, the Sony was re-banished to my office.

918kalista.4.jpg

Popular music and jazz also benefited from what I came to regard as the Kalista's reliably and realistically colorful—indeed, vivid—sound. Enjoy it though I do, Bryter Later is my least favorite Nick Drake record, yet when the swelling strings from that album's "Introduction" poured from my speakers—I listened to the version from the collection A Treasury (SACD/CD, Island B0003518-36)—I found my stance beginning to soften. It may well have happened at some point in time, but I really can't recall the last time a CD player was so good that it helped change my mind about music I'd never quite favored. Yet if the DreamPlay One allowed beautiful music to sound ever more so, it allowed more aggressive musics to sound downright fierce. Never has "Simple Sister," from Procol Harum's Broken Barricades (Salvo SALVOCD022), sounded more sinister, Chris Copping's electric bass and Gary Brooker's electronically speeded-up piano gaining momentum and edgy force not heard through other players. The DreamPlay One is also to be commended for surpassing any other player at revealing Chris Copping's organ work throughout the same album's "Power Failure," not just in the song's final bars.

One of the most poignant moments with the DreamPlay One came when I played Joanna Newsom's masterpiece, Ys (Drag City DC303CD)—and my 20-year-old daughter, home from college, entered the room just as the first song, "Emily," began. My Julia, who is very much a Joanna Newsom fan and has most of her albums on vinyl, exclaimed, "That sounds amazing! I've never heard a CD sound that good!" We both paused to listen, and as the strings and jaw harp and banjo and other elements of Van Dyke Parks's lovely arrangement emerged, seemingly whole, from the mix, blending with Newsom's concert harp—which had never sounded quite so full-size or present until now, at least from CD—I had to agree.

Filter comparisons
I've been listening for a living for a very long time. The distinctions between the DreamPlay One's six user-selectable filters were the smallest real differences—as opposed to instances in which a credible suspicion existed that I was imagining differences—I've ever heard. The difference in sound between correct and inverted signal polarities is greater than the differences between the two most distinctly opposed of these settings.

918kalista.5.jpg

The differences I heard were more of musical than sonic consequence. As I switched among filters, none of the changes resulted in differences in tonality—no selections were consistently brighter or duller than others. Rather, the thing most affected was musical timing—again, to a slender degree. In general, the Slow Rolloff filters allowed music more believable timing, with greater momentum and more realistic flow, than the Sharp Rolloff filters. The Slow Rolloff filters allowed every kind of music to sound pacier and more natural. As to why this was so, I have no idea—in fact, if you assume that such filters make their presence known more in the note envelope's decay component than its attack, my findings would seem counterintuitive. But I'm confident about what I heard: I came to regard the Kalista's Super Slow Rolloff filter as the one that let music sound best—and once I'd acclimated to it, switching back to a Sharp Rolloff filter left me feeling slightly less comfortable, almost as if the musicians were playing with less certainty—but to only an infinitesimally small degree, and only in direct comparison.

With the default Sharp Rolloff filter engaged—as it was during about half of the listening impressions described above—the Kalista was a supremely musical product; with Super Slow Rolloff filter, I liked it a hair more.

Conclusions
That wasn't so hard after all, was it?

If I actually believed in a reviewing model that puts the sound of real music at one extreme and the worst imaginable playback system at the other, then I suppose I'd labor in fear of being made redundant, or at least of painting myself into a rhetorical corner, when faced with a product as good as the Kalista DreamPlay One. Fortunately, domestic audio—like motoring, cuisine, wine, art, and life itself—isn't so simple that it can be quantified and described along a single continuum of good to bad, or of flawed to neutral. You paid good money for this review—either that, or you're a willing and compliant deer at the salt lick our advertisers have paid us to spread out before you—and damn it all, you want more than just This sucked less than anything else I've heard. You've told me so!

Although it's been a long time since I last heard Naim Audio's 555 CD player, a discontinued product that until now I considered the world's best, I'm confident in saying that the more vivid, more spatially accomplished, and no less musically accomplished Kalista DreamPlay One goes it one better. Music, sound, ergonomics, appearance—the DreamPlay One is without flaw in every regard but price.

COMPANY INFO
Kalista Audio
US distributor: Wynn Audio
20 Wertheim Court, Unit 31
Richmond Hill, Ontario L4B 3A8, Canada
ARTICLE CONTENTS

COMMENTS
Bogolu Haranath's picture

"Hello, Star Trek Enterprise here ........... How can we help you?"

"Ahoy ahoy, Alexander Graham Bell here .......... Beam me up Scotty"

Indydan's picture

I wonder how many of these will sell? In a world where people are buying more and more streamers and DACs, CD players aren't flying off the shelves.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

May be a collector item for people with deep pockets :-) ...........

ok's picture

save for the shortage of transport spare parts; which is really a shame, since well designed cd players can wipe out almost anything out there sonically speaking.

Jason P Jackson's picture

I agree. A good cd based system playing decent recordings can deliver sonic tricks I've yet to hear elsewhere, save megabuck record players. Call me sheltered, considering I've yet to hear what high-bitrate downloads can do.

jdpalmer1's picture

Really? I lasted about 30 seconds before I had to bail. Someone is in serious need of vocal lessons.

georgehifi's picture

Not very good on the bench there JA. Kinda had to bite your tongue a bit in the conclusion.

And what with not getting digital inputs for this kind of money, that stinks.

Cheers George

Axiom05's picture

Not sure why this kind of product is reviewed in Stereophile. I doubt that any potential purchaser even reads audio magazines, they are the type that relies strictly on the recommendation of the sales person. If it looks cool and is expensive, then it must be great. Anyone that cares even the slightest bit about measurements would not consider this player for even a second.

John Atkinson's picture
Axiom05 wrote:
Not sure why this kind of product is reviewed in Stereophile.

I have just written an As We See It essay for the November issue on this subject. In the meantime, see my thoughts at www.stereophile.com/content/price-event-horizon.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

Ortofan's picture

... the combination of an ineffective anti-aliasing filter and a rolled-off high frequency response - to impress a Stereophile reviewer?

Would the reviewer have been half as impressed if instead the unit was packaged in a relatively plain black box and the remote control was made of plastic?

Bogolu Haranath's picture

You have revealed the secrets to success ........ Also add good looks :-) .............

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Beauty is only skin deep ......... What is under the hood is what matters :-) ............

RH's picture

Looking at that bling-bling design, one can't help wondering of this review suffered from the expensive-wine-label-on-a-cheap bottle bias effect. (As JA's measurements seem at least in part to suggest).

If ever there was a review begging for blind test methodology, this would be it.

supamark's picture

Perfect
Impulse
Response

AD came out and said it in the review, plus if you've read much of Art's stuff (and I'm sure you have) then you'd know what he values in a playback system.

Ortofan's picture

... it radiates from the speakers AD is using, propagates through his listening room and finally reaches his ears?

supamark's picture

what's the point of any of this? It's just going to get mangled by the speakers/amp/preamp/room/whatever anyway. yeah, you're right, let's all just get some cheap used Radio Shack speakers and a cheap Sansui receiver from the 80's and be done with it. smh.

Ortofan's picture

... standard equipment in a 2001 Subaru:
https://www.stereophile.com/content/naim-cd555-cd-player-art-dudley-october-2007

Bogolu Haranath's picture

"Don't review (audio) equipment with your eyes" ............ John Atkinson :-) .........

jeffhenning's picture

If you bought one of these, your photo should be next to the phrase in the dictionary, "more money than brains".

Yes, it's pretty, but it's performance no better than any disc player you can buy for 2.5% of its price. That it only plays CD's is stupefying.

This unit is absurd in the worst way.

Allen Fant's picture

Outstanding! works as always- AD
I enjoyed how you compared this player to your road-tested Sony ES spinner. I had no idea that the Philips CDM PRO12 transport was still in production? Which other brand(s) still incorporate this veteran transport into their spinner designs?

CG's picture

It's really fascinating that Art found such small differences in the filter settings. This is consistent with some other observers trying different filter shapes in other systems. Other factors in the player and system characteristics are probably more of a factor in the overall experience. But, a difference is a difference.

Still, how does this square with the night and day differences some observers are reporting with MQA processed recordings?

ok's picture

the primary role of digital filtering is very similar to that of the analog subsonic filters of yore – namely safety concerns about the subsequent equipment; amplifier topology/bandwidth and tweeter frequency extension/power handling should be the main factors in digital filtering selection. From a purely (ultra)sonic point of view, save for possible intermodulation by-products, no low-pass filter is required whatsoever.

supamark's picture

it's because when the DAC tries to convert data with fewer than 1 sample per wavelength back to analog weird and often unpleasant sounds tend to arise.

ok's picture

though is extremely difficult for any real music listener to be able to discern these alien sounds in any kind of input signal other than pure HF sine wave.

tonykaz's picture

It's a ROLEX kind of product, isn't it?

Maybe a ROLEX Presidential extravagance expressly for people like our own Agent Orange in Washington.

I have to admit that I'd love to own and "Show-off" all that Chord Stuff that's so darn striking and industrially beautiful, who wouldn't ?

Back in the Day, I kept a Gold Mitchel Gyrodek in my Esoteric Audio Store Front Window.

If you love your Audio Gear more than your Wife, this CD Player is a dam good way to prove it.

However, now-a-days, I'm rather inclined to the LG Phone method of Audio advancement and rely on a Porsche 718 Hybrid for showing off.

I'm not showing off, I'm investing in my Grandchildren's future Quality of Life.

I vote for the PS Audio Player

Tony in Michigan

ps. it does make for one hell of a Front Cover !!!

John Atkinson's picture
tonykaz wrote:
it does make for one hell of a Front Cover !!!

Indeed it does. Again this is something I write about in the November issue's As We See It.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

tonykaz's picture

Another "Must Read" from Stereophile.

Tony in Michigan

johnnythunder's picture

As someone who worked in the magazine business for 16 years - TIme Inc. - and who intimately involved in the choice of covers, I look forward to reading your November column. In a nutshell, for a magazine cover, you strive to make 'eye candy" and make things look larger than life.

supamark's picture

which traditional print magazines saw the internet coming and took action (whether it was successfull or not is a different issue - Stereophile seems to have done okay, others less so) and which were just caught totally off guard.

ok's picture

The bulk –if ever was one– of unnecessarily expensive US/EU-made audio gear is actually being sold to Asian markets; opposite is the trade route case for plebeian electronics..

Christian Goergen's picture

Noone can say, you didn't: "I asked—no, begged—for the opportunity to write about the DreamPlay One. "
I'm shure you enjoyed listening as writing the advertisement.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Stereophile could come up with an yearly calendar (just like Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue) with exotic, good looking audio equipment :-) ...........

Anton's picture

That is so great, you deserve royalties.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

I will be happy with free life time subscription to Stereophile including the yearly calendar :-) .......

Duck851's picture

"the maximum balanced output level was twice the unbalanced, at 4.92V"
The peak in Fig 1 is over 1V higher than this - might it make music more dynamic than the digital representation or is it that it can't sustain it's true max during the max output test?

John Atkinson's picture
Duck851 wrote:
"the maximum balanced output level was twice the unbalanced, at 4.92V" The peak in Fig 1 is over 1V higher than this...

The maximum output level is an RMS figure, which is lower than the peak; 3dB lower for a sinewave. The Kalista's peak output voltage is therefore just under 7V, so there's no conflict between the two voltages.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Stereophle could probably re-publish some of the articles published in the 90s and early 2000s ....... like the article comparing AAC, Mp3 and CD quality sound as well as 'Quality lies in the details' on the Stereophile website .........

John Atkinson's picture
Bogolu Haranath wrote:
Stereophile could probably re-publish some of the articles published in the 90s and early 2000s ....... like the article comparing AAC, Mp3 and CD quality sound as well as 'Quality lies in the details' on the Stereophile website ........

The Features and Reference sections of our website archives - see links at the foot of every page - have almost all the technical articles we have published over the years. You can sort them by title, date of being posted, or date of original publication. You can also use our search engine in the menu bar at the top of every page.

For example, if you enter the phrase (in double quotes) "Quality Lies in the Details" in the search magazine, all the pages of the article can be found at www.stereophile.com/features/112/index.html.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

RH's picture

Mr Atkinson,

I'd like to express my admiration, and thanks, for your product, in print and especially on line. This Stereophile is so well presented in terms of graphic style, organization, and ease of use. No squinting at low contrast text on ridiculously colored backgrounds. It's easy to find exactly the content I want (specs, measurements etc always there at the bottom of the page). This is probably the most consistently pleasant site to read that I routinely visit.
(That goes for the magazine as well - I'm a digital subscriber and sometimes still pick up the print version).

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Thanks JA ........ Another interesting and informative article to read .......... three part series of "loudspeaker measurements" ..........

Bogolu Haranath's picture

"Always pass on what you have learned" ........ Yoda :-) .............

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Stereophile published an article in 1995 about similar topics like output voltages etc ......... The article was written by Robert Harley with contributions by JA .......... I found that article on Google search ........

jimtavegia's picture

That costs more than any of my first 3 houses. And it is not the best C D player ever made?? Wow! I am so glad JA tests things.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

Thank you JA for testing and measuring the audio equipment ............

RH's picture

I am hugely grateful to Mr. Atkinson for all the measurements he has supplied for all these years. It seems to me one of the most valuable individual contributions to the high end audio hobby.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

There is an audio hall of fame for audio equipment .......... I am not sure if there is an audio hall of fame for people ...... If there is such an audio hall of fame for individuals, JA is eminently qualified as an inductee .......

Robin Landseadel's picture

I know I'm not in the market for $45,000.00 of digital replay. That said, I'm always interested in assaults on the state of the art. In one regard this Blingy collection of audio objects appears to be SOTA. The impulse test, without ringing fore or aft, appears perfect. Art Dudley liked the player best with the slow roll-off filter, the mode that produces that perfect impulse test. I think there's something to that.

However, the product is prima-facie absurd.

This is my wish list for a disc spinner in the 21st century. First, it has to play everything. As physical products are preterite, they will have to be treated as "special cases" from here on out. Second, I would want all the disc data moved to a solid state memory. I would use the data from the SSD instead of the disc drive. I would design the disc player/storage locker to be accessible to DAPs so one could smoothly and easily move sound files to the DAP. I would separate the disc drive/"storage locker" from the DAC. I would include HDMI as an output option for obvious reasons. The DACs I'd come up with would come in "Plain"—just 2 channels output, no bells & whistles—& "Peanut", with streaming options built in. There would also be a "Surround" flavour. All the DACs would have USB and HDMI inputs in addition to the usual suspects.

I could imagine a $45,000.00 version of some combination of these boxes making sense. But a $45,000.00 CD player that only plays CDs? Pricey bling.

Ortofan's picture

... the CD player that was standard equipment in a 2001 Subaru?
Anywhere near as perfect as that from the Kalista? Probably not.
Yet that CD player in the Subaru was able to move AD "close to tears" as related here:
https://www.stereophile.com/content/naim-cd555-cd-player-art-dudley-october-2007
Are you still certain that the nearly perfect impulse response was the key factor that made AD so highly rate the sound reproduction from the Kalista?

Archimago's picture

Seriously guys,
Just because the impulse response is of short duration, or have no pre-ringing IMO are not characteristics that tell us if the filter is "perfect". More myth-making in the audiophile press IMO. In fact, I would argue that it should be the opposite for high fidelity.

Anyhow, as a start, perhaps someone should show us where pre-ringing shows up in some actual music and under what circumstances. Once that is demonstrated, then maybe we can get somewhere with actual understanding of what is or is not desirable as far as impulse responses go.

ok's picture

..though the same could also be the case with harmonic distortion, which is definitely part of "real" music one way or another; certain electronic distortion patterns could actually compensate for harmonics that have been altered or lost in the recording proccess, couldn't they?

Robin Landseadel's picture

They could, but of course, the electronics would have to be some sort of "thinking machine" for that sort of task. As it is, tubeaholics settle for second harmonic distortion ladled on like so much gravy.

On the other hand, lack of ringing fore and aft suggests that something is being done right.

Tubes are for folks who can't face reality. Drugs are for people who can't stand solid state.

I think I'm done here.

ok's picture

that despite all “distortion pride” tube tech, I still cannot reliably tell tubes from solid state (or class A from class D or..) merely by hearing. Individuality counts more than race in audio as well as in people. No, it’s not distortion – must be the lighting of the lamps..

CG's picture

One of the interesting details about the audio engineering field over the past decades is the advances in measurement capabilities. Through clever design and better components, it's now possible to measure harmonic distortion down to -120 dBC or lower. That's pretty much like being able to hear the foot steps of an ant walking across the stage in front of the monitors at a Led Zeppelin concert of the 70's.

Some of this has been attained through techniques such as waveform averaging over many "sweeps" of the desired measurement band. Really amazing stuff.

What really has not progressed much is new measurements that give better insight into the details of complex modulation - aka musical content - and the fidelity to the source. To hit on averaging again, it may be that averaging actually masks the real thing to measure - events that take place differently in each sample period. That sort of thing has been examined in other areas of electronics, but has been pretty much ignored in audio.

Why is that? Does nobody care? Is arguing more fun?

That's not even taking into account how the human auditory system might perceive sound. Pretty much everybody knows there's plenty of stops along the recording chain where the program content is modified to make it sound "better". Whether it's compression or changing the mix, that's a distortion of the original. That pretty much says that perfect fidelity is not what people perceive to be best, right?

As for the perfect impulse measurement, yeah, you don't find perfect impulses in the real world of music. It may not even be that a perfect impulse is what is truly important. Instead, it may well be that, by chance, a filter that reproduces an artificial pulse well conditions the sound in a way that people find to be more pleasing or more realistic. Who knows - maybe alias products are a desirable thing with regard to how people perceive sound. This test might have uncovered something that it wasn't designed for. It would hardly be the first discovery of that nature - I think of Jansky and cosmic noise.

My point is that I don't think anybody really has a good handle on this. The existing dogma of THD (c'mon; sound is composed of lots of tones taking place all at once - there is far more IMD power than harmonic power in an imperfect system) may be an important condition, but it hardly tells the whole story. I'm not going to pick on the audio press for that. They may not be offering a resolution, but neither is anybody else. The BBC tried very hard back a few decades ago and got nowhere. Who's to blame? Better yet, who's going to make progress that people won't spend man-centuries arguing over?

teched58's picture

Over the top audio bling with a nouveau riche design sensibility. The audio equivalent of a McMansion.

davip's picture

Test it playing CDs against the corresponding vinyl release (using originally analogue recordings of course) on any decent ~ $3k turntable. Then, tell your readers on the basis of sound-quality whether they wouldn't be better off buying that turntable and $40,000 of Mint vinyl. I gave my entire CD collection to goodwill for this very reason and am currently rebuilding my vinyl collection. This comparison should be made every time such super-expensive digital audio is gushed over in a magazine ostensibly dedicated to audiophilia...

ok's picture

unabashedly contemplative comments based on purely impersonal interest for someone else’s hard earned blood money ;-)

hollowman's picture

From the review ...
"Clauzel said that the Elektra also contains 'specific ultra-low-noise regulation'dedicated to the player's DACs—a dual-mono pair of Asahi Kasei Microdevices AK4497 chips, implemented without digital oversampling."

This does not make sense. The AK4497 DAC is a delta-sigma design. It HAS to use digital filtering (oversampling). Nowhere in its datasheet does it mention non-oversampling.
The datasheet does note:
"six different digital filter types are selectable according to the user audio and system preferences."

Refs:
https://www.akm.com/akm/en/product/datasheet1/?partno=AK4497EQ

Bill Leebens's picture

Sorry! ;->

David Harper's picture

this reviewer is delusional. CD players do not have "sound quality" This review is the reason the audio press is a laughingstock. What is it that this fool doesn't understand about one's and zero's? Every correctly designed modern CD player sounds EXACTLY the same.

Robin Landseadel's picture

Too bad they don't make any of these "correctly designed modern CD players" anymore. Ah . . . the good old days . . .

John Atkinson's picture
David Harper wrote:
this reviewer is delusional. CD players do not have "sound quality" This review is the reason the audio press is a laughingstock.

If that is the case, Mr. Harper, then why do you read Stereophile? If you don't do so, then why are you posting to our site? You are like a Protestant posting to a Catholic website that transubstantiation is a fraud, that the wafer and wine in the communion chalice are just that, ie, you are a troll.

John Atkinson
Editor, Stereophile

Anton's picture

"You are like a Protestant posting to a Catholic website that transubstantiation is a fraud, that the wafer and wine in the communion chalice are just that..."

I was raised Catholic, then escaped in 1st grade. I have none of the faith but all of the shame/guilt; so, call me a genetic Catholic!

Anyways...

I was once involved in a case of food hypersensitivity that orbited this very issue. The victim was a young girl, a devout Catholic, who was going to have her first communion. She was exquisitely sensitivity to wheat/gluten and her parents had discovered that the 'host' was made from bread (sanctified Wonder Bread without crust, then pressed and dried.) At issue was a request they had made for an alternative gluten free 'host.'

The church, being the church, had refused this request, but the parents were going to bring suit. I was called to verify the child's sensitivity and testifying was a great deal of fun...

The underlying paradox that we presented the church:

The Catholic Church asserts that consecrated bread and wine are not merely "symbols" of the body and blood of Christ: they are literally the body and blood of Christ. It also declares that, although the bread and wine completely cease to be bread and wine (having become the body and blood of Christ), the appearances (the "species" or look) remain unchanged, and the properties of the appearances also remain (one can be drunk with the appearance of wine despite it only being an appearance).

So, looks like bread and wine, but has actually been divinely transmorgrified into the actual body and circulatory fluids of Christ.

Therefore, no need to accommodate this child.

Our position: If she was sensitive to gluten and took communion in 'good faith' and had an untoward reaction, then that would be 'proof' that transubstantiated 'host' is not, in fact, made up of authentic Christ parts. Either that, or, it would show she had an immune mediated intolerance to the body of Christ, which would be quite a coincidence that she'd be adversely affected by the body of her Savior and by wheat/gluten.

It seemed to be lose/lose for the church, and the family was ready to take it tho the TV news channels. I thought it would be a hoot to testify regarding these ramifications under oath, "so help me, God."

At the 11th hour, the local parish priest saved the bishop's bacon, and, on the sly, the family was allowed to prepare their own host, and then he would sanctify it....all agreeing not to let the higher ups in the church know what the compromise was. That way, one fewer kid harmed by the Catholic Church!

After all, it shouldn't matter what substance the host started out as. Only to the bishop on up, I guess.

So, cue happy ending music on the pipe organ, theologically vast question postponed!

_

As you ponder it, if the sanctified host was truly the blood and body of Christ, wouldn't it be awesome to use for transplants and transfusions?

_

So, much thread drift, but JA brought up a very cool theological topic!

Cheers, JA!

RH's picture

What a great story, Anton!

The test you proposed seemed as unwelcome by the church as blind testing is unwelcome by reviewers and audiophiles. And...perhaps....for similar reasons ;-)

Anton's picture

Can you tell me that date upon which commenced all correctly designed CD players henceforth sound exactly the same?

That would be useful to know.

Do you know which model started this? Finding the first correctly designed CD player would be cool, for history.

Also, any list you'd care to provide would help. Could save a lot of money!

Your information will be invaluable to the audio community!

Thank you for speaking up, I look forward to using your information.

David Harper's picture

It was approximately 15 to 20 years ago CD players became essentially perfect in their reading and transmission of a digital binary number stream.

Anton's picture

I think that is a well considered answer.

Bogolu Haranath's picture

"Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection, we can catch excellence" ......... Vince Lombardi :-) .............

Bogolu Haranath's picture

I read in the latest edition of the Sound & Vision magazine that, some automakers are not including CD players in some of their latest models (sad) ............

David Harper's picture

I have, in fact, posted to catholic websites (after having been a catholic for twenty years) and presented logical,factual, historically based arguments which challenge certain catholic doctrines,such as the perpetual virginity of Mary. I don't think that makes me a troll.If that were true it would lead logically to the conclusion that no one should ever be permitted to challenge the status quo. Your example of the transubstantiation and communion are not analogous in this comparison because those things are purely articles of faith. They can not be proven or disproven. But it can be proven, using biblical and historical references,that Jesus had brothers and sisters.His brother James founded the Jerusalem church. I will admit that my post was disrespectful and antagonistic.I apologize for that. I should have made a more nuanced argument.

Robin Landseadel's picture

There's no proof to be made here about brothers, sisters or aunts of Jesus. There no definitive proof of the existence of Jesus as a historical figure. There are many writings that contradict what you are saying. Just because they were thrown out of earlier drafts of what was to eventually become what we call the Bible, doesn't in any way make those contradictory writings any more or less meaningful than the unprovable contents of the final, massaged and edited product. Which is still being massaged and edited. If you know anything about how the bible was made up, you'll know it was made up. By humans. With obvious agendas.

ok's picture

and ethical improvement of her children a mother had given them Aesop’s fables to read. Too soon however they returned her the book while the eldest, wise well beyond his years, expressed himself as follows: “This is no book for us! It is far too childish and stupid – no longer can we be made to believe that foxes, wolves and ravens can speak; we have long since got beyond that stuff!”
..Who does not recognize in these young hopefuls the enlightened rationalists of the future?

Arthur Schopenhauer, Parerga and Paralipomena, 1851.

ChrisS's picture

Nuance?

It's insulting.

You can't unread what you wrote here.

David Harper's picture

huh?

ChrisS's picture

Manners?

Civility?

Sheldon?

Bogolu Haranath's picture

"Only two things are infinite .......... The universe and human stupidity ........... I am not sure about the former" ........... Albert Einstein .........

Bogolu Haranath's picture

"The difference between stupidity and genius is that, genius has its limits" .......... Albert Einstein ........

David Harper's picture

one more time; it was about 15 or 20 years ago that CD players became essentially perfect in their reading and transmission of a digital binary number stream. This means that if the player is outputting a digital signal to an external DAC, then they will all sound the same.I understand the compulsion of those who have spent thousands on a CD player to defend their purchase.They're mitigating buyers remorse.I also spent more than necessary.I bought an OPPO 203. I bought it for it's physical build quality.Cheap players usually don't last very long.

ChrisS's picture

Same?

No one hears this or has thought this way in years!

johnnyangel's picture

... why this CD player got such an enthusiastic review from Stereophile, and for that matter its sister publication HFN/RR, when the frequency response reported by both publication rolls off like a cassette recorder with cheap tape.

I’m not immune to the idea of spendy CD players (I own one that was class-A-rated by Stereophile when it was in production, and incidentally has a flat response) but this is just ridiculous.

Joseph Cohen's picture

Perhaps the most common topic of discussion at shows is, “Who has the best sound?” Consumers are looking to be wowed as are reviewers. Awards are given and reputations are made. New technology trickles down to more “affordable” products, but inevitably, the things that differentiate the top components from their lesser siblings are the costly bits: the more robust power supply, the extra isolation, the added mass and machining, the larger more expensive drivers, etc. If all components were equal and their sole value was in their utility, then we could all stay home and none of this would be necessary. Should manufacturers cease to push the envelope? Should price limits be imposed? Should designers leave their creativity behind? Finally, would Stereophile be doing its readers a service or disservice if it ignored high dollar state-of-the-art components?

X