It was reassuring to read John Atkinson's "As We See It" column. I'm certainly relieved to find out there are organizations working to improve the sound of audio recordings. I'm extremely disappointed with the sound of the majority of albums I purchase. It would be a godsend if there was a reliable method to determine the sound quality of an album before I plunk down good money.
I've joined the Pleasurize Music Foundation to support their efforts to bring quality sound to recordings. Many others have already done the same and I hope the list will continue to grow.
Right from the start—from the very first musical moment—it’s the gorgeous, spacious sound we’ve grown to love from Espers’ Greg Weeks and his <a href="http://www.myspace.com/hexhamhead">Hexham Head Studio</a> in Philadelphia. While <i>III</i>’s rather straightforward instrumentation (churning, scintillating acoustic guitars, appropriately warm, round bass, and steady, impactful drums) marks a subtle departure from the doumbek and dholak of <i><a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/musicroom/facethemusic/042706espers/">II</a…;, the quality of sound is no less complex or stirring. We hear the sounds of wood and brass meeting with flesh and skin, of bow hair as it courses along cello strings, of cello moan and sigh, of the most delicious fuzzed-out guitar placed in realistic, three-dimensional space—all with such <i>truth</i>, such <i>blood</i>, such respect of momentum and flow, that we are fooled into thinking that the very space around us is, in fact, growing, exhaling, beating.
These days, it seems you can't shake a stick without hitting a USB DAC, but Ayre's QB-9 ($2500) is something a little different. Ayre's marketing manager, Steve Silberman, was adamant: "The QB-9 <I>isn't</I> a computer peripheral. It makes computers real high-end music sources."
Ayre Acoustics QB-9 USB DAC Getting Those Last Few Drops
These days, it seems you can't shake a stick without hitting a USB DAC, but Ayre's QB-9 ($2500) is something a little different. Ayre's marketing manager, Steve Silberman, was adamant: "The QB-9 <I>isn't</I> a computer peripheral. It makes computers real high-end music sources."
These days, it seems you can't shake a stick without hitting a USB DAC, but Ayre's QB-9 ($2500) is something a little different. Ayre's marketing manager, Steve Silberman, was adamant: "The QB-9 <I>isn't</I> a computer peripheral. It makes computers real high-end music sources."
These days, it seems you can't shake a stick without hitting a USB DAC, but Ayre's QB-9 ($2500) is something a little different. Ayre's marketing manager, Steve Silberman, was adamant: "The QB-9 <I>isn't</I> a computer peripheral. It makes computers real high-end music sources."
These days, it seems you can't shake a stick without hitting a USB DAC, but Ayre's QB-9 ($2500) is something a little different. Ayre's marketing manager, Steve Silberman, was adamant: "The QB-9 <I>isn't</I> a computer peripheral. It makes computers real high-end music sources."
These days, it seems you can't shake a stick without hitting a USB DAC, but Ayre's QB-9 ($2500) is something a little different. Ayre's marketing manager, Steve Silberman, was adamant: "The QB-9 <I>isn't</I> a computer peripheral. It makes computers real high-end music sources."
These days, it seems you can't shake a stick without hitting a USB DAC, but Ayre's QB-9 ($2500) is something a little different. Ayre's marketing manager, Steve Silberman, was adamant: "The QB-9 isn't a computer peripheral. It makes computers real high-end music sources."
It was reassuring to read John Atkinson's "As We See It" column. I'm certainly relieved to find out there are organizations working to improve the sound of audio recordings. I'm extremely disappointed with the sound of the majority of albums I purchase. It would be a godsend if there was a reliable method to determine the sound quality of an album before I plunk down good money.
I've joined the Pleasurize Music Foundation to support their efforts to bring quality sound to recordings. Many others have already done the same and I hope the list will continue to grow.