Gemme's Vivace

Gemme's Vivace

Maybe it's my selective perception, but there seems to be a resurgence of single-driver speakers. The Gemme Audio Vivace ($4100) uses a 4" Fostex driver in a complex horn-loaded enclosure. Sensitivity is 92dB, which is not high by horn standards, but the claimed bass frequency extension is 20Hz, which is extremely low by any standard. They played some organ music at the demo, and I can't say that I heard anything close to 20Hz. The bass <I>was</I> impressive by single-small-driver standards, however, and the speakers had the coherence that this sort of design is known for. Gemme Audio is a small company based in Montreal, with only two products: the Vivace and the Tanto ($5100), a more conventional two-way system. Getting into the crowded audio marketplace is a difficult feat for any speaker company that doesn't have a full product range; the fact that Gemme has been picked up by distributors in the USA, the United Kingdom, France, Sweden, and Ukraine tells me that they must be doing something right. Pictured: V-P Sales and Marketing Jean-Pierre Boudreau and the Vivace, with the Tanto lurking in the background.

An Essential Break

An Essential Break

Attending a show like FSI can be a tiring business, what with walking up and down corridors, and even when you sit down to listen you may experience tension, trying to discern the character of the sound. A few hours of that, and you can probably use a massage. If that's how you felt at FSI, the remedy was at hand: Jennifer Sunde and Mireille Beaudry are massage therapists who were at the show, offering a choice of Swedish and Shiatsu massage. Here they are in a brief break between clients.

Neil Young's Archives Performance Series

Hey hey!

I've been spinning the new Neil Young Archives series CD's (wishing they'd been issued on vinyl) and I like them.

In case you've been wondering what these 35 and 36 year old live recordings are like, I'll just start by saying "remarkably clean."

I'm actually kind of shocked at how pristine they sound.

Great song selection, too.

Free Seminars and Clinics at HE2007

Free Seminars and Clinics at HE2007

Show attendees at Home Entertainment 2007, the High Performance Sound & Imaging Show of the year, will be treated to several educational seminars and clinics that will help guide and inform them about the choices confronting contemporary music and film lovers looking for better home entertainment experiences.

How Old Were You When You Became An Audiophile?

Forums

B.B. King is 82 and travels everywhere, got many beat. Buddy Guy is 71 or so, looks 40 and energy like a young dude. didn't Andy Williams always have The Osmond Bros on....Sappy squared, Andy Williams with the Osmonds. At least it was/is much batter than the Nappy Headed ho Rap hip hop garbage that has to disapear soon one would hope and real music could make a come back? End teh Bling bling and bring back the 50's and 60's music. Buffalo Springfield, Rolling Stones, Beatles, Lee Michaels, Hendrix, so much REAL music, all original and different.

How Old Were You When You Became An Audiophile?

This is a response to Stephen's "Banning Youth" thread. We've corresponded in the past about our first "Hi-Fi" syetems. I believe that most of us will admit to having their initial audiophile revelation (remember your first time?) at a young age. Albeit, for many of us, this happened during the pre-MTV early FM radio era, or even the transistor radio era. OK, even the Victorola era, eh, Clifton?

Red Red Wine

Red Red Wine

Red Wine Audio is the name of the company making amplifiers designed by one Vinnie Rossi, "an electrical engineer with a true passion for music and implementing the electronics that recreate it," whose name, if you pretend that Vinnie is spelled with one "n," means "red wine" in Italian. (Actually, "vini rossi" means "red wines," but let's not quibble.) What makes Red Wine Audio amplifiers interesting is that they're all battery-operated. The system being demoed used a pair of the Red Wine Audio Signature 70 monoblocks ($2999/pair), driving single-driver speakers ($2495 MaxHemp or $949 Super 3XRS) from Omega Speaker Systems. The source was a battery-powered computer server, so that the only AC-powered devices in the room were some table lamps. I can't say whether it was the battery power source or some other aspect of these designs, but the sound was uncommonly natural and easy-on-the-ears. The small Super 3XRS speaker, which uses a proprietary 4.5" Omega hemp-cone driver, had a coherence and focus that reminded me in some ways of the $7000/pair Fujitsu Ten Eclipse TD-712z single-driver speaker that I <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/standloudspeakers/107fuj">reviewed</A&gt; in the January, 2007 issue. Shown here are Vinnie Rossi (left) with Omega Speaker Systems' designer Louis Chochos and the Red Wine/Omega system.

Sonus Faber's Elipsa

Sonus Faber's Elipsa

This is in the "Better Late Than Never" department: At the end of the 2007 CES, John Atkinson auditioned <A HREF="http://blog.stereophile.com/ces2007/011407elipsa/">Sonus Faber's new Elipsa loudspeakers</A>, but he ran out of space on his camera's memory card, so he was not able to take a picture. After the show, JA emailed the other writers that had attended CES, asking if anyone happened to take a picture of the Elipsa. None of us had. So, John, this is for you: a picture of a pair of Elipsas, which were making sweet music, driven by Ayre electronics.

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