Getting to the ten week mark until Rocky Mountain Audio Fest.
Anybody gonna go?
Me and Big Mike are going, and maybe the wives. (It's my wife's birthday during the show, what could be a finer gift than a romantic journey through the halls of RMAF? )
Maybe a keg party and a cake?
Ooooh! How about assembling a small room/party system on the fly?
As we approach the end of the 21st century's "oughts" decade, many feel that playing music from a discrete physical medium is positively <I>20th</I> century. Much of my own music enjoyment now comes from computer files, often high-resolution, streamed to my high-end rig via a <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/mediaservers/207slim">Logitech Transporter</A> or <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/computeraudio/bel_canto_usb_link_2496_usb-sp… Canto USB Link 24/96</A>. It is perhaps a paradox, therefore, that high-end audio companies are still devoting so much effort to developing expensive, state-of-the-art disc players. In April I very <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/cdplayers/meridian_8082808i2_signature_refer… reviewed</A> Meridian's superb 808i.2 CD player–preamplifier, which costs $16,995 as reviewed, and Michael Fremer is about to review the ultimate Scarlatti SACD playback system from another English company, dCS. The $80,000 price tag of the Scarlatti makes the subject of my review this month, the Boulder 1021, seem relatively affordable at $24,000.
As we approach the end of the 21st century's "oughts" decade, many feel that playing music from a discrete physical medium is positively <I>20th</I> century. Much of my own music enjoyment now comes from computer files, often high-resolution, streamed to my high-end rig via a <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/mediaservers/207slim">Logitech Transporter</A> or <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/computeraudio/bel_canto_usb_link_2496_usb-sp… Canto USB Link 24/96</A>. It is perhaps a paradox, therefore, that high-end audio companies are still devoting so much effort to developing expensive, state-of-the-art disc players. In April I very <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/cdplayers/meridian_8082808i2_signature_refer… reviewed</A> Meridian's superb 808i.2 CD player–preamplifier, which costs $16,995 as reviewed, and Michael Fremer is about to review the ultimate Scarlatti SACD playback system from another English company, dCS. The $80,000 price tag of the Scarlatti makes the subject of my review this month, the Boulder 1021, seem relatively affordable at $24,000.
As we approach the end of the 21st century's "oughts" decade, many feel that playing music from a discrete physical medium is positively <I>20th</I> century. Much of my own music enjoyment now comes from computer files, often high-resolution, streamed to my high-end rig via a <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/mediaservers/207slim">Logitech Transporter</A> or <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/computeraudio/bel_canto_usb_link_2496_usb-sp… Canto USB Link 24/96</A>. It is perhaps a paradox, therefore, that high-end audio companies are still devoting so much effort to developing expensive, state-of-the-art disc players. In April I very <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/cdplayers/meridian_8082808i2_signature_refer… reviewed</A> Meridian's superb 808i.2 CD player–preamplifier, which costs $16,995 as reviewed, and Michael Fremer is about to review the ultimate Scarlatti SACD playback system from another English company, dCS. The $80,000 price tag of the Scarlatti makes the subject of my review this month, the Boulder 1021, seem relatively affordable at $24,000.
As we approach the end of the 21st century's "oughts" decade, many feel that playing music from a discrete physical medium is positively <I>20th</I> century. Much of my own music enjoyment now comes from computer files, often high-resolution, streamed to my high-end rig via a <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/mediaservers/207slim">Logitech Transporter</A> or <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/computeraudio/bel_canto_usb_link_2496_usb-sp… Canto USB Link 24/96</A>. It is perhaps a paradox, therefore, that high-end audio companies are still devoting so much effort to developing expensive, state-of-the-art disc players. In April I very <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/cdplayers/meridian_8082808i2_signature_refer… reviewed</A> Meridian's superb 808i.2 CD player–preamplifier, which costs $16,995 as reviewed, and Michael Fremer is about to review the ultimate Scarlatti SACD playback system from another English company, dCS. The $80,000 price tag of the Scarlatti makes the subject of my review this month, the Boulder 1021, seem relatively affordable at $24,000.
As we approach the end of the 21st century's "oughts" decade, many feel that playing music from a discrete physical medium is positively <I>20th</I> century. Much of my own music enjoyment now comes from computer files, often high-resolution, streamed to my high-end rig via a <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/mediaservers/207slim">Logitech Transporter</A> or <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/computeraudio/bel_canto_usb_link_2496_usb-sp… Canto USB Link 24/96</A>. It is perhaps a paradox, therefore, that high-end audio companies are still devoting so much effort to developing expensive, state-of-the-art disc players. In April I very <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/cdplayers/meridian_8082808i2_signature_refer… reviewed</A> Meridian's superb 808i.2 CD player–preamplifier, which costs $16,995 as reviewed, and Michael Fremer is about to review the ultimate Scarlatti SACD playback system from another English company, dCS. The $80,000 price tag of the Scarlatti makes the subject of my review this month, the Boulder 1021, seem relatively affordable at $24,000.
As we approach the end of the 21st century's "oughts" decade, many feel that playing music from a discrete physical medium is positively 20th century. Much of my own music enjoyment now comes from computer files, often high-resolution, streamed to my high-end rig via a Logitech Transporter or Bel Canto USB Link 24/96. It is perhaps a paradox, therefore, that high-end audio companies are still devoting so much effort to developing expensive, state-of-the-art disc players. In April I very favorably reviewed Meridian's superb 808i.2 CD playerpreamplifier, which costs $16,995 as reviewed, and Michael Fremer is about to review the ultimate Scarlatti SACD playback system from another English company, dCS. The $80,000 price tag of the Scarlatti makes the subject of my review this month, the Boulder 1021, seem relatively affordable at $24,000.
Grado Prestige Gold1 phono cartridge Associated Equipment
In the early to mid-1980s, I read every high-end hi-fi magazine I could get my hands on. Among the consequences was my discovery that the Grado Signature Seven phono cartridge—which was better <I>and cheaper</I> than the Signatures One through Six—was the cartridge that God wanted me to have. So I cut back on all manner of luxuries, saved every dollar I could save, and a few months later brought a walletful of cash to Harvey Sound in midtown Manhattan, where an unpleasant man with a bad comb-over handed me a little pill bottle of a plastic tube.
Grado Prestige Gold1 phono cartridge Specifications
In the early to mid-1980s, I read every high-end hi-fi magazine I could get my hands on. Among the consequences was my discovery that the Grado Signature Seven phono cartridge—which was better <I>and cheaper</I> than the Signatures One through Six—was the cartridge that God wanted me to have. So I cut back on all manner of luxuries, saved every dollar I could save, and a few months later brought a walletful of cash to Harvey Sound in midtown Manhattan, where an unpleasant man with a bad comb-over handed me a little pill bottle of a plastic tube.
In the early to mid-1980s, I read every high-end hi-fi magazine I could get my hands on. Among the consequences was my discovery that the Grado Signature Seven phono cartridge—which was better <I>and cheaper</I> than the Signatures One through Six—was the cartridge that God wanted me to have. So I cut back on all manner of luxuries, saved every dollar I could save, and a few months later brought a walletful of cash to Harvey Sound in midtown Manhattan, where an unpleasant man with a bad comb-over handed me a little pill bottle of a plastic tube.
Getting to the ten week mark until Rocky Mountain Audio Fest.
Anybody gonna go?
Me and Big Mike are going, and maybe the wives. (It's my wife's birthday during the show, what could be a finer gift than a romantic journey through the halls of RMAF?
)
Maybe a keg party and a cake?
Ooooh! How about assembling a small room/party system on the fly?