Kudos to John Marks

I totally meant to post this a while back but had forgotten. Just a word of appreciation to John Marks. His assessments on 'phile seem to me - along with JA's - the most level-headed and clear-eyed, even among the great crew at Stereophile. Doesn't pull his punches, but he's never cruel with his judgments, always fair. It's a difficult rope to walk, but he walks it very well. I also appreciate the fact that he's on the look-out for great bargain-priced gears, all the while refusing to recommend subpar equipments just for the virtue of their cost...

XTZ Room Analyzer

Ever since reading a blurb about the XTZ analyzer last year, I was wondering why I hadn't heard anything else. Leave it to Kal to finally mention it! It looks like a capable one-box solution for those of us not wanting to cobble together the necessary software and hardware. It's a bit $$$ right now, but I'm hoping a U.S. distributor will offer it at a better North American price point.

Kal, can you SAVE measurements for later comparison (i.e. before and after room treatments, other tweaks)? Also, do you know if they will offer free upgrades as the software matures?

Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC

Thinking about integrating a computer into your hi-fi? Please check out John Atkinson's essay, "Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC" for everything you need to get going.

John covers the basics and links to other pieces to provide more in-depth information. Read the essay and follow the links, and you'll be prepared to set up a computer-based music server.

Anat Cohen at the Vanguard

Anat Cohen at the Vanguard

It’s been a year and a few months since I’ve seen Anat Cohen, the young Israeli-born jazz clarinetist, play live, and she’s grown still more assured and supple, her swing more insouciant, her tone more sheer and gorgeous. She and her quartet began the early set at the Village Vanguard last night with “Jitterbug Waltz” (as she did the previous time I saw her there) and breezed through it with breathtaking speed, but not just as some virtuosic show: there was brio, gusto, real delight in her playing, as she slid in and out of a slew of styles and rhythms—trad, bop, Latin, quasi-klezmer—seamless and natural and fresh. And so it went through the set, with ballads and blues and multiculti sonic frescoes. She plays tenor and soprano sax as well, though the licorice stick is her glory (second only to Don Byron in fire, versatility and skill). The band consists of the agile Jason Lindner on piano, Daniel Friedman on drums, and Joe Martin (replacing Omer Avita) on bass. The gig continues through this Sunday. She also has a new album, <I>Notes from the Village</I>, which is nice and fine (though I prefer her earlier quartet disc, <I>Poetica</I>, both on her own Anzic label).

Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC MP3? FLAC? AAC? AIF? WAV?

Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC MP3? FLAC? AAC? AIF? WAV?

"Physical discs seem <I>so</I> 20th century!" That's how I ended my <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/images/newsletter/406Bstph.html">eNewsletter review</A> of the Logitech (then Slim Devices) Squeezebox WiFi music server in April 2006, and it seems that increasing numbers of <I>Stereophile</I> readers agree with me. In our <A HREF="http://cgi.stereophile.com/cgi-bin/showvote.cgi?551">website poll</A> of January 5, 2008, we asked, "Are you ready for an audiophile music server?" The response to that question was the highest we have experienced: 32% of respondents already listen to music via their computer networks, many using home-brewed solutions, and 44% intend to. We've published a lot of material on this subject in the last five years, and it seemed a good idea to sum it up in this article.

Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC Page 2

Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC Page 2

"Physical discs seem <I>so</I> 20th century!" That's how I ended my <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/images/newsletter/406Bstph.html">eNewsletter review</A> of the Logitech (then Slim Devices) Squeezebox WiFi music server in April 2006, and it seems that increasing numbers of <I>Stereophile</I> readers agree with me. In our <A HREF="http://cgi.stereophile.com/cgi-bin/showvote.cgi?551">website poll</A> of January 5, 2008, we asked, "Are you ready for an audiophile music server?" The response to that question was the highest we have experienced: 32% of respondents already listen to music via their computer networks, many using home-brewed solutions, and 44% intend to. We've published a lot of material on this subject in the last five years, and it seemed a good idea to sum it up in this article.

Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC

Music Served: Extracting Music from your PC

"Physical discs seem <I>so</I> 20th century!" That's how I ended my <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/images/newsletter/406Bstph.html">eNewsletter review</A> of the Logitech (then Slim Devices) Squeezebox WiFi music server in April 2006, and it seems that increasing numbers of <I>Stereophile</I> readers agree with me. In our <A HREF="http://cgi.stereophile.com/cgi-bin/showvote.cgi?551">website poll</A> of January 5, 2008, we asked, "Are you ready for an audiophile music server?" The response to that question was the highest we have experienced: 32% of respondents already listen to music via their computer networks, many using home-brewed solutions, and 44% intend to. We've published a lot of material on this subject in the last five years, and it seemed a good idea to sum it up in this article.

Fried Compact 7 loudspeaker Second Sample Measurements

Fried Compact 7 loudspeaker Second Sample Measurements

Fried Products Corporation's Compact 7 is a two-way, standmounted loudspeaker with a 1" ring-radiator tweeter and a 7" woven glass-fiber&#150;coned mid-woofer in a "line tunnel" enclosure. Its cabinet is substantial and well made, with handsome real-wood veneers. The speakers come in mirror-imaged pairs, the tweeters offset toward the inside. The Compact 7 is unusual in that its mid-woofer is above its tweeter, which is likely related to the line-tunnel bass loading. Fried insists that the speakers be placed at least 28" above the floor, which dictate I followed.

Fried Products Corporation
PO Box 680
Gladwyne, PA 19035
(610) 649-8774
www.friedproducts.com
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement