Classical recording with huge/extreme dynamic range?

Hello:

Can my fellow audiophiles recommend me a classical recording with huge/extreme dynamic range?

I am not much informed about classical music but I am bored with compressed recordings.

I need full orchestra music. Kindly only recommend CDs, no SACD, DVD-A, LP. Also apart from music recommendation, I shall appreciate the details for CD label/ recording company so I can buy the exact CD.

Something that will be enjoyable but will also test the limits of equipment!

Regards

Cross forum invite: NYC Pubcrawlistas...

...would you be interested to attend a speaker demo in Rhapsody Audio (27 W 24th St) around 1-5PM this coming Saturday? Click here to see details.

NY members of that forum get together once a month for a "rave," usually hosted by a member, sometimes a manufacturer or dealer, and is open to anyone interested.

(Mods, I hope it's okay to extend this invite from the original post in Audiocircle, if not, please delete. Thanks!).

2 channel receiver around $500???

Hi - this is my first post. My wife and I are moving from a small one-bedroom to a 2000 square foot house and I am starting research for a new stereo system - overall budget of around $2000 (unless I can push for more, but that may be hard!)

I have started some receiver research and am focusing on the 2 channel market since there is no tv or dvd in the picture. How do people feel about the Outlaw RR-2150? What other receivers should I be considering?

Thank you!!!

Marty

Triangle Esprit Comete Ex loudspeaker Measurements

Triangle Esprit Comete Ex loudspeaker Measurements

The first reference I saw to the Count of Saint Germain was in <I>Foucault's Pendulum</I>, Umberto Eco's dense novel about a man whose paranoid delusions become so overpoweringly real that, by the end of the book, the reader is left wondering whether the protagonist's enemies actually exist. That their number should include Saint Germain was a nice touch: Part cabalist, part confidence man, the real-life Count was thought by some to be immortal (in <I>Pendulum</I> he's pushing 300), and while Casanova wrote vividly of meeting Saint Germain at a dinner party in 1757, so did the English writer and pederast C.W. Leadbetter&mdash;in 1926. Like Aleister Crowley, the Count of Saint Germain can be seen peering over the shoulders of countless parlor (but not <I>parleur</I>, or even <I>haut-parleur</I>) occultists: He keeps popping up all over the place.

Triangle Electroacoustique
US distributor: VMAX Services
P.O. Box 570
Chazy, NY 12921
(800) 771-8279
www.vmax-services.com

Triangle Esprit Comete Ex loudspeaker Associated Equipment

Triangle Esprit Comete Ex loudspeaker Associated Equipment

The first reference I saw to the Count of Saint Germain was in <I>Foucault's Pendulum</I>, Umberto Eco's dense novel about a man whose paranoid delusions become so overpoweringly real that, by the end of the book, the reader is left wondering whether the protagonist's enemies actually exist. That their number should include Saint Germain was a nice touch: Part cabalist, part confidence man, the real-life Count was thought by some to be immortal (in <I>Pendulum</I> he's pushing 300), and while Casanova wrote vividly of meeting Saint Germain at a dinner party in 1757, so did the English writer and pederast C.W. Leadbetter&mdash;in 1926. Like Aleister Crowley, the Count of Saint Germain can be seen peering over the shoulders of countless parlor (but not <I>parleur</I>, or even <I>haut-parleur</I>) occultists: He keeps popping up all over the place.

Triangle Electroacoustique
US distributor: VMAX Services
P.O. Box 570
Chazy, NY 12921
(800) 771-8279
www.vmax-services.com
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement