Quad Goes Platinum

Quad Goes Platinum

Anglo-Chinese brand Quad is not one of your consumer electronics companies that revamps their entire line every year (whether it needs to or not). Some might even consider their approach a bit stodgy, resisting change. So when they come out with not just one new product but a completely new series, that has to be considered news.

A Nightingale Sang

A Nightingale Sang

Continuing my game of guess-the-nationality-of-the-manufacturer, I walked into a demo room that had a very-nice-sounding system with the brandname Nightingale. My thought was <I>British</I> (I recall vaguely a British speaker designed by John Jeffries many years ago bearing that name) or <I>Japanese</I> (as in the Emperor’s Nightingale). However, the answer was <I>Italian</I>. They make electronics as well as speakers: they were demming the prototype PTS-03 battery-operated preamp ($8000), the Gala power amp ($6000), and the new CTR-2 speakers ($9000/pair). I also saw what I thought was another power amp (the one on the right in the picture), so I asked about it, and was told that it was actually the power supply for the amp. I wasn’t doing too well in my guessing here!

Bryston Goes Class-D

Bryston Goes Class-D

Bryston's James Tanner surprised me by showing me a new direction for Canadian amplifier manufacturer Bryston: it has developed a series of class-D (switching) amplifiers. "You'll notice from the line's hybrid name that we combine the class-D output module with regular linear power supplies, not switching supplies," explained James. "The switching supplies are too noisy."

Make Way for the Big Boys

Make Way for the Big Boys

Attendance was light at the Alexis Park on Wednesday, with the rooms closest to the front getting the most attention. That was certainly the case for Evolution Acoustics, whose imposing MM3 modular speaker commands respect. After seven years of development, this huge baby, designed by Kevin Malmgren (left, formerly of Von Schweikert) made its initial debut at RMAF 2006. Then, the company went low-key while Malmgren and his wife were busy raising their first child (who, after almost one year of development, has just made a most auspicious debut in his stroller at T.H.E. Show 2008). Well, not really. The speaker was back-ordered even before it was launched, and has kept Malmgren and its distributor so busy that they haven’t had the time or need to yet establish a dealer network.

Sounds Right

Sounds Right

As much as I had hoped to write about new companies at T.H.E. Show this time around, I keep finding myself drawn to "old friends" for one overriding reason: their sound is the best I encounter. Such was the case with veteran audio designer Peter Ledermann's Soundsmith. Despite Peter's 1960s-holdover proclivity to turn his consistently impressive, housed-in-wood electronics into multi-colored light shows&mdash;thank God you can dim the lights or turn them off entirely&mdash;the former Director of Engineering at the Bozak Corporation continues to astound with the sound of his phono cartridges and the amazing frequency response of his small Firefly speakers.

Source Recommendation

Can you guys recommend good CD players with digital input for me? I'm going to run my Squeezebox through the CDP to use it as DAC. I'm already looking to try Cambridge Audio 840C, and wanted other options to test before deciding. Thanks!

(In the Source forum, I mentioned Luxman & Accuphase models, which - although expensive - sound wonderful & have digital inputs... any 1st-hand experience using these players?)

Accuphase or Luxman CD players...

Anyone have experience with Accuphase CD players? (Not the SACD models.) I heard Accuphase DP55 a couple of days ago at a dealer, and it sounded great, but of course it was very expensive. Are these players dependable? How are they compared to models by Luxman, Esoteric, Ayre, etc? And are there comparable, more affordable alternative options, in terms of sound quality? Thanks

P.S. - preferably, if the CDP could serve as a DAC, too, that would be lovely; I'm already looking into Cambridge Audio 840C.

Music Culture Technology Corporation

Music Culture Technology Corporation

Music Culture Technology Corporation's Reference line has been designed and engineered by MBL's official engineers. Though not yet distributed in the US, the combination of MC's partnership with MBL and their components' arresting good looks drew me in for an extended listen. It was also a belated listen, but that had to do with the Hard Rock Caf&#233; across the street from the St. Tropez, whose bass blasting from the rock video they project in their parking lot between 5pm and 10pm made listening to anything other than equally blaring rock music an absurdity. Call it high end trumped by high insult.

More than a Black Box

More than a Black Box

Instead of using conventional CD playback technology, the Rockport room featured the DC-powered Black Box Audiophile PC from Blue Smoke Entertainment Systems of Chicago. (Preliminary pricing, expected to lower before the unit reaches the market, is $7999.) With no moving parts in the box into which one inserts a CD, the DSP-based system reclocks the data after reading the CD, basically eliminating jitter. It copies the audio data from a CD onto a hard drive, reading the CD multiple times if necessary to eliminate data-reading errors. It is said to be far more accurate my own conventional stick it in the iMac and burn it in iTunes setup. The unit can process data up to 24/192. Lordie did it sound good.

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