Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker Associated Equipment

Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker Associated Equipment

Wood is not an engineering material. It might look pretty, but it's inconsistent and therefore unpredictable. So we smash cheap wood into sawdust and then glue it all together again to create something that can be machined. This is called medium-density fiberboard, or MDF. We then thinly slice some classy hardwood—hopefully harvested from sustainable sources—and use it to cover the ugly MDF. This might have made sense back when Chippendale was making furniture, but it seems strangely old-fashioned in our age of plastics and composites. I haven't seen wood trim on a TV set for more than a decade. Why is it still the norm for loudspeakers?

Mordaunt-Short
US distributor: Marantz America
440 Medinah Road
Roselle, IL 60172
(630) 741-0300
www.mordaunt-short.co.uk

Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker Specifications

Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker Specifications

Wood is not an engineering material. It might look pretty, but it's inconsistent and therefore unpredictable. So we smash cheap wood into sawdust and then glue it all together again to create something that can be machined. This is called medium-density fiberboard, or MDF. We then thinly slice some classy hardwood—hopefully harvested from sustainable sources—and use it to cover the ugly MDF. This might have made sense back when Chippendale was making furniture, but it seems strangely old-fashioned in our age of plastics and composites. I haven't seen wood trim on a TV set for more than a decade. Why is it still the norm for loudspeakers?

Mordaunt-Short
US distributor: Marantz America
440 Medinah Road
Roselle, IL 60172
(630) 741-0300
www.mordaunt-short.co.uk

Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker Page 2

Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker Page 2

Wood is not an engineering material. It might look pretty, but it's inconsistent and therefore unpredictable. So we smash cheap wood into sawdust and then glue it all together again to create something that can be machined. This is called medium-density fiberboard, or MDF. We then thinly slice some classy hardwood—hopefully harvested from sustainable sources—and use it to cover the ugly MDF. This might have made sense back when Chippendale was making furniture, but it seems strangely old-fashioned in our age of plastics and composites. I haven't seen wood trim on a TV set for more than a decade. Why is it still the norm for loudspeakers?

Mordaunt-Short
US distributor: Marantz America
440 Medinah Road
Roselle, IL 60172
(630) 741-0300
www.mordaunt-short.co.uk

Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker

Mordaunt-Short Performance 6 loudspeaker

Wood is not an engineering material. It might look pretty, but it's inconsistent and therefore unpredictable. So we smash cheap wood into sawdust and then glue it all together again to create something that can be machined. This is called medium-density fiberboard, or MDF. We then thinly slice some classy hardwood—hopefully harvested from sustainable sources—and use it to cover the ugly MDF. This might have made sense back when Chippendale was making furniture, but it seems strangely old-fashioned in our age of plastics and composites. I haven't seen wood trim on a TV set for more than a decade. Why is it still the norm for loudspeakers?

Almarro M0A loudspeaker Measurements

Almarro M0A loudspeaker Measurements

One of my favorite parts of attending <I>Stereophile</I>'s Home Entertainment shows&mdash;aside from seeking out the sexy new gear and pressing the flesh of readers&mdash;is the "Ask the Editors" panel discussions. What begins as a Q&A session usually turns into a free-for-all, as the outspoken and opinionated likes of Sam Tellig, Michael Fremer, Ken Kessler, and John Marks barely give room for wallflowers such as Art Dudley and yours truly to express our opinions&mdash;except when editor John Atkinson asks each of us, in turn, to cast our votes for the "most interesting rooms to visit." At both the HE2004 and HE2005 "Ask the Editors" panels, one company was recommended by a number of <I>Stereophile</I> writers, me included: Almarro Products.

Almarro
1800 Fumia Place
San Jose, CA 95131
(408) 375-3799
www.almarro.com

Almarro M0A loudspeaker Associated Equipment

Almarro M0A loudspeaker Associated Equipment

One of my favorite parts of attending <I>Stereophile</I>'s Home Entertainment shows&mdash;aside from seeking out the sexy new gear and pressing the flesh of readers&mdash;is the "Ask the Editors" panel discussions. What begins as a Q&A session usually turns into a free-for-all, as the outspoken and opinionated likes of Sam Tellig, Michael Fremer, Ken Kessler, and John Marks barely give room for wallflowers such as Art Dudley and yours truly to express our opinions&mdash;except when editor John Atkinson asks each of us, in turn, to cast our votes for the "most interesting rooms to visit." At both the HE2004 and HE2005 "Ask the Editors" panels, one company was recommended by a number of <I>Stereophile</I> writers, me included: Almarro Products.

Almarro
1800 Fumia Place
San Jose, CA 95131
(408) 375-3799
www.almarro.com

Almarro M0A loudspeaker Specifications

Almarro M0A loudspeaker Specifications

One of my favorite parts of attending <I>Stereophile</I>'s Home Entertainment shows&mdash;aside from seeking out the sexy new gear and pressing the flesh of readers&mdash;is the "Ask the Editors" panel discussions. What begins as a Q&A session usually turns into a free-for-all, as the outspoken and opinionated likes of Sam Tellig, Michael Fremer, Ken Kessler, and John Marks barely give room for wallflowers such as Art Dudley and yours truly to express our opinions&mdash;except when editor John Atkinson asks each of us, in turn, to cast our votes for the "most interesting rooms to visit." At both the HE2004 and HE2005 "Ask the Editors" panels, one company was recommended by a number of <I>Stereophile</I> writers, me included: Almarro Products.

Almarro
1800 Fumia Place
San Jose, CA 95131
(408) 375-3799
www.almarro.com

Almarro M0A loudspeaker

Almarro M0A loudspeaker

One of my favorite parts of attending <I>Stereophile</I>'s Home Entertainment shows&mdash;aside from seeking out the sexy new gear and pressing the flesh of readers&mdash;is the "Ask the Editors" panel discussions. What begins as a Q&A session usually turns into a free-for-all, as the outspoken and opinionated likes of Sam Tellig, Michael Fremer, Ken Kessler, and John Marks barely give room for wallflowers such as Art Dudley and yours truly to express our opinions&mdash;except when editor John Atkinson asks each of us, in turn, to cast our votes for the "most interesting rooms to visit." At both the HE2004 and HE2005 "Ask the Editors" panels, one company was recommended by a number of <I>Stereophile</I> writers, me included: Almarro Products.

Recording of September 2005: Not In Our Name

Recording of September 2005: Not In Our Name

<B>CHARLIE HADEN LIBERATION MUSIC ORCHESTRA: <I>Not In Our Name</I></B><BR>
Charlie Haden, bass; Carla Bley, piano, arranger, conductor; Seneca Black, Michael Rodriguez, trumpet; Miguel Zen&#243;n, alto sax; Chris Cheek, Tony Malaby, tenor sax; Curtis Fowlkes, trombone; Ahnee Sharon Freeman, French horn; Joe Daley, tuba; Steve Cardenas, guitar; Matt Wilson, drums<BR>
Verve B000494902 (CD). 2005. Charlie Haden, Carla Bley, Ruth Cameron, prods.; Gerard de Haro, eng. DDD? TT: 68:55<BR>
Performance <B>****</B><BR>
Sonics <B>****</B>

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