Have you ever heard an audio system that faithfully reproduced the sound of real, live musicians? What was it?

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Faithfully reproducing the sound of real, live musicians in our listening rooms is the audiophile Holy Grail. Have you ever heard a system do this? If so, what was it?

Stereophile's Products of 2004

Stereophile's Products of 2004

For the 13th consecutive year, <I>Stereophile</I> has recognized the components that have proved capable of giving maximal musical pleasure with its "Products of the Year." Based on a vote by the magazine's reviewers and editors, the 2004 winners were announced in the <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/features/1204poty/">December 2004 issue</A> and the awards were presented by <I>Stereophile</I> editor John Atkinson at last week's 2005 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.

2005 CES: The Last Report

2005 CES: The Last Report

It's the final day of the 2005 Consumer Electronics Show. I'm walking down the Alexis Park's long corridors, beneath its archways and palm trees, wondering where I'll end up next. The air is cool, but the sun is out and I'm feeling very much alive, energized by all the morning's music.

2005 CES: Day Four

2005 CES: Day Four

The Primedia team has been staying at the San Tropez, home of T.H.E. (The High End) Show, which means some of us have been walking down halls filled with exhibitors frantically getting rooms put together before the throngs arrived. The night I arrived, one room in my building was making music that beckoned to me as I passed by&mdash;today, I finally entered and took over the sweet spot.

2005 CES: More Day Four

2005 CES: More Day Four

As an audiophile manufacturer, the odds are stacked against you getting a great sounding demo up and running under show conditions. The rooms are generally skimpy and oddly shaped, the construction materials and walls unpredictable, and there's the need to set up fast with only what you've thought to pack in.

CES: Day Three

CES: Day Three

<B>The Alexis Park</B><BR>
Packing for Vegas, I assured my wife that it might be cold but it would be a <I>dry</I> cold. Unfortunately, this has absolutely no truth when it is raining cats and dogs, so I stumbled into Quartet Marketing's room chilled and soaked. I felt as though things couldn't get any worse&mdash;and I was right. Stirling Trayle pulled a long espresso out of his <I>machinetta</I> and settled me down in front of a pair of the $1150/pair Amphion Heliums Robert J. Reina reviewed in the January <I>Stereophile</I>. Go juice and music: life immediately got better.

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