End of An Abso!ute Era?

End of An Abso!ute Era?

Breaking news at the 2001 CEDIA Expo, held this past weekend in Indianapolis, IN, was that Harry Pearson, founder and editor of bimonthly high-end audio magazine <I>The Absolute Sound</I>, has apparently been moved to one side. According to <I>TAS</I> publisher Mark Fisher, with whom I spoke briefly Sunday morning on the Show floor, the day-to-day editing of the magazine will become the responsibility of erstwhile <I>Stereophile</I> consulting technical editor Robert Harley.

Added to the Archives This Week

Added to the Archives This Week

In his review of the <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//digitalsourcereviews/407/">Toshiba SD-9200 DVD-Audio player</A>, Chip Stern asks the question "In a rollout of new technologies more or less driven by the expectations of the home-theater crowd, what's in it for us music-lovers?" Stern uncovers the answer and then some, while Kal Rubinson explores the player's surround-music performance.

Consumer Counterattack

Consumer Counterattack

For the last several months, the major record labels have been ramping up what some have viewed as a stealth assault on their customers by increasingly deploying technology that restricts the use of audio CDs (see <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/11113/">previous</A&gt;). While an increasing number of music fans have been crying foul, one consumer has decided to fight back in court.

RIP Dr. Gizmo

RIP Dr. Gizmo

My dogs were killing me. It was the end of the second day of the 1985 Summer Consumer Electronics Show, which I was visiting on behalf of English magazine <I>Hi-Fi News & Record Review</I>. I had been dutifully tramping the capacious corridors of Chicago's McCormick Center and the rooms of the (now demolished) McCormick Inn, looking for signs of musical life amid the huge promotion for the 8mm tape format, which was being heavily touted at CES as the future of both video and audio (!) reproduction. Even trade-paper headlines shouting "<I>Audio: Not Just Video Peripheral!</I>" failed to lift my spirits as I took the shuttle bus over to the Americana Congress hotel on South Michigan, where most of the high-end audio companies were hanging out.

And Universal Players For All

And Universal Players For All

For many audiophiles, the reasonably priced "universal" DVD-Audio/SACD/CD player is the magic combination that will trigger a jump into the new high-resolution audio formats. As an answer to those universal player prayers, <A HREF="http://www.wolfsonmicro.com">Wolfson Microelectronics</A>, UK&ndash;based developer of audio ICs for multimedia and communications applications, announced the introduction of two new six-channel audio DAC chips last week&mdash;one of which brings the contentious formats together in one box.

Classical Gets Web Boost

Classical Gets Web Boost

Classical music fans will be happy to learn that Vivendi Universal has decided to give two of its classical labels a state-of-the-art web facelift. <A HREF="http://www.deccaclassics.com">Decca</A&gt; and <A HREF="http://www.philipsclassics.com">Philips Classics</A> are combining their resources and launching a single new site this month designed by trendy web developer Razorfish.

Added to the Archives This Week

Added to the Archives This Week

In his review of the <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//amplificationreviews/403/">Conrad-Johnson Premier Eleven power amplifier</A>, Wes Phillips comes clean and admits that he loves to be seduced by sound. Phillips writes, "Now, I'm not proposing that we embrace coloration . . . but the removal of all pleasure-producing tonalities doesn't necessarily make for increased realism."

Joseph Audio Wins "Best Sound" at Home Entertainment 2001

Joseph Audio Wins "Best Sound" at Home Entertainment 2001

Melville, NY&ndash;based manufacturer <A HREF="http://www.josephaudio.com"&gt; Joseph Audio</A> announced September 1 that the company was "pleased to accept the 'Best Sound at Show' award as determined by the votes of attendees" at the Home Entertainment 2001 event held in May at the NY Hilton. "We're deeply grateful that so many at the show felt that our RM33si Signature at $7500/pair was worthy of such an honor," said company president <A HREF="mailto:Josephaud@aol.com">Jeff Joseph</A>.

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