First-Ever DVD-Audio Disc Premiered in Berlin

First-Ever DVD-Audio Disc Premiered in Berlin

Earlier this month, at the Internationale Funkausstellung 1999 in Berlin, Germany, <A HREF="http://www.syrinx.de">Syrinx music & media</A> announced that, together with <A HREF="http://www.panasonic.com/">Panasonic/Technics</A&gt; and their new DVD-Audio players (see <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10509/">previous story</A>), they successfully presented the world's first DVD-Audio disc. The Internationale Funkausstellung 1999 ran from August 28 until September 5 under the theme of "Your World of Consumer Electronics."

CD Recorders Fastest-Growing Category in Audio

CD Recorders Fastest-Growing Category in Audio

More than a million CD recorders have been sold in the last 21 months, making the category one of the most rapidly developing segments in the history of the consumer electronics industry. The news was delivered by <A HREF="http://www.philips.com/">Philips</A&gt; executives at the end of August at the IFA trade and consumer exhibition in Berlin, Germany.

J. Gordon Holt resigns from Stereophile to go freelance

J. Gordon Holt resigns from Stereophile to go freelance

J. Gordon Holt founded <I>Stereophile</I> in the fall of 1962 in order to promote the idea that the optimal way to judge audio components was to do what end users did: <I>listen</I> to them. Since then, Gordon has had an unbroken relationship with <I>Stereophile</I>, through its sale to Larry Archibald in 1982, my coming on board as editor in 1986, the sale of the magazine to Petersen Publishing in 1998, and the subsequent sale of Petersen to Emap in 1999. Through all this time he has been listed on the magazine's masthead as "Founder & Chief Tester." (A <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//interviews/66/">fascinating interview</A> with Gordon, conducted by his associate and friend Steven Stone, can be found in this website's "Archives.")

New Onkyo CD Recorder Will Debut at CEDIA

New Onkyo CD Recorder Will Debut at CEDIA

CD recorders are the hottest ticket in audio at the moment. Philips and Marantz once dominated the category, but other manufacturers have recently jumped on board with their own versions, among them Pioneer and Harman/Kardon. <A HREF="http://www.onkyo.co.jp">Onkyo</A&gt; will introduce its DX-RD511 dubber later this month at the 1999 <A HREF="http://www.cedia.org/">CEDIA</A&gt; Expo in Indianapolis. The machine is expected to arrive in stores in October&mdash;just in time for the holiday season.

Added to the Archives This Week

Added to the Archives This Week

Back in 1985, J. Gordon Holt wrote: "It seems, these days, that many of us audiophiles have become so preoccupied with the minutiae of sound reproduction that we haven't even noticed that it doesn't sound like music any more." He was talking about the obsession with soundstaging and detail at the expense of <I>musical</I> accuracy. In "<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//asweseeit/144/">Getting the Notes Right (Midrange Madness)</A>," he renders his lesson in classic JGH style, observing that "I have played on this old saw in these pages for so many years that it has turned into a dead sawhorse, but somehow the message never seems to get through. There should be no harm done by beating it into the ground a little farther."

Maybe it was Just a Slow Week for Audio News . . .

Maybe it was Just a Slow Week for Audio News . . .

The year was 1956, and Elvis had just finshed his set on the December 15 <I>Louisiana Hayride</I> radio show. Elvis was one of a half-dozen acts that were broadcast that night on KWKH, the radio station that originated <I>Hayride</I>. After his encore, Elvis left the stage and the crowd went wild&mdash;so wild that they would not stop screaming for more of the soon-to-be king of rock'n'roll. Because several acts on the bill had not yet performed, the show's announcer, Horace Logan, went to the microphone in an attempt to quiet the audience, and ended up making a little music history.

Sony Announces Second Super Audio CD Player

Sony Announces Second Super Audio CD Player

When <A HREF="http://www.sony.com">Sony</A&gt; introduced the first Super Audio CD (SACD) player, the SCD-1 (see <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10445/">previous report</A> and Jonathan Scull's forthcoming review in the November 1999 <I>Stereophile</I>), audiophiles who heard it were impressed with its performance, but wondered if its $5000 price tag would keep it out of the market for a while. Last week, Sony announced their second SACD player, the SCD-777ES, to appear in October at the slightly more wallet-friendly price of $3500.

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