Added to the Archives This Week:

Added to the Archives This Week:

We posted an <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/news/10415/">update</A&gt; on Peter Belt and his activities earlier in the month, but the saga began many moons ago. If you're curious about where it all began, or just need to know more, then J. Gordon Holt's "<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//asweseeit/110/">L'Affaire Belt</A>" is for you. Stranger than fiction? Guaranteed.

Lenbrook Group adds NAD to Roster

Lenbrook Group adds NAD to Roster

Toronto-based Lenbrook Group announced earlier this month that it had acquired NAD Electronics from AudioNord International, a Scandinavian organization that has owned the brand for most of this decade. The deal is expected to close next week, on May 3. Lenbrook will take over NAD's worldwide marketing and distributorship, but AudioNord will continue to market the brand in Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, and Scandinavia. Other joint marketing ventures will follow, according to Lenbrook's public relations agent.

Stereophile Links Database Now Online

Stereophile Links Database Now Online

Every week we get an e-mail or two from online readers begging for a state-of-the-art set of searchable weblinks on the <I>Stereophile</I> website. Starting this week, your e-prayers have been answered. The <I>Stereophile</I> website now sports one of the Internet's most comprehensive set of qualified audio and video links---as of last count, they number more than 2500. The database is searchable in a variety of ways, and also groups similar categories.

DVD-Audio, the Internet, and Those Pesky Downloads

DVD-Audio, the Internet, and Those Pesky Downloads

Last Month, music labels, distributors, and retailers met in Las Vegas for the 41st annual <A HREF="http://www.narm.com">National Association of Recording Merchandisers</A> convention to wrestle with several new issues wrought by the digital age. NARM Chairperson Rachelle Friedman set the tone for the event when she stated in the keynote address that "for the music industry, the 21st century and the impact of the Internet have already thrust themselves upon us."

Recording of April 1999: John Tavener: Eternity's Sunrise

Recording of April 1999: John Tavener: Eternity's Sunrise

<B>JOHN TAVENER: <I>Eternity's Sunrise</I></B><BR> With: <I>Song of the Angel</I>, <I>Petra: A Ritual Dream</I>, <I>Sappho: Lyrical Fragments</I>, <I>Funeral Canticle</I><BR> Patricia Rozario, Julia Gooding, sopranos; George Mosley, baritone; Andrew Manze, violin; Choir & Orchestra of the Academy of Ancient Music, Paul Goodwin<BR>Harmonia Mundi HMU 907231 (CD). 1998. Robina Young, prod.; Mike Hatch, eng. DDD. TT: 65:03<BR> Performance <B>****</B><BR> Sonics <B>****</B>

Meridian's 96/24 Digital Loudspeakers First on Market

Meridian's 96/24 Digital Loudspeakers First on Market

Cambridge, England's <A HREF="http://www.meridian.co.uk/">Meridian Ltd.</A> has been making digital active (or self-powered) loudspeakers since 1990. Regarded as the best among the very few companies to offer such a product, Meridian has taken the concept to a new level by introducing three DSP-series loudspeakers with 24-bit/96kHz capability: the DSP6000, DSP5500, and DSP5000---all bearing the 96/24 suffix to distinguish them from their lower-resolution predecessors. Meridian introduced two 96kHz-capable subwoofers, the DSW1500 and DSW2500, at the 1999 Consumer Electronics Show.

RealNetworks Acquires Xing, Joins IBM

RealNetworks Acquires Xing, Joins IBM

Last week, <A HREF="http://www.real.com">RealNetworks</A&gt; announced that it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire privately held <A HREF="http://www.xing-tech.com">Xing Technology</A>, a developer and provider of MP3 software. Xing has been developing standards-based digital audio and video encoding and decoding technology since 1990, but eventually ran into trouble competing with other Internet-audio startups such as RealNetworks and Liquid Audio.

Added to the Archives This Week:

Added to the Archives This Week:

Step all the way back to issue number one of <I>Stereophile</I>, in which Lucius Wordburger proffers some sage advice on <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//historical/108/">How to Write an Ad</A>. Learn about The Endorsement (hint: don't use Fidel Castro), The Calculated Omission, and The Junk Product.

Sony, IBM in Online Music Partnership

Sony, IBM in Online Music Partnership

There's gold in them digital music hills. This obvious reality---supported by the music industry's near-panic in the face of the phenomenal growth of MP3 in the past year---was reinforced last week, when <A HREF="http://www.sony.com/">Sony Corporation</A> and <A HREF="http://www.ibm.com/">International Business Machines</A> announced a digital music mutual-aid pact at a press conference in Los Angeles.

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