I was all set to give up on moving magnets until the new Shure VI5-VMR (MR stands for Micro-Ridge stylus) arrived. In a word, it's terrific. I was slightly disappointed with the original V15-V: I just didn't think it was a significant improvement over the Type IV. What I missed was fine detailespecially in the high frequencies and during heavily modulated passages. The original V was not quite up to the sound of certain moving coils. Which is not to say the original V was a bad buy: moving coils cost twice the price and you need a stepup. I could recommend the original V without hesitation.
I am a Sharpener. I can acknowledge being a Sharpenersomeone who, as explained by Stereophile reviewer/psychology professor Robert Deutsch in our March 2009 issue, tends to look for and exaggerate differenceswithout feeling a need to enter a 12-step program or confess to a crime. That's because there's nothing wrong with being a Sharpener.
Revinylization #5: Craft Recordings & Charlie Parker's Savoy LPs
Apr 30, 2020
I was well over 50 when I first heard an original copy of Charlie Parker's "Ko-Ko." It was a happy accident. I received a call from the family of a well-to-do neighbor who had recently passed away, asking if I'd be interested in having his record collection. Three minutes later, I was parked near the servants' entrance of their centuries-old brick mansionhow quickly we forget our proletariat resentment when there's vinyl to be hadloading a few cartons of LPs and 78s into my car.