One glance told you that this place was trouble incarnate, a serious dive, which I took as a very good sign. A low slung, half–falling down concrete building with no sign and Christmas lights twinkling outside, this utterly depraved den (in a residential neighborhood no less) effortlessly radiated the kind of pure…
search
It's the song I hate
Basically, our man Thurston is saying he hates political songs, but he obviously feels that they are necessary. Political songs are so necessary, in fact, that even he needs to sing one.
This is not a political post, but this is the post I hate. I hate explaining things…
The fact is, a loudspeaker must be more than just sonically pure: It must be musically competent as well, inasmuch as it should communicate the momentum, flow, and sheer rightness of pitch relationships that distinguish music from sound. A very good loudspeaker should also convey the drama, scale, and sense of touch that contribute to holding the listener's interest...
AD's complete review of the Harbeth M40.1 loudspeaker, along with some interesting comments from Harbeth designer Alan Shaw, can be found here.
In the mythical land of perfect recordings and utterly neutral playback gear, no preamplifier has a "sound." Neither do amps or speakers or phono cartridges. But in the real world we live in, every sound recording is a flawed replica of a live or imagined event reproduced by equally flawed playback gear.
MF's complete review of the glitzy MBL 6010 D preamplifier can be found here.
And how great was the rhinestone–trimmed bow on Aretha’s super tricked out, super swank hat!!!! She actually looked a little…ummm, thinner than I’ve seen her lately.
It was wonderful to hear “Simple Gifts,” though I did think that the John Williams arrangement could have made better use of the instrumental firepower that was present. Where was the soaring ending?
Best…
...no single aspect of the sound calls attention to itself, but there is instead a seamless presentation in which the acoustic objects representing instruments and voices are naturally embedded within the whole while retaining their individuality, just as happens in real life.
JA's complete review of the Cary CD 306 SACD Professional Version (whew!) can be found here.
A company better known for their pro and consumer audio amplification, Bryston takes an interesting step into the digital playback arena at a time when compact discs seem to be going out of fashion. Nevertheless, they did it with style and grace: Larry Greenhill was impressed by the BCD-1's ability to "reveal the most subtle sonic details," and John Atkinson noted measured performance that was "close to the state of the art for a…
Me minus you is such a lonely ride, baby.
Seriously, though, how much does this song kill? Doesn't it just make you feel like slow-dancing 8th Grade-style?