While developing the Ampeggio, Adler decided to approach some piano companies for help in transforming into reality the now-complex cabinet design. "I was disappointed at first," she says, "because all of the [European] companies I asked say their stuff is made in China." But Adler eventually discovered Schimmel, a 125-year-old, family-owned company in Braunschweig that also happens to make the best-selling German piano in America. Schimmel's engineers were intrigued by the project and made some contributions of their own—including the advice that, because any music-making device oscillates…
Some general observations: The Voxativ Ampeggios showed the same considerable transient speed, spatial presence, dramatic ease, and physical impact as the best Lowther applications I've heard—and lacked the English speakers' most egregious flaws. Low-frequency tones, from just below 40Hz and up, had real power, color, and physicality via the Voxativs, with response irregularities at only a couple of mid-to-upper-bass frequencies in my smaller room. (Some notes in the piano's left-hand register sounded a little weaker than the rest, though not nearly enough to intrude on my listening…
Sidebar 1: Specifications
The Voxativ Ampeggio costs $29,750/pair. Manufacturer: Voxativ GmbH, Nollendorfstrasse 11a, 10777 Berlin, Germany. Tel: (49) (0)30-2100-5662. Web: www.voxativ.com. US distributor: Audio Arts, Inc., 1 Astor Place, Suite 11(h), New York, NY 10003. Tel: (212) 260-2939. Web: www.audioarts.co.
I think any newish company launching yet another expensive (ie, anything over $2000) digital-to-analog converter on the roiling waters of the audiophile marketplace needs at least two things: a truly great product, and a good story to tell. I think Bricasti Design Ltd., of Medford, Massachusetts, has both.
Although Bricasti came into corporate existence only in 2004, it is not a pure startup. The principals of Bricasti were longtime Lexicon employees who had to seek other options when Harman International closed down Harman's New England operations. Bricasti cofounder (with DSP-software…
Repeatedly pressing Status scrolls through displays showing: the Input selected and that input's sampling rate; a resettable log of digital "overs" for the Left and Right channels; and the M1's current operating temperature, in degrees Celsius or Fahrenheit. Pressing Filter shows the number of the filter selected and enables selecting a different one. The Aux button selects between the Aux jack's accepting a digital-audio input or an external word-clock input. The Display button controls the brightness of the display, and Enter executes whatever selection is displayed.
The M1's exterior…
I also briefly used Ayre's CX-7eMP CD player ($3500) for its AES/EBU output, but I did not have an AES/EBU cable anywhere near as good as the Silver Shadow S/PDIF cable. (Nordost does make an AES/EBU version of the Silver Shadow, but I didn't request it.) That said, the Ayre CD player, used as a transport with a $30 Canare 110-ohm AES/EBU cable, was truly excellent. The Silver Shadow shone brightest—a Miltonian oxymoron, that—with the Sooloos, which has only an S/PDIF output. That the Silver Shadow shone less brightly with the $1500 Musical Fidelity CD player might say more about the…
Sidebar: Contacts
Bricasti Design Ltd., 123 Fells Avenue, Medford, MA 01255. Tel: (781) 306-0420. Web: www.bricasti.com.
Nordost Corporation, 200 Homer Avenue, Ashland, MA 01721. Tel: (800) 836-2750, (508) 881-1116. Fax: (508) 881-6444. Web: www.nordost.com.
Summer's end is traditionally known as "the silly season" in European newsrooms, but there was nothing silly about the bombshell of a press release that arrived on the desks of hi-fi journalists on August 19. Two of Europe's most successful and best-established high-end audio brands, Focal and Naim Audio, announced that they are joining forces to create a new company, Focal & Co., under the chairmanship of Focal founder Jacques Mahul. With a combined annual earnings of nearly £50 million ($82 million), ca £31 million for Focal and ca £18 million for Naim) and more than 300 employees,…
Michele Bachmann, who is now warning us about the rise of the USSR, vowing to padlock the EPA, and saying she will single–handedly bring back $2 a gallon gas—perhaps she and her husband have convinced the heads of the major oil companies to pray away their profits—has now crossed the line as far as music is concerned by wishing Elvis happy birthday on the anniversary of the day on which he died. Mistaking death for birth? Perhaps she’s actually a secret Buddhist?
Bachmann’s musical gaffe—which still pales in comparison to Palin’s Paul Revere “ringing those bells” or Bachmann’s…
During the final episode of Radio Happy Hour, held at Manhattan’s Le Poisson Rouge on Friday, August 12, we were treated to performances by New York five-piece, Twin Sister. The band played a selection of songs from In Heaven, an unabashed pop album full of hooks and charms, to be released by Domino on September 27.
I was drawn to this music from its earliest moments—those celestial and far-reaching chimes, old-school synth beats, and Andrea Estella’s arresting vocal delivery, a strange and glittering coo, reaching out to “Daniel”:
Saw you making eyes at me
Hotels are…