If Stereophile has covered another product that has received as many upgrades in as brief a time as Bricasti's M1 DAC ($8595), I missed it. I first wrote about the M1 in my August 2011 "Fifth Element" column; John Atkinson's full review was the cover story of the February 2012 issue; in a Follow-Up (March 2012), I wrote about Bricasti's expansion of the M1's selectable filter options; and in another Follow-Up (September 2012), I reported that Bricasti had now included, via a firmware upgrade, so-called "minimum-phase" versions of…
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My first reaction on setting up the latest version of T+A elektroakustik's Music Player Balanced ($4400) was one of familiarity. Apparent on the outside were the same clean, beautiful design, build quality, and attention to detail that had impressed me when I reviewed the original Music Player ($4000) in our August 2009 issue. But a closer inspection revealed that T+A's engineers have been busy (footnote 1).
First off, the display seems easier to read, and several new buttons have sprouted on the front panel. On the back,…
The cream-colored jackets for the three LPs that comprise Martzy's Bach recordings have the precise look and feel of British…
Stink on Paper: 10 Awful Books about Music.
Donovan Leitch: Hurdy-Gurdy Man. The innocence of his music makes the self-inflation in Donovan's autobiography all the more jarring.
Stephen Davis: The Hammer of the Gods. An entertaining examination of Led Zeppelin, but apparently without basis in fact.
Robert Christgau: Grown Up All Wrong. An unwitting parody of the self-consciously hip rock critic at his worst.
Philip Hart: Fritz Reiner: A Biography. A sinfully dull, unrevealing book about a giant of 20th-century music.
Geoffrey…
The Marimbas sounded fine right out of the box and placed exactly where the PSB Alpha B1s had been, in their cat- and girlfriend-approved locations: on 24"-tall stands, the centers of their woofers 37" from my room's front wall, 96" from my listening position, and about 48" from the sidewalls. But I quickly found that the Marimbas would also respond well to more extreme placement scenarios, delivering a wider, deeper soundstage, with no apparent loss in bass impact or image focus, as I brought them closer to the listening position. I found the best results with the Marimbas…
Description: Two-way, reflex-loaded stand-mounted loudspeaker. Drive-units: 1" silk-dome tweeter, 5¼" polypropylene-cone woofer. Crossover frequency: 2.6kHz. Frequency range: 50Hz–35kHz. Impedance: 6 ohms. Sensitivity: 87dB/W/m.
Dimensions: 10.9" (279mm) H by 6.5" (167mm) W by 8.6" (221mm) D. Weight: 8.6 lbs each (3.9kg).
Serial number of review samples: 201206 1364.
Price: $349/pair.
Manufacturer: Music Hall, 108 Station Road, Great Neck, NY 11023. Tel: (516) 487-3663. Web: www.musichallaudio.com
I began my serious listening with the Marimbas mated to PSB's SubSeries 1 subwoofer and driven by NAD's C316 BEE integrated amplifier. I played mostly CDs using NAD's recently discontinued C515 BEE CD player. (A sample of the replacement model, the C516 BEE, arrived at our office in late February; look for my review sometime this summer.) Lengths of Kimber Kable 8VS speaker cable connected amp to sub, while longer runs of QED X-Tube 400 Signature connected sub to speakers; interconnects were Kimber PBJ.—Stephen Mejias
Both Sam Tellig ("Sam's Space," December 2012) and Stephen Mejias ("The Entry Level," June 2013) enthused over the price/performance ratio offered by Music Hall's Marimba bookshelf loudspeaker. Sam concluded that the Marimba was "an astonishing little speaker, as long as you don't expect it to do much." Stephen, too, was impressed by the Marimbas' startling imaging capabilities, and found the bass to be impressively tight, tuneful, and fast. With this consensus from the oldest and youngest of Stereophile's writers, I decided to run the Marimba through my speaker…