Given how dynamic the system sounded on “Rey’s Theme” from Star Wars, the Force Awakens, performed by violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter and conducted by John Williams on Across the Stars, and the…
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The treasure behind the door to room 732 was a pair of $160,000 Bayz Counterpoint 2.0 speakers. I’d heard them two years earlier but in a room with too many talkers. All I could really do at the time was admire the…
It was equally great to hear how warm and inviting the Solo 800s sounded in the company of an all-Linn system that also included the Linn Klimax DSM streaming preamp/DAC ($42,000) and Linn 360 (PWAB = passive with active bass) speakers ($66,000/pair). Vinyl was played on a limited production run Linn Sondek LP12-50 turntable with Ekstatik cartridge ($60,000) and Radikal Power Supply Akurate.…
I swore that the next time I heard Rimsky-Korsakov’s infernal Dance of the Tumblers, I’d tumble out of the room. But since this was my penultimate room, I grudgingly remained and noted how well the subs mated with…
Michael Vamos, who pays attention to my playlist, switched to Grant Green’s “…
The sound was so good that I asked to scroll through the iPad-controlled playlist. Given the opportunity to make up for what I missed, I cued up Elisabeth Schwarzkopf’s great recording of Richard Strauss…
Jain evidently has ears that match his business acumen; so far, every Fidelity product I’ve encountered has sounded somewhere between really good and masterful, with Perlisten and Diptyque impressing the most in the speaker department. As for amplifiers and players, I give a tip of the trilby to Soul Note, Audia Flight, and Unison Research.
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The setup included the JBL Classic SA550 ($1999) and SA750 ($3000) integrated amplifiers, and three sources: the MP350 Classic music player/streamer ($799), CD350 Classic CD player ($699), and TT350 Classic turntable ($999).
Starting with the compact L82 Classic MKII speakers ($2900/pair) powered by the SA550, Lake Street Dive's "I Want You Back"…
Today, a turntable price of $7000, while not exactly cheap, can't be called stiff. What happened between then and now…
Though the design of the 309 SPD—and that of SME's entire line of tonearms—has been refined over the years, it remains essentially unchanged from the company's first Series 300 tonearms of the late 1980s: After the cartridge pins themselves, between the headshell's cartridge-pin clips and the cable that goes to the phono preamp, there are three breaks in the signal path: an additional set of pins, at the back of the headshell; the connection between the headshell and armtube; and the connection between the DIN socket at the base of the tonearm pillar and the…