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Description: Remote-controlled integrated CD player with multiple, user-selectable digital inputs and volume control. Inputs: 4 digital, S/PDIF (BNC), TosLink, ST-glass and AES/EBU (XLR). Outputs: 2 analog, single-ended (RCA) and balanced (XLR); 4 digital, S/PDIF (BNC), TosLink, ST-glass, and AES/EBU (XLR). Output impedance: 51 ohms. D/A conversion: 32x upsampling, using 4 Burr-Brown PCM-1704 24-bit DACs (2 per channel) and 3 user-selectable interpolation algorithms. Digital resolution: 21 bits. Power consumption: 25W.
Dimensions: 17" (430mm) W by 7" (180mm)…
Analog source: VPI TNT V-HR turntable/tonearm, Grado Statement Reference and Benz-Micro LO4 cartridges.
Digital sources: Wadia 861, Simaudio Moon Eclipse, Parasound CDP-1000, Marantz CD-63SE CD players.
Preamplifier: VAC CPA1 Mk.III.
Power amplifiers: Classé CAM-350, Mark Levinson No.20.6, VTL Ichiban monoblocks; VAC Renaissance 70/70.
Loudspeakers: Magnepan MG3.6/R, Impact Technologies Airfoil 5.2.
Cables: Nirvana S-X Ltd., Nordost Valhalla.
Accessories: Duo-Tech Cable Burn-In device, Bright Star isolation systems, MIT Z Systems and…
The Wadia's output impedance was a low 58 ohms from the unbalanced RCA jacks, this doubling as expected from the balanced XLRs. (Because a balanced connection has a separate driver for each phase of the signal, the drivers impedances appear in series and must therefore be added to get the overall output impedance.) The player preserved absolute polarity from both sets of outputs, with the XLR wired with pin 2 "hot." Its error correction was superb, coping with gaps in the CD data spiral up to 1.5mm in length without audible glitches.
The maximum output…
For the first time in a long time, audiophiles were putting together music systems differently, spending money on audio equipment differently, and listening differently. Shopworn watchwords like soundstage and bloom and inner detail were replaced with vibe and drama—words that real people might actually use to describe real music. And, as with the flat-earthers of the 1970s, it was nice to…
That's where claims of objectivity…
Lost Highway 088 170 239-2 (CD). 2001. Luke Lewis, Mary Martin, Bonnie Garner, prods.; Bob Brockman, Michael Hopkins, Mark Johnson, others, engs.; Hank Williams (no relation), mastering. AAD. TT: 43:19
Performance ****
Sonics *****
TOWNES VAN ZANDT: Poet: A Tribute to Townes Van Zandt
Pedernales/Freefalls FFE 7019 2 (CD). 2001. Freddy Fletcher, exec prod.; Eric Paul, Michael Timmons, Ray Kennedy, Steve Earle, others, prods. & engs. AAD? TT: 59:17
Performance ****
Sonics ****
Tribute albums are problematic in enough ways that…
by Jim Cogan and William Clark; Foreword by Quincy Jones
San Francisco: Chronicle Books, 2003. Softcover, 7.5" by 10", 224 pp. $24.95. ISBN 0-8118-3394-1.
Temples of Sound: Inside the Great Recording Studios is a history of those US studios that were either the most influential in advancing the state of the art of American popular music from the late 1940s on—the "Golden Age"—or that made the records that were the most popular. In many cases, those were one and the same studio.
The book is organized into 15 principal…