On two occasions I've caught myself wondering how to afford a pair of Wilson Audio loudspeakers. Interestingly, both happened within the past year. The first was in April 2009, at the Son et Image show in Montreal, during a demonstration of the MAXX Series 3. The experience was notable for its blend of genuinely great sound with genuine musicality: Each performance unfolded of its own natural accord, with human randomness and nuance, and without the fussy, mechanical, shallow artifice that attracts some audiophiles in…
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Peter McGrath was our guest near the end of summer, but I was the one with the baggage: A few good Wilson demonstrations aside, I was far from convinced. I didn't think the Sophia Series 2 would prove musically satisfying. Would it sound good? Yes. Would it deserve my respect? Without question. Would I love it? Couldn't imagine it.
Then there's the power thing. My favorite amp these days is the 20W Shindo Haut-Brion, each of whose custom output transformers has only a single 16-ohm secondary winding: scarcely the thing for a high-end loudspeaker with a sensitivity…
Well, I'm working up to the Ring. But it's important to remember that, throughout most of the 19th century, Tannhäuser was Wagner's most popular work. With Lohengrin, Der Fliegende Holländer, and Rienzi—early works all, it was one of the few Wagner operas that most operagoers would have heard. Not only that, a good case can be made that the opera's unprecedented sensuality, its convincing musical…
But in all of these permutations, Tannhäuser can still be a bitter pill to take. Even in the Dresden version, the music ranges from the sublime (the pilgrims' chorales, the Act III prelude, the Rome Narration) to the ridiculous (the overdone part-writing that closes Acts I and II) to the merely humdrum (the Act II…
WAGNER: Tannhäuser
Plácido Domingo, Tannhäuser; Cheryl Studer, Elisabeth; Agnes Baltsa, Venus; Andreas Schmidt, Wolfram; Matti Salminen, Landgraf; William Pell, Walther; Kurt Rydl, Biterolf; Clemens Bieber, Heinrich; Oskar Hillebrandt, Reinmar; Barbara Bonney, Shepherd; Chorus of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; Philharmonia Orchestra, Giuseppe Sinopoli
Deutsche Grammophon 427 625-2 (3 CDs only). 1989. Klaus Hiemann, eng.; Günther Breest, Wolfgang Stengel, Claudia Hamann, prods. DDD. TT: 3:16:14
Which brings me to the second recording of the…
Briefly, the argument, brewed of Wagner's usual conflation of various legends, with a soupçon of fact, and set in 12th-century Thuringia:
Tannhäuser is a Minnesinger, a composite of two historical figures: the ne'er-do-well minnesinging Tannhäuser, who lived somewhat later and was for centuries the subject of cautionary lays; and Heinrich von Ofterdingen (Wagner retains "Heinrich" as Tannhäuser's Christian name), whose travels and trafficking with the almost certainly legendary magician Klingsor led him to a cave of timeless delights not unlike…
I'm an audiophile; worse yet, I'm a reviewer. It's my job to hear some of the most incredible audio gear on the face of the planet. So it isn't much of a surprise that I love the cutting-edge stuff!
I kept repeating thoughts like these in my mind like a mantra as I sauntered along, walking from Penn Station to Rockefeller Center one morning on my way to work. But as I did, I must have looked like the Cheshire Cat. My grin stretched from ear to ear. Deep in my shoulder bag was a Radio Shack Optimus CD-3400…