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Gonzalo Rubalcaba, piano; Charlie Haden, bass; Paul Motian, drums
Blue Note CDP 7 95478 2 (CD only). Charlie Haden, prod.; David Richards, eng. DDD? TT: 54:06
Couldn't figure out what jazz release to review this month. Nothing, as Elvis said, moved me; I wanted to get real, real gone this time. I stopped into Nick Potter's Books & Used Records. Nick was waiting for me.
"Ever heard of Gonzalo Rubalcaba?"
"Who?"
"Gonzalo Rubalcaba—28-year-old Cuban pianist. This's his first recording outside Cuba. Lissen to what he does with '…
Description: Two-way, floor-standing loudspeaker with sealed-box bass and electrostatic midrange/tweeter unit. Drive-units: 48" by 10" curvilinear electrostatic panel, 10" plastic-cone woofer. Crossover frequency: 250Hz. Crossover slopes: second-order, 12dB/octave. Frequency response: 28Hz–2kHz –2dB. Bass control switch: shelves response between 28Hz and 250Hz down by 3dB. Dispersion: 30° horizontal (no frequency limits), 48" line source vertical. Sensitivity: 89dB/2.83V/m. Nominal impedance: 6 ohms, with a minimum of 2 ohms. Impedance phase angle: less than 45…
The preamplifier initially used for CD and open-reel tape replay was the Mod Squad Line Drive Deluxe AGT. As my usual Vendetta Research SCP2 phono preamp was away for updating to SCP2A status, I made use of the sample of the Conrad-Johnson Premier Seven tube preamplifier reviewed by J. Gordon Holt last November to play "real" records. Source components consisted of a 1975-vintage Revox A77 to play my own and others' 15ips master tapes, a Linn Sondek/Ekos/Troika setup sitting on a Sound Organisation table to play LPs, and the CAL Tempest SE two-box CD player. For…
Electrostatic loudspeakers have gained a reputation for being hard to drive, so it was with my bump of curiosity piqued that I measured the load represented by the Sequel II. Fig.1 shows the result. A well-damped peak at 33Hz reveals the woofer tuning, while the overall graph suggests a rating of 4 ohms rather than 6. The speaker drops to 3 ohms at 440Hz and to a hair over 2 at 24kHz, from which I infer that puny amplifiers, current-wise, should best be avoided. (Music has considerable energy at 440Hz, though only the occasional high-level cymbal crash will cause…
Act I, Scene One
"Finished version, I promise."
Gayle Sanders was reassuring the press about the $35k Statement at last summer's CES.
MartinLogan seems to run through revisions rather rapidly. For instance, no sooner had I settled in with the Sequel (which itself had undergone some major changes since first being introduced) than M/L announced the Sequel II. Drat! All those listening notes for naught.
Not quite. The original Sequels and the new Sequel IIs have much in common—sound as well…
It was in early August, on a Sunday afternoon, that I got my first listen to the MartinLogan Sequels. Remarkable transparency, lightening-quick transients, and lots of low-level detail, were some of my immediate observations. You should know that the venue was JA's listening room, and the occasion was the Stereophile writers confab, where we compiled the "Recommended Components" listing that appears in this issue. There was a significant slice of the magazine's writers on hand, including guru J. Gordon Holt (…