PaulF70
Audio Loudspeaker
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« on: April 18, 2016, 03:57:40 am » |
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My wife & I made the short trek down to the northern Chi burbs to check out Axpona for a day, as we did last year (with 16-month-old Anastasia in tow again). Here's my little report.
I had a very targeted list of about a dozen rooms to visit, though, of course, I popped into some others.
The short story is that I did not find a thing - with one exception (noted below) - to impress me enough to think it might rival my own system. (This does not mean nothing else was better, but does mean that nothing else sanely priced was better - or even as good.)
Room descriptions below are in no/little particular order.
Classic Audio Reproduction/Atma-Sphere
In one of the large ballrooms were the large, horn-loaded, field-coil-driver CAR speakers driven by A-S OTL amps and other gear. As with last gear, I was completely and totally unimpressed with this mega-buck system (I think the speakers are at least $40K). Thin sound, with no mid-bass weight and little texture. Yes, there was purity in spades, but it was a completely amusical sound (Pam agreed, with no foreknowledge or prompting on my part).
mbl
mbl was not on my list but since they were showing their massive, top-line omni speakers and electronics I had pop in. And stay for a while we did - the sound was first-rate, despite the fact that they were playing extremely cr*ppy pop music. Michael Jackson - seriously. And, Frankie Goes to Hollywood's Relax - on reel-to-reel! I have to admit, that track was completely awesome on this system. That $300K+ (WAG) system had no flaws. (Actually, it probably did. I kind of doubt those wildly inefficient speakers could reveal all the nuance and decays of acoustic instruments - what really matters, to me anyway. We didn't get to hear any there.)
Martin Logan/McIntosh
This was another pop-in. I was impressed by some vocals early on, but a long audition (with one of my CDs, Miles' Four & More), revealed classic hi-fi brightness and lack of texture. Of course, this could have been solely the fault of the McIntosh DAC they were running - who knows.
This brings me to a tangent which will be explored more fully below: There were many rooms in which the digital source was clearly or likely holding back the system (I can only say "likely" when said room did not also have an analog source for comparison). At home, my Phasure NOS1A DAC has taken digital to a level previously not experienced in my system, and experienced at shows by nothing less than a $70,000 dcs stack.
Doshi/Wilson
Last year Wilson speakers impressed me so much (with both Doshi and D'Agostino electronics) that I went and bought a pair of (brand-new, re-certified) Sophia IIs. I ended up selling them as they require too much power to do what they can do and no amp with that kind of power and with the nuance of low-power SE amps exists - at any sane price, anyway. But - in terms of "conventional", dynamic speakers, the (newer) Wilsons actually are impressive - despite being the very epitome of "hifi sound" for some (they're really not).
This year, Paragon (the Michigan dealer from which I bought my speakers) was again showing with Doshi, with tape and digital (dcs) sources. After plopping down I thought it was the reel-to-reel playing, but then realized it was the dcs stack - make no mistake, that $70,000 pile of boxes can make music on-par with anything.
Doshi is always a really nice guy too, and builds great gear.
Many rooms with YG, Sonus Faber, and numerous other low/mid-efficiency boxed speakers
This would be pretty much the majority of rooms at the show. They all suffered more or less from the same weaknesses:
- Lack of speed (driver mass too high) - this is the biggest issue for me - Fat and/or muddy bass & mid-bass - Dynamic homogenization (especially in the bass) - Lack of coherence (very common)
Unfortunately, msb, who makes some great resistor-ladder DACs (so I read), was using YG speakers, and I found their room completely pedestrian.
Avantgarde
Avantgarde had two rooms, one with the Uno and one with the Zero. We spent a good amount of time in the first room.
I owned Trios so I know what the AV speakers are capable of, and recognized the house sound immediately: Extremely smooth, "billowy", never harsh, but a bit diffuse (definitely no point source here). The Uno, with dynamics bass (which is powered) extending up pretty high, did display some discontinuity in dynamics between it (the bass) and the far more sensitive horns, but integration overall was surprisingly good. Very musical, but these speakers are very expensive - $35,000. (Gee, I remember when even the Duo was under $20K new!)
Audio Note UK
I have loved the AN room at every show I've ever been to, because the sound is always great, whether they're playing digital or vinyl and whether they have a $20,000 or $200,000 system. Yes, detail levels will vary, but whatever errors exist are virtually always of omission and the whole is always extremely musical.
This year they were showing some new speakers with a new form-factor (non-wide baffles) and a new EL34 integrated with built-in DAC. This was a decidedly low-end (for AN) system, but still sounded great, though clearly not reference-quality in any particular area of sonic dissection.
Highwater Sound
Jeff Catalano's room is another audio show constant for great sound. His Horning speakers always sound incredible, driven by Tron (previous years) or NAT (this year). And, of course, he has superb taste in music and only plays vinyl.
To nitpick those speakers, however, they do not have dynamic snap or coherence of an unimpeded Lowther (properly front and rear-loaded anyway).
The Surprise - LaHave/Berning
I wanted to check out a room (the only one, I think) running Berning electronics because they are, of course, first-rate. The surprise was the speakers, made by "LaHave Audio", using a single Seas widebander in what the dealer (who's also the LaHave distributor) stated was some kind of unique loading.
This room had just about everything - a total absence of electronic signature in the music, point-source coherency, paper-driver tone, and high-efficiency micro and macro dynamics. I was extremely impressed, and came back a 2nd time to play my vinyl copy of Hubbard's First Light.
If there was one room in the entire show I might take over my system, it would have been this one - but, to be honest, after listening upon returning home I'm virtually certain it was not quite as good.
Because I had never heard of these speakers (and I thought I'd heard of everything) I did some searching online at home - there is, surprisingly, next to nothing about them on the web, though there is another speaker manufacturer of the same name. However, I did discover this: Michael Fremer picked this room as his favorite of the show last year! So, apparently I really was on to something there.
Epilogue (My System)
Upon returning home, I, of course, sat down to listen, after letting my amp warm up for 30 minutes (everything else is always on).
My system consists of the following:
- Analog Source: Rega RP8/Shelter 501/EAR MC-4 SUT/Graham Slee Reflex M Phono Preamp - Digital Source: Phasure NOS1A DAC - Linestage: Django AVC - Amplifier: First Watt F2J - Speakers: Beauhorn Virtuoso with Lowther DX-4 drivers, and twin subs
I'm going to say a few words here about my new DAC, the Phasure. This thing is pretty remarkable.
Over the past couple years, I've gotten accustomed to really good digital, especially with the Auralic Vega. That is a really impressive piece, that presents even redbook recordings with very vivid tonal colors and dynamics that escape almost every DAC. It plays DSD especially wonderfully (which is actually a bummer since there is so little material on DSD).
However, there was still no doubt that, especially for what I listen to most - 40s-60s un-amplified jazz - vinyl was generally superior, comparing commercial recordings especially.
I did not expect the Vega to be beaten any time soon, which is why I was surprised to have the Phasure leap beyond it in the areas of instrument separation and treble refinement - the two biggest areas where I find even really good digital to lag behind analog. Most digital (again, even pretty good digital) has a sort-of homogenizing effect on micro-dynamics and instrument separation (probably related). The NOS1A just sorts out instruments in a way that is much more akin to what vinyl does routinely, and it does this with redbook recordings. I've only had it for a bit under a week now but it's got me completely captivated.
In fact, I had a very interesting "first" just last evening: For the first time ever - and probably by a long shot at that - I preferred a recording on redbook digital to the same recording on 45 RPM vinyl, with the latter being a very high-quality recording! The record, one of my favorites, was Miles Davis' Sorcerer. The vinyl (this is a superb recording) sounded just a tiny bit compressed and distorted in the bass in comparison, though that thought had never struck me before (I love this record). The digital didn't have this weakness but, much more importantly, the midrange and treble were on-par with the vinyl. No, of course, they didn't sound identical, but neither was one or the other necessarily superior.
In other words, the digital recording, free of typical digital weaknesses (that are so terribly amusical when present), brought to the forefront the (relatively mild) weaknesses of the analog medium.
For the first time ever, I can realistically see giving up the hassle of vinyl even without having recorded all my records (though I'll certainly finish that, if for no other reason than a lot of my jazz records are still and may never be available on digital, or in any decent digital recording).
It's surprising and heartening "news" (to me) that, after all, just maybe, many or maybe even most redbook recordings don't actually suck! No, they've just never been played like they need to be.
And here's the thing: I have not yet tapped the full potential of the Phasure DAC. Everyone agrees that for this DAC to shine it must be used with the corresponding XXHighEnd player - the two are a system, created by the same individual. At present I am running it with HQPlayer, which is definitely an excellent player, however, with anything other than XX the DAC can only accept data upsampled to 384 Khz, while XX allows double that. (With resistor-ladder DACs, of course, upsampling moves noise beyond the audio band and is necessary for best sound.) XXHighEnd also has, apparently, the only filter available today with no pre- or post-ringing.
Looking forward to that next step; I just need my copy of Windoze to arrive. (It pains me a bit to have had to buy one - I've been a Mac guy for a decade now at home and at work - but I'm sure in this case it will be well worth it.)
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