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04.2022

NAD C399 Integrated Amp $2000 (180×2)

(4 3/4h, 17 1/8w, 15 3/8d, 25 lbs)
NAD C399

NAD’s new, dynamite (!) integrated amp has just landed. It features NAD’s cutting edge PowerDrive nCore amplifier technology. It eschews the world of traditional amplifier design which is replete with mismatched output transistors. C399 is more efficient and refined in performance.

C399 is better in that it resolves instrumental character without the ragged edges that come with traditional technology. Mismatched transistors create artifacts that aren’t part of what should be there. We hear them as harsh and unpleasant. C399 is not only smooth, it’s conspicuously MUSCULAR. If you like to drive your music hard, C399 is up to the task and doesn’t sound flustered in the process.

Virtually all competitors rate their amplifier power AT CLIPPING = 1% THD. Yep, competitors rated at 160×2, do so at clipping- that’s 1 full percent of distortion. If they told you the 160 spec was at clipping, you’d say- it’s a bogus spec. We want to know amplifier power at scant levels of THD, not at clipping.

C399 does NOT claim power at clipping (1%). C399 claims its 180×2 rating at .0005%.

Please take a moment to drink that in. C399 has 2000 times less distortion at rated power!

If NAD chose to rate C399 at clipping, LIKE THE OTHER GUYS, it would exceed 250×2. But, that’s not how NAD plays ball. NAD wants to, instead, raise the bar by claiming power at a very low rate of distortion that would be much more meaningful to your actual listening experience.

This is relevant in that it helps explain why NAD amps purvey a sanguine, non fettered sound. I’m not saying that NAD sounds 2000 times better than brand X, despite measuring dramatically better. My point IS to say that the piano/guitar/voice sounds closer to crystal clear because there’s no debris or hash in the equation.

You can check Dave’s Faves for inputs and other features. The point of having C399 here is to put it on your radar to come audition. There is NOTHING better at $2K. And you can bet it won’t stay at this price for long.


Wharfedale Elysian One Speakers $4995 Per Pair

Piano Walnut
(19 5/16h, 10 3/8w, 12 7/16d, 33 lbs, 4 ohms, 89dB)

Piano Walnut, Piano Black, Piano White

Wharfedale’s stunningly gorgeous Elysian line has been UNavailable for the majority of C19. We’re seeing the dam starting to break now.

I commend Wharfe for making the E-1 a substantial “smallish” speaker. It isn’t a mini. It’s a 7” 2-way with ribbon tweeter. The cabinet is available in a 3 slick flavors, but it is the luscious walnut that even Sonus Faber will envy.

The 7” mid/bass driver is comprised of a coated mix of pulp fiber and fiberglass. It’s full and warm sounding. The ribbon tweeter is conspicuously big at 3.5 x 1.5 inches. It casts a large, mellow image. The choice of a 7” driver makes sense as E-1 has a good bit of gusto. A 5-6” driver just can’t deliver this heft of sound. We always worry about ribbon tweets sounding too bright. Wharfedale has voiced its ribbon to be beautiful, not biting.


Matching Stands $500 Per Pair If Purchased With Speakers, $800 Per Pair Alone

(18 3/4h, 13 3/8w, 11 5/16d with top plate of 10 5/16w and 13 3/8d)

The stands are made of black metal. The plinth on the bottom of the stands is available in matching walnut/black/white finishes.

Camille Saint-Saens (1835-1921)

Composer Camille Saint-Saens was a piano and organ prodigy. His day job for decades was as the organist at La Madeleine, the official church of the French Empire. His sight reading skills and musical memory were legendary, even at a young age.

What were you doing at age ten? When he was performing (yes, by age ten!) he would ask the audience to call out any LVB sonata- which he would then play from memory. Did I mention he could do this by age TEN?!

03.2022

Mytek Liberty 2 DAC $1495

Covid 19 has impacted every audio company the last couple of years. Nobody has been disrupted more than Mytek. They have been out of the popular Liberty DAC for well over a year -and Liberty 2 is here- at long last!

Liberty 2 steps in as THE best choice as a great cut above DAC- that compares to some of the most expensive on the market. In addition to sounding better on CD and hi-res streaming content, Liberty 2 supports full MQA decoding. If you like Tidal (I do!) you’re gonna love Liberty 2.

Liberty 2 is a great choice to run with a wide variety of preamps and integrateds that have no DACS, OLD DACs or mundane DACs. With Liberty 2, you’re right in the space race with state of the art digital performance for only 15 bills.

Most outboard DACs are simply repackaged versions of what is built in your receiver or integrated. Not so for Liberty 2 which is a significantly higher echelon performer. Specifically, Liberty 2 depicts leading edge transient response more adeptly to your system. Think of the alacrity purveyed by a virtuoso guitar player or pianist- like the sparks off Dorothy’s slippers!

A great guitarist like Milos Karadaglic not only plays the right notes, but can fire off percussive dynamic fireworks better than lesser players. Let’s hear how Milos can accent specific plucks to bring out a Spanish cadence more authentically. Let’s hear the incredible Yuja Wang awe us with Dukas’ “Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” Liberty 2 will allow you to appreciate the world class skill & dexterity of these musicians. They have command over their instruments that even quality touring pros do not. Let’s drink it all in- right down to the last drop!

Liberty 2 uses ESS’s latest 9038 chipset with its new, dedicated linear power supply, clock generator and discrete line stage. It decodes full bore MQA which makes it a slam dunk decision.

Inputs include 2 Coax, 1 OPT, USB2, & XLR.

Outputs are RCA and XLR.

Liberty 2 also can serve as a fine headphone amp with 1/4” jack.


NAD C700 Streaming Integrated Amp $1500: 80×2

NAD’s C700 is killin’ it out there as among the best electronics’ values our biz has seen. I wrote about the basics in the Nov 2021 newsletter. What I want to brag up here, since we’ve sold a pile by now, is the resolution. The features are wonderful- actually class leading. You can stream Tidal and other music services through the on board Bluesound platform that works like a champ. But beyond that, I want you to appreciate how spaciously C700 can portray music.

C700 isn’t just a cute integrated for running tiny speakers in your office or bedroom. The 80×2 amp on board C700 is something special. The amplifier is NAD’s proprietary PowerDrive UcD design. They don’t just buy a Hypex module off the shelf and plug it in- as the other guys do.

Traditional amplifier technology has an array of output transistors that are mismatched. Imagine looking through glasses that are out of focus. C700’s amplifier section is computer controlled to the degree that it is difficult to even MEASURE distortion. The musical benefit of this is that your “glasses” are precisely focused. And yet, there is no grain or bite to the sound. It is well delineated and has a broad soundstage.

The PowerDrive module provides a second high current rail of performance so C700 can excel into low impedances and sound smooth, not gritty.

C700 has a delightfully open and relaxed character. It is built like a tank within a chunk of aluminum and has a lovely 5” screen readout. C700 is a not just an easy choice when running modest shelf style speakers. It can drive extremely revealing speakers like the family of Amphions. It is also a perspicacious choice with among the best speaker values in our biz, the Wharfedale Lintons and Denton 85s.

Of course C700 doesn’t outperform or hit as hard as its bigger sibling power amp, C298. But short of spending in that league and buying separates, C700 is a flat out bargain. And… C700 has a preamp output, so you can muscle up even further if you decide you need to- without trading up.

NAD C700. It’s almost… the perfect hub for anyone’s music system!


Ortofon Bronze $440

One of the best MM cart values in our biz has been out of stock since June 2021. That’s EIGHT MONTHS! We just got a batch in. First come, first served. Dave’s Fave!


Vocalion: State Of The Art Gramophone 1923

In 1923 a Vocalion gramophone was considered state of the art. You can see Compton Mackenzie here with his personal unit. Looks a bit like a tuba. There was only one recording of a full symphony then, LVB’s #5 from 1913.

Mackenzie started his own label when electronic recording became possible in 1926, called NGS (National Gramophone Society). The race was on to produce and sell great records and audio systems. We’ve come some distance in a hundred years…