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08.2018

Magnepan MMGi $650 Per Pair (48h, 14 1/2w, 1 1/4d)

Magnepan has improved its entry speaker to MMGi. Maggie has always had an entry speaker that is designed to hook you. It is sheer entrapment! They make this model at an absurdly low price so you’ll take a chance on trying Magnepan.
We’re happy to warn you that once you get a taste, you’ll want more and more! The devious plot is, buy these boys for $650 per pair, and it won’t be long before you’ll want one of the bigger models, a bigger dose, as it were.
MMGi set up properly, meaning three feet or so off the back wall, will cast a very large image. It is actually more than a bit eerie to have these two screens about eight feet apart and be able to SEE (hear) a vocalist dead center between them! We’re not talking small dead center, but HUGE dead center. The size of the image of a singer, for ex, is convincingly close to real life size.
At $650 per pair, you can’t get a speaker that is more open or has faster transient response. MMGi has extremely taut bass. On top of sounding gorgeous, MMGi is an especially good fit for an apartment or condo. Their clarity competes with the best speakers out there, without pounding bass response.
We can drive them very nicely with an NAD integrated amp of 40-50w/ch. NAD C316 ($380, 40×2) and NAD C328 ($550, 50×2) are natural, commensurate integrated amps to go with MMGi.
I particularly like C328 because it has better sound, MM phono, DAC and Bluetooth. If you get C328, you’re really good to go. C328 also has a subwoofer out in case you want to add the thunder of a dynamic woofer, to augment the beauty and speed of MMGi.
We stock MMGi in the best selling version, black cloth with natural oak sides. They’re also available in off white or grey cloth. Optional wood side finishes are black or dark cherry.

We’ve Come A Long Way

The Absolute Sound magazine commenced in spring of 1973. In the initial issue, publisher Harry Pearson went gaga for “Double Advents.”
HP started with the Advent bookshelf speakers. Then he took a second pair, put them atop the
first pair upside down and ran them in parallel. This… was considered a very substantial offering in 1973. That is, take a 10” 2-way with paper drivers- invert a second set and run “the tower” as a column at four ohms, when few amps of the day could drive them! They ran about $250 per pair, so for $500, I suppose, why not have some fun messing about? But… REALLY?
In the same article HP says he heard TRIPLE Advents and they put everything else in the
store to shame.
The best cartridges of the day were a disaster. HP’s faves of Decca & ADC were so varied in performance that he warned you better audition the exact cartridge that might end up at your house.
Channels cut in/out. Cantilevers collapsed. Some were smooth, others harsh. Crazy.
HP had to get four samples of the Audio Research SP-3 preamp to find one that worked. And even then, when his buddy Frank re-soldered the PCBs, harshness diminished and transparency improved NOTICEABLY.
HP waxed on that another buddy had some McIntosh gear that was reliable but sounded grainy.
In short, this was the wild, wild west. The “industry” was full of guys putzing about with very amateurish, non consistent PRODUCT.

Vintage

Why am I wasting your time with the above entry? Hardly a week goes by that we have to face the question by one shopper or another, “Isn’t vintage gear better than new?” NO. IT ISN’T!
If you want to invest in old baseball cards because you just love rubbing shoulders with
Mickey Mantle in 1951, knock yourself out. When it comes to audio gear, your relationship should be the same. If you want the old stuff cuz it is cool and collectible, fine. But don’t even begin to kid yourself that the performance and or reliability will be competitive with what we have new.

Electronics

Consider Emotiva’s great preamps:
PT-100 $300. Single ended with DAC & phono.
XSP-1 $1200. Balanced with great phono & sub out.
They slaughter the best stuff made in the 70s-80s!.They are quite affordable and reliable to boot!

In power amps, it’s even more extreme. Emo’s:
A-300 $400, 150×2 (Single Ended)
XPA2G3 $1000, 300×2 (Balanced)
DR-2 $1600, 550×2 (Differential/Balanced!)
DR-2 in particular, at only $1600, competes with any amp in the biz- built in the USA with a five year warranty!

New GoldenEar In Wall Speakers

Invisa SPS (Signature Point Source) $1000 each. (27 9/16h, 7 15/16w, 3 1/4d, 92dB SPL)


New from GoldenEar is a serious in wall speaker that fits in a standard 4” deep stud space. SPS can be run with, or without its back box ($150 ea). You can run three across the front, more on the sides and rears. Even in Atmos config.
Each SPS uses four 5 1/4” cast frame drivers along with GE’s esteemed ribbon tweeter. To have this level of smoothness with great imaging, in a speaker array that is almost invisible, pleases the audiophile, as well as the audiophile’s wife’s sense of style. We as audiophiles, have no sense of style!
You might think, what’s the big deal about running four of the same drivers with a tweeter? You’d be right. These four 5 1/4s are not the same.
The outside 5 1/4s are specifically woofer drivers and only run up to 500Hz.
The inside 5 1/4s are mid/bass drivers run up to 3k to meet the tweeters.
The tweeter in SPS is the new high gauss ribbon used in the highly touted T-Ref!
GE uses a BALANCED crossover to blend this system into a cohesive image.
The result of going to this “trouble” is that the speaker presents a more specific, point source image- the kind of image GoldenEar is quite famous for in its towers. To do this in an architectural speaker is unique.
The purpose of the back box is to define the enclosure space and make it rock solid. This deepens the bass and improves clarity. SPS is such a high performing speaker that if at all possible, we’ll twist your arm to use the back box!

Franz Liszt (1811-1886) Rock Star!


Liszt was perhaps the greatest pianist ever. He was among the first rock stars of the music world. Niccolo Paganini (1782-1840) preceded Liszt. But Liszt was clearly the first musician to drive the ladies to hysteria, creating Lisztomania!
In Liszt’s time people wrote to “stars” to ask for locks of hair, instead of autographs. Liszt got tired of the antics early and started cutting hair from his dog to mail away. So all those keepsakes…

07.2018

Klipsch LaScalla II Now In! $8000 Per Pair (35 1/2h, 23 3/4w, 24 1/2d, 175 lbs)

Now that LaScalla II has arrived, we have all four models of the current Klipsch Heritage line on display. K has modernized four absolutely iconic speakers from yesteryear!

Current Models:

Heresy III $2000 Per Pair
Forte III $3600 Per Pair
Cornwall III $4400 Per Pair
LaScalla II $8000 Per Pair

 

Klipschorn

The famous top of the line Klipschorn is being revised and we’ll carry the new model in the fall or whenever it comes out. The new K-horn will be a different animal from its predecessor. It will not require corner placement. K has been working on this design for some years and we’re told the new model will be out before the end of 2018.

LaScalla II

LaScalla debuted in 1963. To my eyes, LaScalla has the coolest aesthetics of any vintage speaker! You look at LaScalla and think of great 60s-70s audio. More than one “mature” customer has asked me- “Isn’t that the speaker that comes with a Hammond organ?” Nope, it isn’t a Leslie. But you are excused for thinking they could be from the same family. Now that LaScalla has been technologically updated you can have your cake and eat it too!

A number of people have said they remember hearing Klipsch in the 60s-70s, but not since. We invite you to visit to hear for yourself, what new technology can do for classic designs. LaScalla uses a 15” folded horn woofer design, along with a horn midrange and tweeter.

The efficiency is 105dB on LaScalla. That means you can drive them with any amp on the market. Of course you are rewarded for using a great amp and source. But you don’t need loads of watts to drive them.

What will impress you IMMEDIATELY about LaScalla (and its brethren) is the enormous dynamic range. The difference between pianissimo and FORTE is astounding. The SPEED of response reveals the technique of a world class instrumentalist and the subtle nuances of great singers. The bottom line is that these speakers are as FUN to listen to as any speakers on the market!

Let me further point out that despite using horns, LaScalla is not BRIGHT sounding. When people read about horns they typically infer the sound will be harsh. But the top end of LaScalla is downright smooth, not the least bit biting.

Further, LaScalla’s bass is nicely controlled. It doesn’t produce FAT, muddled bass. Of course you can crank up the tone controls and make them heavy. But their endemic character is leaner than fatter. We know audiophiles sometimes turn their noses up at horns. Listen before you draw conclusions!

 

 

McIntosh MA-252 Integrated Amp $3500 (100×2)

Mac’s new hybrid integrated (tubes in the preamp section) is a good match for any speakers you might consider. But if you’re tempted by K’s vintage looks and sound, you simply can’t do better than MA-252. With a muscular Mac amp and mellow tube preamp in one package, it’s a synergy
with the K speakers above.

MA-252 runs four 12AU7s tubes. These aren’t high current tubes and will last for many years.
They’re not expensive either. Hence don’t be dissuaded by tubes in this application. By including tubes in the preamp section, MA-252 provides a warm preamp to mate with its solid state amp. The 100×2 power amp on board is a brute. This boy doesn’t use output transformers and has a big punch. While MA-252 will drive virtually any speakers well, it’s a synergy with the vintage looking but modern sounding Klipsch Heritage models.

 

 

Rolling Stone Writers Rate Top Bands In Live Performance

10 My Morning Jacket
9 Rage Against The Machine
8 Jack White
7 Radiohead
6 Jay Z
5 Neil Young
4 Arcade Fire
3 Rolling Stones
2 Prince
1 Bruce Springsteen