CanJam NYC 2026: Our Massive 7-Hour Preview (The Largest Show Ever)

February 28, 2026 § Leave a comment

FiiO M27 $1799 Review

February 28, 2026 § Leave a comment

I would say, however, the included Allan key is a bit too big and awkward to use with the screws, so if you have a small Philips Head screwdriver, I recommend that one as it is a lot faster.

Aside from that, you get the new grey leather case with enhanced button access, integrated cooling gel, and a larger heat dissipation plate on the rear. It uses a Velcro flap rather than the M17’s tucked-in variant and feels a little more secure as a result.

Aside from those, you also get a cleaning cloth, a pin tray tool for memory card access, a USB-A to Type C adaptor, a long USB-A to USB-C cable, and a shorter USB-C to USB-C alternative.

World Premiere Review!Audio Research I/70 Vacuum Tube Amplifier Review

February 28, 2026 § Leave a comment

https://www.enjoythemusic.com/magazine/equipment/0326/Audio_Research_I70_DAC_MM_MC_Phono_Integrated_Vacuum_Tube_Amplifier_Review.htm

Finally, we get to the thing I am most curious about. And that is the sound of vinyl LP discs, since the I/70 has an optional MM/MC phono stage.  For continuity, I was able to employ the Acoustic Live performance from both a DSD / CD and from a super quality two-disc vinyl album [Analogue Productions APP 090 ], both made from the same master tape. My favorite song on this record is “Some Must Dream”. Now, as you listen, you can hear the subtly present live sounds of the surrounding venue. That space is, in fact, a complex mix of many small whispers of sound.

For me, and what may interest those reading Enjoy the Music.com, is a large portion of this quality is described by the word “continuousness,” which is a term coined by the late Harry Pearson. It is used in part to describe an organic live presence that exists as you listen to a complex chord that slowly decays into silence. I would like to remind you of a problem inherent in Red Book lossy CD digital recordings. As the intensity / volume of a sound fades, it is treated as a least significant bit and dropped. The major difference between this vinyl recording and the same DSD / CD version is that the entire body of sound is retained as natural. It contains a complete range of frequencies, both odd and even.

With an analog recording, those overtones decay into silence naturally, just as they do in life. I wired an RCA connection from my Denon DL-301/2 cartridge to the Audio Research I/70 adjustable moving coil (MC) input. On every track, Nils Lofgren’s presence appeared deeper in the center mix, surrounded by a halo of space, texture, and tonal depth. I have tried a hundred or more little tweaks spread out over decades. A hundred micro steps closer to a tangible reality, all of them hinting at what might be possible. I believe there exists a natural synergy between a vinyl recording and a vacuum tube amplifier that has never been adequately described. I believe even now, with all the advances made by digital technology, there is still something missing. I believe stop and start waveforms just do not let instrumental overtones have enough time to decay naturally.

Kef Coda W Review

February 28, 2026 § Leave a comment

JBL Summit Ama loudspeaker Review

February 27, 2026 § Leave a comment

https://www.hifinews.com/content/jbl-summit-ama-loudspeaker

On this track the brilliant clarity of the performance was noteworthy, in particular the precise location of various instruments. But it’s not a complex, dense piece, unlike Opeth’s ‘Blackwater Park’, the closing track from the Swedish band’s 2001 album of the same name [Sony Music 19439876312]. This posed the Summit Ama a different challenge of thick, distorted guitar riffs and crashing cymbals, but the speakers responded with a superb display of lower midrange strength and drive. Sticking with European prog/metal, Riverside’s epic nine-minute ‘The Struggle For Survival’ [Wasteland, InsideOutMusic; 44.1kHz/24-bit] was delivered with real speed and clarity right across the frequency range.

HiFiMAN Ananda Review

February 27, 2026 § Leave a comment

WAV, FLAC, AIF, APE, WMA Lossless, DSF, DFF: What’s the best lossless file format?

February 27, 2026 § Leave a comment

Børresen M8 Gold Signature Speakers

February 26, 2026 § Leave a comment

A few years ago, Michael Børresen and Flemming E. Rasmussen embarked on a mission: to create a flagship loudspeaker that preserved the distinctive M-series aesthetics while delivering dramatically greater performance. The Børresen M8 Gold Signature is the result of that quest —a singular creation representing the absolute pinnacle of our craft and more than a decade of accumulated engineering insight.

The M8 was conceived from a simple but uncompromising premise: a loudspeaker should react to the signal as quickly and as precisely as physics allows. To achieve this, long-held assumptions were re-examined. Every material choice, every structural decision, and every acoustic principle serves one overarching goal: to remove inertia, distortion, and delay between the signal and the sound. The result is a loudspeaker whose performance challenges conventional categories.

NAD Masters Series M10 V3 streaming integrated amplifier Review

February 26, 2026 § Leave a comment

https://www.stereophile.com/content/nad-masters-series-m10-v3-streaming-integrated-amplifier

I connected my vinyl playback rig—the Arkiv B fitted to a Linn Ekos tonearm and a Linn Sondek LP12 turntable with its Lingo power supply—to the Black Head and the NAD M10 V3’s phono input. I took a deep breath, crossed my fingers, and played a test pressing of Sasha Matson’s Fillmore Street/Little Woodstar album on Albany Records, which I produced and which, like the 2012 Cannonball Adderley album, was mastered by Kevin Gray. Interesting. I remember the Black Head as sounding sweet back in the day, and the balance with the SUT feeding the NAD’s phono input did indeed sound sweet, though there was no lack of high-frequency detail. Alvester Garnett’s cymbals on Fillmore Street‘s first movement had sufficient “splash.”Using the Matson album, I performed level-matched comparisons between the LP played via the M10 V3’s phono input and the 24/96 FLAC files streamed with Qobuz Connect. The LP’s low frequencies sounded powerful and extended; the double bass and kickdrum were more clearly articulated with the digital version but somewhat less warm. The midrange seemed palpable with both media; on balance I slightly preferred the LP’s presentation

Florida Audio Expo 

February 26, 2026 § Leave a comment