Linn Klimax DSM AV $39000 Review

August 27, 2021 Comments Off on Linn Klimax DSM AV $39000 Review

https://www.whathifi.com/us/reviews/linn-klimax-dsm-av

Once the DSM is given a few days to settle it’s pretty obvious that it’s an exceptional product that sets new standards for the streamer category as a whole. We certainly haven’t heard an alternative that betters the Linn’s detail resolution or dynamic expression.

Time and time again we hear new details in recordings that we have been using for years and know well. When we listen to an old favourite like Arvo Pärt’s Tabula Rasa we’re far more aware of the recording venue than ever before, thanks to the clarity with which the Linn resolves the low-level ambience information. Each instrument is placed securely in position within the soundstage and stays sharply focused no matter how demanding the music gets.

Focal Stellia Review

August 27, 2021 Comments Off on Focal Stellia Review

Yamaha RX-A2A $799 REVIEW

August 25, 2021 Comments Off on Yamaha RX-A2A $799 REVIEW

https://www.whathifi.com/us/reviews/yamaha-rx-a2a

Watching the race from Ready Player One the movement of the motorbike zipping across the sound field feels both wide and precise as it weaves in and out of traffic. The long skids and screeches of these virtual vehicles are pleasingly broad and fizzy, while smaller features of the game such as the controller beeps and coin glissandos are neatly detailed. During big crashes, low frequency information occasionally sounds a bit blunt but there’s still plenty of drama and punch in the explosive action.

NAD MASTERS M33 BLUOS® STREAMING DAC AMPLIFIER REVIEW

August 25, 2021 Comments Off on NAD MASTERS M33 BLUOS® STREAMING DAC AMPLIFIER REVIEW

The M33’s Dirac Live is a sort of “Lite” version that measures and corrects only up to 500 Hz, which nonetheless covers most of the heavy lifting that any such system can offer. (Above the “transition frequency” where room modes cease to exert much influence— typically a few hundred Hz—equalization becomes much more of a crap- shoot that’s highly dependent on speaker radiation patterns, placement, and room surfaces and furnishings.) M33 owners can upgrade to full-bandwidth Dirac Live Full Frequency for an up-charge of $99 via a card supplied with the unit.

I ran the M33’s Dirac using the supplied “puck” micro- phone, conveniently via my iPad Mini 5 and Dirac’s relatively new iOS app, with no difficulty. It’s an elegant system, but since Dirac has been amply covered in these pages by myself and others I will not rehearse the process here fully, other than to point out that the M33’s iteration permits storage and recall of up to five different correction “runs,” for different speakers, placements, or seating positions. My measurement run for a single-listener setup required nine mic positions in concentric rings around the primary seating area, with the whole process taking 15 minutes. Unlike most receiver-bound correction systems, Dirac Live permits the user to adjust the target curve, shaping response to the listener’s room, speakers, or preference, though—unless one upgrades to Full Frequency—only over the bottom four-plus octaves

Dan Clark Audio Stealth Review

August 25, 2021 Comments Off on Dan Clark Audio Stealth Review

Bryston B135 Cubed Integrated Amplifier Review

August 24, 2021 Comments Off on Bryston B135 Cubed Integrated Amplifier Review

https://www.soundstagehifi.com/index.php/2-uncategorised/1559-bryston-b135-cubed-integrated-amplifier

As quiet as the B135 SST2 is—it’s still one of the quietest integrateds I’ve heard—the B1353 seemed quieter still. The difference was subtle, but with “Get Behind the Mule,” from Waits’s Mule Variations, it was as though the head of the drum was stretched more tightly across the frame, sounding a bit more taut. The sound of a foot tapping out the beat was also more readily resolved through the B1353. Similarly, with Tori Amos’s “Caught a Lite Sneeze,” I thought the stage was even better resolved through the newer Bryston, with even greater fluidity in the rhythm of the music.

These aren’t the kinds of differences that will make B135 SST2 owners run out and sell their amps—the gap in performance was no gulf. However, if I had the choice of buying one or the other and sound was the only factor, I’d opt for the B1353. As I switched back and forth between them, it was sometimes hard to pinpoint exactly what difference I was hearing—yet I consistently heard an overall smoothness to the sound of the B1353 that was incredibly easy on my ears. When I reviewed my listening notes, I found the nouns ease and easiness sprinkled throughout. Evidently, that was the consistent impression I was left with.

Paradigm Founder 100F Loudspeaker £5400 Review

August 24, 2021 Comments Off on Paradigm Founder 100F Loudspeaker £5400 Review

https://www.hifinews.com/content/paradigm-founder-100f-loudspeaker

The more time I spent with the 100F, the more I realised there was no flavour of music with which it really struggled. Fed the ethereal, electronic textures of Jean-Michel Jarre and Hans Zimmer’s ‘Electrees’ collaboration [Electronica 2: The Heart of Noise; Sony Music] it was all smoothness and light, with a purity to its midband that encouraged a game of ‘how loud can these go?’. The answer was ‘plenty loud enough’ for my circa 4x5m space, with no subjective trace of them losing their composure before I lost my nerve.

The track ‘Exit’ was faster, synthesisers acquiring a nastier edge and the 100F locking in step with the pounding techno rhythms. At the opposite side of the spectrum, my enjoyment of The Royal Festival Orchestra’s rendition of Vivaldi’s ‘Four Seasons – Winter’ [Stradivari Classics; Tidal] was dependent on the 100F’s presentation of the strings. I won’t insult your intelligence by saying they sounded like ‘the real thing’, but this lilting, layered piece came across with wonderful timbral detail.

A pure digital amplifier

August 24, 2021 Comments Off on A pure digital amplifier

TOPPING EX5 $350 REVIEW

August 23, 2021 Comments Off on TOPPING EX5 $350 REVIEW

The EX5 reproduces the treble range skilfully, the treble feels accurate, transients are fast and snappy. Just like the rest of the spectrum, the treble range feels dynamic and agile. Detail-retrieval is excellent here as well. This range boosts the perceived clarity of the signature and the EX5 reaches the top octave without getting harsh. The treble carries good detail and definition while presenting the harmonics brilliantly. The EX5 shows great balance throughout the spectrum. The extension is just as good as it is at the lowest notes. Overall, the EX5 has excellent tonality and it stays true to the mastering. 

Audiovector R 8 Arreté loudspeaker $69,995 Review

August 23, 2021 Comments Off on Audiovector R 8 Arreté loudspeaker $69,995 Review

https://www.stereophile.com/content/audiovector-r-8-arret%C3%A9-loudspeaker

This was a subtle thing, and it’s not unnatural. Setting aside the fact that the vocal was probably recorded in an isolation room, and that studio effects could be added, the degree of resonance or room sound is determined by where the mikes are placed. Salvant is close-miked while the piano is miked—well, I’m not sure how or where, but well outside the piano case, so there’s more room sound on the piano.

Still, I wondered: What would happen if the piano and the voice were in the same acoustic? This album is a mix of live (recorded at NYC’s Village Vanguard) and studio tracks (Sear Sound Studios), so I didn’t have to go far for a live comparison. I put on Salvant and Fortner’s account of Bernstein and Sondheim’s “Somewhere,” from West Side Story, another track I turn to often in reviews.

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