Keep reviewing and writing - prof.
Happy Listening!
Contemplating DEVORE SPEAKERS (and others)....LONG audition report of many speakers
murphythecat, No I haven't heard the ATC speakers. I'm not looking for active speakers and on looks alone I don't think I could place those in my living room. And I always mix ATC up with PMC speakers. And as I've just brought up PMC speakers, I did actually demo some because I've heard their giant monitors do some incredible things at shows (though always way too loud for me to stay in the room very long).I listened to the "20" series PMC speakers, which are fairly elegant floor standing speakers in terms of shape. But in terms of fit/finish they are well below the level of quality of most of the other speakers I looked at, especially given their price. I didn't include the PMCs in my demo descriptions because the demo environment was the most hilariously ill suited place I've ever experienced to demoing speakers. Imagine one of those cheap speakers stores in Hong Kong, the ones with a narrow hallway and speakers stacked side by side, separated only by inches, lining the entire store. That's what it was like, and the PMCs (at least one of the pairs I listened to) were literally still just stacked in among all the other speakers, and, like 4 feet apart. Almost a mono listening experience.It was...really something! Though I did hear one pair pulled out from the stack of speakers at one point. I found them just kind of boring to listen to. |
@prof: “I understand you aren’t a Magico fan boy, so I wonder why you seem fixated on the magico post given I hadn’t detailed associated equipment in all the previous speaker impression posts?” Simply because this brand, for better or worse, has a reputation for being particularly sensitive to upstream electronics. Some might say that’s because it’s in a league of its own from the standpoint of transparency. In other words, crap in, crap out. While I don’t believe this, my experience with Magico is limited and what I’ve heard doesn’t make me want to hear more. “I can only relay that the A3s were driven by solid state amplification.” Thanks, that’s helpful. There’s very little in the way of ss amplification that sounds real to me so to a degree it puts your experience in perspective. “I’ve simply set out to describe my own experience on my recent speaker quest - in case anyone enjoys reading it (apparently many have).” Count me among them. |
@kevinkwann You’ve been quite generous about sharing your experiences with various other loudspeakers and systems. Why won’t you do the same with the Magico system? I am doing the same with Magico. Do you see associated equipment in any of the speaker posts? I understand you aren’t a Magico fan boy, so I wonder why you seem fixated on the magico post given I hadn’t detailed associated equipment in all the previous speaker impression posts? The reason I didn’t include all the associated equipment is that: I could never recount all the associated gear for all these speakers. Never kept track. That includes the Magico. I can only relay that the A3s were driven by solid state amplification, set up by a very experienced Magico dealer. Presumably he wasn’t out to sabatoge his own sale and was able to present me with a fairly representative example of that speaker’s performance. But, hey, it’s an in store (on that case, in house) audition so as I’ve said: caveats apply. I’ve simply set out to describe my own experience on my recent speaker quest - in case anyone enjoys reading it (apparently many have). And it seems that despite a lack of equipment lists, many have felt I accurately conveyed the character of many speakers on the list, so that’s fun to hear. But if you are after lists of all the associated gear I’m afraid you’ll remain disappointed and this thread clearly won’t satisfy you. There’s always Stereophile for lists of associated gear. Here you get wut yous pays for :-) |
@ prof: As loudspeakers don't operate in a vacuum, I'd reiterate that system context is key towards determining the validity of your observations. To that end: "So let’s start with the source, preamp and amp. What were they and why do you feel your conclusions about Magico’s sound are valid if you weren’t intimately familiar with everything feeding them upstream?" You've been quite generous about sharing your experiences with various other loudspeakers and systems. Why won't you do the same with the Magico system? |
@kevinkwann Of course I’ve given consideration to the variables involved in auditioning speakers. That is why I mentioned that caveat right at the start in my OP. When you say I gave no consideration in my Magico post to the fact it was a single audition with associated equipment variables to consider, I can only imagine you managed to miss this paragraph explicitly stating such considerations: PROF WROTE: I have to say though, that while this single encounter with the Magico A3s suggest that they are not the right match for me, the general quality of the sound left me with the impression of HUGE POTENTIAL. If those speakers can be set up to tame the bass and smooth out the response, and if they could be dialed in via positioning, acoustics, and perhaps mated with some nice tube amps (which appeal to me) then it’s possible they could be absolutely crazy good. At their price point they really were world-beaters in terms of some of what I heard. (I have a similar feeling about the Paradigm Persona speakers I auditioned - super clarity and low noise floor, that although it left me ultimately fatigued, made me wonder how great they might be with the steps to dial them in to my liking). |
Prof I briefly listened to the Devore X, as I mentioned earlier in the thread.These puppies could be what you need. This is an under $5k sound system. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=33&v=d9alPfzMD2M |
Interesting stuff Prof...but your conclusions about the Magico are based on one audition without any consideration given to the fact that the upstream components might have some small effect on the sound. I’m no Magico fanboy, but come on. Really? So let’s start with the source, preamp and amp. What were they and why do you feel your conclusions about Magico’s sound are valid if you weren’t intimately familiar with everything feeding them upstream? |
Prof, Very nice! I have been on a speaker journey recently. Thought initially I'd go for a widebander by Cube to go along with my Bakoon amp and dac. Then just decided to give Devore a look. I live in LA and Matt at Perfect Pitch allowed me an audition of the 3XL and O/93. Long story cut short, I now listen to a pair of 3XL's in my small room and loving the music making. And I aspire to reach for the O/93's after a bit more time with the standmounts. Devore has won me over big time! Ciao, Stoney40 |
jriggy, Yes I seem to remember the JA speakers liked to be goosed a little. Then again, that is true to a certain extent with my current Thiels. They manage good low level resolution when at low volume, but to get feeling the music I turn them up. I'd think the Devore speakers with the richer bass presentation would do better for low level listening. But I've actually been enjoying listening louder than I have before. (I have struggled with tinnitus and occasional hyperacusis for many years, but I seem to be able to cope with louder playback these days which is fun). BTW, I just read the July issue of Stereophile in which Herb Reichert did a follow-up review of the JA Pulsar speakers. He was pretty much amazed by the same things I was and many others: amazing detail with no hash, so it ends up being "musically involving" detail. I've rarely luxuriated in the pure tone of instruments and voices as easily as through the JA speakers. In the end (spoiler alert!) Herb says he slightly prefers his Harbeth M30's for their fuller sound and added texture. I get that. Though he made a point of saying in a recent show review that, upon hearing the floor standing Perspectives, they sounded bigger and richer than the Pulsars. It has me wondering if that would push him toward the Perspectives over the Harbeths. (Probably not as I think over all the Harbeth sound is more for him). |
Interesting pingvin, I may have noticed that a bit too. The sound of the 93 was amazingly similar to the 96. I wish I liked the aesthetics of the 93 as much as the 96s. Still moving back and forth between a desire for the Devores or the Joseph speakers. I really need to hear the Josephs again, which will probably happen at the end of the month when I get back from vacation. |
Interesting discussion folks. I’ve heard the Devore O/96 and liked them. this is a good quality speaker IMO. I do however find the Horning ( I heard the Eufrodite) a particularly exceptional sounding speaker. It has a natural/organic sonic character that’s emotionally engaging and very life like in terms of tone, dynamics and sense of tactile musicians presence. I heard them in the High Water Sound room at CES a few years ago. Honestly one of the best sounding rooms of the entire show. Jeff was driving the speakers with a 10 watt SET amplifier and it really filled the generous sized room with quite beautiful palpable music. The musicians were alive and playing with soul😊. I strongly suspect the Aristotle would perform similarly in a smaller space. To be clear, nothing against the Devore O/96 but I believe the Horning is more open, dynamic , lively and engaging. As always YMMV. BTW Snowpro has very good ears and taste😊. Charles |
Oh man those Horning speakers look nice! I like the design, the wood finish, and I've always enjoyed that lowther-thing when I've heard it (though with the usual lowther caveats). Would love to hear a pair. But the ones mentioned in this thread are too rich for my blood, and the speakers look to be too deep for my purposes (I need a shallower speaker to fit in my room). |
Hi pingvin, Sorry, I didn't hear the Aristoteles. I have a pretty big room and the Eufrodite probably would have filled the room better. I'm sure they both have the Hornings house sound. They are coherent, fast, natural, organic. Which makes you get emotionally involved in the music without analyzing the sound. Just sitting back and enjoying the performance. I've been in this hobby a long time and use to like hi-fi sounding speakers (won't name them) as you get older you learn to just appreciate speakers that don't call attention to themselves. The Hornings make you relax and just enjoy the music and the performance. Prof, if you like the Devores I'm sure you would like the Hornings even more. They are easy to drive. I use Frankenstein 300b amps and Pass Labs XA30.8 amps. |
Yep. Plus ease, nuance, flow ... trying to get closer to those qualities that live music has (like the way a single note from a French horn just comes to you in an instant in the concert hall). Plus I know that that the Hornings are very synergistic with my amplifier. (I’ve gradually replaced the upstream components with those from High Water Sound, which carries Horning.) snopro, did you compare the Euphrodite to the Aristoteles?, |
I went on a financially ruinous vinyl splurge over the last couple days - much of it centred around brazillian 70's gems of disco, funk, funk/jazz etc. Also picked up another gem of electronic music that was released not long ago: Buchla Concerts 1975 Some really rare live performances by early female synth-music pioneer Suzanne Ciani. You can just hear the joy of experimentation going on with all the ways you can tune analog while playing. |
Thanks for the reminder about Yello, ronkent. Yello has been mentioned by reviewers and audiophiles for as long as I can remember, but I never bothered listening. I’ll see if it’s available on Tidal. astewart8944, If you haven’t done so, on the Dave Brubeck live at Carnegie Hall, check out the song Castilian Drums! Joe Morello does an extended drum solo, employing his hands lightly on the drums to ever more frenetic playing with sticks. It’s panned fairly hard left, but still with some spatial characteristics. But the intimacy of the drum miking make for a pretty astonishingly realistic rainbow of drum sounds bursting through your speakers. It's like the drum skins, rims and cymbals are right inside your speakers, behind the drivers. Thiels are great for that kind of thing. |
want to have some fun and give your system a real workout. try this one. i have used it for years to test speakers for a number of variables. https://www.amazon.com/One-Second-Yello/dp/B000AC5LD4/ref=sr_1_9?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1528039... |
Nice to see that EBTG is gettin' some luv here. They are certainly a talented duo, and as musicians open to experiment. If you like electronica, they had some fantastic electronica albums in the 90's that were very well regarded and influential, and sound today as fresh as when they came out (their sense of melody and musicianship come through): The Walking Wounded and Temperamental. Later there was an excellent electronica re-mix album of their songs called Adapt Or Die. I particularly like the first two tracks, Mirrorball and Before Today: https://www.allmusic.com/album/adapt-or-die-ten-years-of-remixes-mw0000244711 Mirrorball sounds amazing on a good system - dense full analog sounding synths, with really spacious accents like the piano in the background which, if your speakers soundstage well, can sound like they have expanded your walls waaaay out into a new reverby recording space. |
+1 Everything But the Girl--I just listened to the first track of Amplified Heart, which @prof uses as a test track (he listed Atomic Heart but his description of the track matches Rollercoaster--the first track on Amplified Heart). It sounds great on JA Perspective. Every instrument with right timbre; I like her voice. Thank you Rich Regards Al |
Very nice selections - prof.I recently bought a lot of EBTG 80's CDs to add to my 90's collection.I enjoy the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet (LAGQ) as well. Miles Davis Kind of Blue (KOB)- a reference disc in any format. Check out Johnny Cash -Folsom Prison disc, especially, on SACD. I own Gord's Gold- fantastic disc. I own the entire Herbie Hancock catalog. Happy Listening! |
jafant, I use one of my favorite albums of all time, EBTG's Atomic Heart. It doesn't matter that I've used it a million times to demo systems, I still put it on to listen all the time. It's a combination of elements in the recordings - warm acoustic instruments, acoustic guitars, stand up bass, analog synths, wood blocks, bongos. And a variable quality in the recording of voices - sometimes fairly natural, but a number of tracks have an artificial edge due to reverb/recording and even a teeny bit of apparent distortion here or there. So it really tells me a lot both about how a system handles good and not so good elements in a recording. Yucky systems can give the first few tracks a bit too much icy edge to the vocals and sibilance. I prefer a system that shows me the characteristics on the recording, but doesn't kill me with it. If the first track, Rollercoaster, doesn't sound utterly warm and inviting something is wrong and I'm not going to get along well with a speaker. (It did so on the JA Perspectives, Devores, Harbeths and some others, much less so on Magico and some others). I also love the track I Don't Understand Anything. Great for soundstaging, acoustic guitar, voice, drum and vocals sound, and checking out how well a system conveys the emotion of the piece. If a system doesn't produce the swelling, emotional moments in the song, that's not a good sign. (Joseph speakers did really well with that). Also the track Missing. Tells me tons about the bass quality, separation of elements, and sense of rhythmic drive from a system. It's a song that has a mid-level tempo that on some systems has real drive, but others can leave it just sort of plodding and dead. (The Magicos left it in the plodding side, my Thiels make it a toe-tapper). I usually play a ton of different music from my thumb drive or burned CDs. Among them: Johnny Cash's "American" albums. Gordon Lightfoot . (if a system doesn't produce acoustic guitars with that familiar golden sparkle and a human warmth in Gord's voice, that's a very bad sign). Chameleon - Herbie Hancock St Louis Blues - Dave Brubeck Quartet live in NYC. Great for instrumental tone, staging, and especially whether a system portrays a realistic drum sound (great solo moments with amazing realism on that album). So What - Miles Davis (Hey...it's a standard). Edgar Meyer Quintet For Strings Mvt 1 +2 - great for string tone and dynamics. Jaws - Intrada recording. I grew up with that soundtrack and if a system doesn't thrill me both sonically, musically and nostalgically on the opening piece, and the Montage track, it's not coming to my house. (Same with the Star Trek Motion Picture album - not an incredible recording, but has to thrill me). Bullit soundtrack - bursting with verve, a ton of different instrumental timbres coming at you a mile a minute. Tells me tons about the chameleon and instrumental timbre aspects of a speaker. Jason And The Argonauts - B. Herrmann. Absolutely killer for the sound of woodwinds and brass. Los Angeles Guitar Quartet - York: African Suite - great for very realistic guitars playing in front of you energetically. Commodores - various - Brick House etc. Talk Talk - The Colour Of Spring album - one of the great recorded albums. Earth Wind And Fire - Greatest Hits Live - 1996. An INCREDIBLE live album in terms of both performances and sound quality. This can sound simply massive, with every single element - and there are tons - beautifully discernible. Deep, tight, killer bass - both electric and synth. Vocals that are both "arena sized" yet somehow organic and natural. A great system can really make you feel like you're at a real concert with the best sound system ever. And others.... |
I figure I’ve reserved this thread as much for the occasional musing on my speaker hunt as for the reports themselves. And to that end: Last night I was listening to one of my favourite soundtracks: Bernard Herrmann’s Jason And The Argonauts. (Not to mention gleefully receiving some mint, unopened vinyl issues of some of his other recorded work from the 70’s. Yippee!) This was through the Thiel 2.7s, which are currently spread out quite wide for a large, but focused soundstage. It came to the track for the Hydra, which used deep swelling woodwinds and brass instruments. It was just incredible the sensation of looking aurally in to a space "inhabited" by palpable, air moving, floor moving, undulating big instruments. It really created in my mind the sensation of being in the presence of a gigantic slithering beast. So much fun! And these are instances that remind me why I always end up going back to floor standing speakers over stand mounted. That sense of scale and moving air. I have several stand mounted speakers that I love: old Thiel 02s, Waveform Mach MC (egg shaped), Spendor 3/5s, and MBL 121 radialstrahler speakers. All of them can make me just melt in to their presentation. (The MBL omnis still drop my jaw with the realism of their detail, tone and imaging). But after a while I hanker for the bigger sound (and I’ve tended to be allergic to subwoofers - though now I do own subwoofers, but first I’ll be integrating them with the Thiels, and hopefully whatever other speaker I buy. Which has made me wonder if anyone has actually used Devore O speakers with a subwoofer. I could see advantages, but on the other hand I could also see crossing over to a sub might actually diminish the particular bass character of the Devores that are part of their appeal). On another note: I’m in equipment selling off mode (a few too many gadgets lying around unused) and any good audiophile knows that the minute he sells a gadget, he will immediately somehow regret it as some need for it suddenly arises. *Smacks head* why did I sell that? I need it now! I’ve had an RDP-1 digital preamp eq that I bought a long time ago but which I never really put in to use. I just put it up for sale and literally last night I heard a little "bump" in the response of my Thiels (or room interaction) stick out, which had me thinking "hmm, it might be nice to equalize that out." Doh! On the other hand, and this isn’t entirely rational, I have this weird thing that, since I now use both turntable and digital sources, I don’t want my system "unevenly tweaked." By that I mean if I tweaked it via a digital eq only for my digital sources, and I got used to that version, then it could annoy me a bit when I switch to analog source and it is not similarly "fixed." So, logical or not, in a way it seems better to me to leave it consistent across sources, warts and all. (And there are very few warts). I’m also thinking of moving to a Roon platform for streaming my digital library, and I believe that offers eq function so maybe that will be a bit of a security blanket in terms of selling my RDP-1. Anyway...more ramblings... It seems to me my next step, when I have a chance, will be to hear the JA Perspectives again, which I haven’t heard for about a year now, to help come to my decision between those and the Devore speakers. |
TAWW, Thanks for dropping in. Like the website! I've been there before and enjoyed your show report. I understand the reticence on Thiel speakers. They have sounded bright or dry to a lot of people. What I found early on was that Thiels can be magic with tubey amps like my CJ gear. They maintain that density of imaging, liveliness and realism, but in a relaxed manner. Jim Thiel's final flagship drivers and design I think finally banished any inherent brightness and don't even "need" tube amps to tame them. But with my CJs I can listen all day, and far from clinical, the main characteristic I hear when I come home from auditioning most other speakers is how utterly rich and organic the sound is in my set up. A fellow audio writer who previously said Thiels would make him run screaming from a room (brightness) agrees. Best sound I've ever had. But...hey...you know. The itch! BTW, I've also found the same with my MBL omni-monitors. They are in theory brutal to drive which is why MBL is usually paired with mega-watt SS amps. But with my CJ amps and even a small Eico 14W integrated they are magical! BTW, I remember listening a number of times to Silverline speakers back when the Sonata was making a splash. I still remember how they sound (I think). I wonder if their house sound has been maintained or not over all these years. (To me Silverline sounded somthing like if you crossed Totem speakers with Meadowlark Audio speakers...but Meadowlark is going back old school as a reference...) |
Hi @prof - thanks for the fascinating thread, great to follow your journey. Super interested as based on your comments, your listening tastes feel pretty convergent with mine and you're looking for exactly what I want - a reasonably sized, aesthetically pleasing, superbly musical speaker under $10k. I haven't heard many of the speakers you've mentioned, but the ones I have, your notes are spot-on with mine - I'd probably be a hair more critical of a few. :) I must admit I was never a huge Thiel fan in the past, finding them a bit dry, but it's possible I never heard them set up to the nines. Currently I have two contenders, both bookshelves: the Silverline SR 17 Supreme ($7500) and the Audiovector SR 1 Avantgarde Aretté ($6k-ish). The Silverline is a superb balance of detail and body, with super natural tones and effortless dynamics. I'll have a review coming out soon. I would probably recommend a subwoofer to compete with some of the floorstanding models you're looking at. The Audiovector is a different beast, lightning fast and hyper resolving, but not in a hi-fi/clinical way - they are incredibly dynamic and nuanced in a way that will pull at your heart strings. I've never heard Mozart arias sound so breathy and emotional. In the right setup it will totally disappear and sound like your ears are plugged directly into your amp. It's en route from the manufacturer, and going first to my friend Marty DeWulf for a listen. I've heard the big Paradigm Personas as well as the new $10k Wilson bookshelf and while the latter wasn't broken in, they weren't close musically vs. either the Silverline or Audiovector. I really wish it were easier to hear the Silverlines. I don't think there's much of a dealer network, and Alan Yun is out here in California. I think the Bolero Supreme could be perfect for you, though it's a bit over budget ($15k). I will keep my eyes and ears open for you and let you know if I find anything promising. Cheers, TAWW http://taww.co |
Thanks charles1dad! rlb61, Yes there certainly does tend to be a house sound within an speaker brand. Both my Thiels have an amazingly similar "voice" and I've found most brands are pretty consistent too. About the Magicos: It's interesting that some will describe the Magicos as "bright, clinical, cold" and others "smooth, musical, almost reticent." And I can see how both impressions can take hold. As I said, I found the A3s to not strike me immediately as "bright" but more detailed and fairly pure of tone. It was only after listening for a while that a certain thinnness or some similar quality made me start to feel fatigued. Yet I don't think I would even then have called it brightness or "harshness." But, yes, there was some unforgiving quality in the sound. I find it intriguing though that "unforgiving" is so often associated with "accuracy" or relaying fine differences among recordings. Yet I've heard many systems that seem to easily portray the chameleon nature of different recordings, defects and all, but which weren't simultaneously fatiguing to listen to. (My Thiels do this for me, for instance). |
Just to chime in here ... there is a "house sound" that should be considered in comparing speakers. I think in the long run, that's the major criterion on which to focus. I've heard most all of the Josephs, and the house sound for them is a bit on the warm side with them being musically engaging, non-fatiguing, and tonally superb . Going up the line, there's just more goodness to be had. I bought the Pulsars and find them to be simply stunning. OTOH, Magico's house sound is a total 180, IMHO ... they're very "cool," with a clinical, almost harsh and unforgiving accuracy that can be fatiguing and challenging to long-term listening. I don't find them generally to be my cup of tea. Haven't heard tbe Devores, so I can't comment on them. |
Hello Prof, I’ve enjoyed reading your thread this evening and find it both interesting as well as informative. I also grew up in a musical family piano,drums,trombone and I played the trumpet. This environment forever influences how I hear music and established listening criteria. So no surprise that I relate to much of your preferences and perspectives. . 1 Your assessment of Magico speakers is very similar to mine. Audiophile report card grades are pretty high yet music lovers emotional engaging quality scores quite low. Although I'll say that the Magico S5 driven by the Absolare Passion Signature PSET amplifiers was pretty good and the best I've heard Magico sound. Unquestionably subjective I know. 2 Your street musicians encounter is something I completely understand. . Beautiful rich, colorful and vibrant tones and timbre, full bodied with dense harmonics and free flowing dynamically. Soul, heart, flesh and blood, breath of life etc. This is what I hear with live unamplified music and attempt to mimic at home. When you wrote that much of current High End audio seems to go in the opposite direction, Bullseye observation. It does seem to me that the pursuit of ultra detail, transparency and "accuracy " have lead often toward an analytical, bleached,thin sound unrelated to real instruments heard directly. No doubt there are those who Will have different options and I can surely appreciate this. Anyway your observations struck a particular chord with me😊. Your thoughts are well written and clear. Best of luck with your speaker selection. Charles |
kacomess, Good question! The only reason is that my past (admittedly very limited) encounters with Vandersteen speakers left me unmoved. I remember auditioning one of their next-down-from-flagship speakers (or maybe it was their flagship) and another model or two - before that. The impression they left we was: Nice boxless, airy, excellent soundstaging, decent palpability, but the overriding impression was of a somewhat "boring" tonality. I pretty much immediately felt "these are not for me." I have in my mind the picture of "greyish" tones when I think of the Vandersteens. Is that fair to keep that impression for a long time? Maybe not. I would enjoy hearing the Trios or Quatros if the opportunity presented itself. But I'm not seeking it out due to past experience with Vandersteens leaving me cold. Again...very subjective on my part and no pronouncement on the worth of those speakers as obviously they have really thrilled many owners. |
ohlala, Interesting observations. Thanks. As I mentioned, I did seem to find a bit of weird behaviour with the A3s as I tested different seating positions - nearer to them seemed to cause some weird spreading of some sounds. But I can only infer so much from a single encounter. Dynamically I remember one of the telling tracks: Herbie Hancock's Chameleon. Every speaker sounds great when that synth starts - just a big fat analog synth in just the frequency that doesn't seem to cause too much bloat in even bad speaker designs - and then the drums kick in. It's always impressive. The Magicos did a particularly good job in this respect: I always listen to high hats, and on this track especially. John Atkinson has put it well, that cymbals (especially I think high hats) on many systems can sound like more like "modulated bursts of white noise" rather than the real thing, real metal/wood causing the sound. And that is so often true in my experience. So I listen to the quality of the high hat at the beginning of Chameleon with that in mind, and the Magico's transparency did a very good job of distinguishing the tone of metal, vs just "white noise." However, as more instruments in the mid and upper mids came in - the various guitar picking, the clavinets parts, they were really clear, but dynamically limpid. They just sort of "sat there" in the speaker drivers not really adding to driving the song. I almost started to wonder if I was misperceiving this aspect of the Magico's shortcoming. Played on my system once back home, there it was: when each part came they felt more substantial, more moving air and driving the song. (And it's really hard for instruments in that range to get that palpability/air moving sensation). It's not a huge difference, but one of those subtle but subjectively important differences I noticed. Again...though ultimately I wasn't grabbed by the A3s, they did imply some strong potential. |
I enjoyed your A3 audition impressions. I heard them at Lone Star Audio Fest, a small but now a better respresented audio show. My audition was short with unfamiliar music in a carefully setup, oversized hotel room. https://www.flickr.com/photos/67568395@N04/41019336645/ I was interested what could be done with a $10k floorstander with an aluminum enclosure, especially in light of my experience with the S3s being so positive. My expectations may have been too high; they did not belie their price point that day, imo, despite my take on the potential of their features. Tone, resolution and integration and overall sophistication was not there that day like I remember the S3mkII or even compared my reference of similar slim box design at the same price, the Spendor D9s. Magicos are not dynamic and I had no expectation the A3s would be. The highs and mids were spatially disjointed. The highs hovered around and in front while the mids were way back, but not recessed sounding at all. I actually thought the bass was good and well damped, although I have a high preference for sealed cabinets. They were played with and without subs right next to each speaker; I preferred the better damped sound when subs were off. I look forward to hearing them again, maybe with better luck. A same-day comparison just down the hall was a Carmel 2, which made due with a worse room. The bass was bloated, ironically because the they were set up for the room to compensate for their lack of and over-damped bass. They were incredibly coherent, detailed and boxless sounding in comparison to the Magicos which shares some of the same ambitions. Obviously it is not an very fair comparison. In the spirit musing Volti’s non-retail horn concoction was awesome in tone and dynamics. https://us.v-cdn.net/5021930/uploads/editor/yq/bab4r6roe2tl.jpeg |
I was just out for a walk (live near the downtown of my city) and passed by some street musicians playing across the road. I stopped to listen and enjoy the music but, good audiophile that I am, I also closed my eyes and took notice of the sound made by live acoustic instruments - in this case two tenor sax and one drum kit. (I've always been kind of obsessed with live vs reproduced sound). The usual things stuck out: clarity with ease, the distinctness of the timbre and tone of whatever I chose to focus on - drum snare, cymbal, kick drum, or which sax was playing. And always, the SIZE an palpability of the sound. A single tenor sax sounds utterly HUGE in real life. It may as well have had it's own sound amplification system - not at all needed in this case for these three acoustic instruments to "light up" a full block with sound. Then there is the palpability. The sound of the sax reached all the way across four lanes giving me the sense of feeling the vibrating air it was causing. Really remarkable. These are the types of characteristics I tend to seek in high end systems (and so rarely found). Most high end audio reproduction seems so reductive in compared to the real thing. But it's so hard - impossible it seems - to find a system that truly does it all (and certainly, that does it all for all listeners). So for instance, in my own decisions, the Devore 0 speakers are giving some of that life-like size and weight and warmth to acoustic instruments and voices. On the other hand, I think the Joseph speakers excelled at digging out those unique timbral differences that I hear in real life. The Thiel speakers I have seem almost an in between - not as big, warm and lush as the Devores, but palpable has heck. Beautifully nuanced in finding instrumental timbre...but not to the degree found in the JA speakers. So on one day it feels like I have the best of both worlds in the Thiel. And I utterly glory in the sound. (As I should). On another day, it can feel like I have something that compromises on both those aspects of sound. I notice what other speakers would do "better." Such is the Curse Of The Audiophile! |
prof(or anyone else), I grew up 4 miles from Canadian border south of Montreal and have always had a "thing" for things Canadian .I’ve owned several small PSB monitors and liked the house sound on Classical which is about 90%of my listening . Any thoughts on the PSB T3’s relative to some of the jewels you auditioned ? There are no PSB dealers within 300 miles of where I live . Like yourself, I have no room for speakers that I consider ugly , but every time I see a T3 photo, I want to buy them . Most of my current listening is on Totem Sig 1’s which are not bad on classical . The fact they are from Montreal , which I consider to be North America’s best city, did play a small part in me buying them , |