Long and short pieces on music you should listen to; audio gear; and pop culture.

Tag: Harman/Kardon

Seven Months

I don’t know what it was. Maybe it was the cooler weather we’ve been having here the past couple of days. Maybe it was the impact of the rather remarkable (I refuse to use “unprecedented” anymore, it’s become – sadly – overused) situation that the Post Office has become controversial. The POST OFFICE. Maybe it was the turn of the calendar, and me recognizing that I’ve been working from home for seven months now, with no end in sight. In any event, the gravity of our current situation brought me back here, finally. (My last post was in April, for crying out loud.) I’ve got a lot to talk about. So I went to my collection and pulled out a bunch of vinyl I haven’t listened to on the turntable for a while, and I’m at the keyboard. Randy Newman’s Good Old Boys kind of called out to me tonight, and it kind of fits the current mood. Let’s do some fast takes tonight.

Good Old Boys (Randy Newman album) - Wikipedia
[Warner Brothers]
  • The Kink Kronikles. Aside from the Buzzcocks’ Singles Going Steady, has there ever been a better anthology? If you’re honest with yourself, you’ll agree. TKK is, like SGS, more than a collection of hits, though it functions as that, of course. It’s pretty much devoid of the primal, early, “You Really Got Me”-era songs, and more devoted to presenting the full spectrum of the Kinks’ brilliance, from Ray Davies’ well-documented observations of English life to his brother Dave’s best work. And John Mendelssohn’s liner notes are simultaneously moving, insightful and hysterically funny. Soon to be re-pressed for the first Record Store Day Drop in August! On red vinyl!
The Kinks - The Kink Kronikles (1972, Terre Haute Pressing, Vinyl ...
{Reprise]
  • You know what Clapton album is just as good, maybe better than Slowhand? 461 Ocean Boulevard. Fight me.
  • Found recently at Mystery Train in Gloucester: a SEALED copy of Johnnie Taylor’s Rare Stamps. Not someone I had on my Stax-artist-I’ve-got-to-check-out list, but, DAMN, this is some grrrrrrrreat soul music.
Johnnie Taylor - Rare Stamps (1969, Vinyl) | Discogs
[Stax]
  • I’m going to be covering audio gear more. This terrible pandemic has taken so much from us in life (170,000 dead as of this writing) and livelihood. Aside from – thankfully – my go-to record stores re-opening, there has been little to do musically; no concerts or gatherings. So I’m directed some of my pent-up music-related energies into to restoring electronic gear from the mid-70’s to early 80’s golden era of hifi. I’ve always admired the 1975-1978 Harman/Kardon industrial design (as well as their peerless audio design), including their Citation line. I just got an H/K 330c stereo receiver (cheap!) to restore as a first project. The 330c was a starter receiver that they sold tons of – it’s only rated at 20 watts/channel, but punches way above its weight. I’ll talk about my restoration efforts in future posts. Wish me luck!

Oh, the humanity!

I should have known. Everything was going great musically. Great new discs were coming out, like Hot Chip’s AMAZING A Bathfull Of Ecstasy and Bill Callahan’s Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest, and more to come, like the remastered Running On Empty and Eno’s Apollo: Extended Edition. I was finding GREAT used vinyl everywhere. (like a VG+ condition original Mobile Fidelity pressing of Supertramp’s Crime Of The Century for SIX bucks! SIX!)

And then, the cruel, cruel hand of fate struck my stereo: my beloved amplifier got sick. The powerful, sweet beast that is my Harman/Kardon HK990 started shutting itself down occasionally, then more frequently. I found this amp about two years ago on eBay for quite a bargain considering its original $2500 price. It’s a very musical dual-mono Class AB stereo amplifier with room correction and a killer digital-to-audio converter (DAC), and until about a month ago, was very happily driving my NHT Classic Three speakers and CS-10 subwoofer.

Alas, poor amp, we hardly knew ye

And then, the music died. Just the ominous words “Protection Mode”, then silence. Craaaaaaaaaap. I took it to two local places, who threw up their hands and told me to send it to the very reputable United Radio in Syracuse, they’d know what to do. They did – they’d have to do pretty much a complete teardown of the unit to isolate and fix the problem for almost as much as much as I paid for it.

So, for almost a month and a half I was without my Wow-And-Flutter engine to listen to my physical media. Like Joni said, you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone. So I had United send the unit back to me, and I set to looking for a replacement. The only other amp I’d consider the Harman’s equal is the Anthem STR integrated amplifier, but that would set me back a cool $4500. Sad horns. So, I’m saving my pennies for that.

As luck would have it, my diligent research turned up an almost perfect replacement: plenty of power, an fantastic onboard DAC, analog and digital inputs for all of my stuff, a subwoofer output, outputs that would let me keep recording my vinyl finds (a must) and – bonus points – solid retro good looks. It’s the Yamaha A-S801:

Yamaha to the rescue!

It’s not perfect – I’d prefer that it had a display showing me the current volume/selected input, it’s missing a Pre Out/In so I can connect my headphone amp, but damn, this is a fantastic sounding amplifier – more than satisfying. Best of all, I got an open-box model at the wonderful Crutchfield and saved almost $200 off the sticker price!

If anyone wants a beautiful amp and is willing to put several hundred dollars into it to get at least another ten years out of it, it’s up on eBay for the next couple of days. Bid away while I reacquaint myself with Little Feat’s Waiting For Columbus.

© 2024 Wow And Flutter

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑