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

Tag: Listening room

New Adventures In Hi-Fi

(h/t to REM for the title)

When you’re seriously into music, it’s easy to get obsessive about what you listen to it on.  Some people simply spend their money on the best headphones they can afford, then connect it to their iPhone or laptop, and stream their music.  Or maybe their system is a pair of great powered speakers like the Audioengine A5s connected to a preamp-equipped turntable.  Still, many music lovers build a good, standalone, two-channel stereo with at least an integrated amplifier, a turntable, probably a CD player to play all those CDs you bought in the previous decade(s), and a pair of passive loudspeakers.  Then, you listen.  And maybe one day you’re listening to your latest find, and think: hey, I think my system should sound better.  (this usually happens when you hear someone else’s audio setup and you go, hmmmmmm.)  So you come into some money (tax refund, money from Granny) that’s enough to cover a new pair of speakers, and you shop around for a “better” pair.  Or, you fry your amp and replace it or upgrade to something with more/better power.  Eventually, you get to a place where your system really makes you go, “ahhhhhhh.”

Then, one day, you’re walking around town and you wander into the sound room of an audio store.  Fool!  There before you, someone is auditioning a pair of speakers; AND they’re listening to a record that you know and love, and so you draw closer.  Your brain whispers to you things like “I’ve never heard those fingers on the bass strings before”, or “wow, this really sounds like you’re in the front row.”  Excited, you look at the price tag of those beautiful speakers, and after you get over your shock, you smile, and head back out to the street.  But, you know what kind of great sound is possible (albeit with probably more dollars than you have at your disposal.)

Really great and reputable audio stores are in the business of selling you the best gear that will work in your space, at a price that meets your budget.  But they always have available no-holds-barred “dream” components that, even if they’re way out of your budget, you just have to hear.  That was the case the other night when I was in Chestertown, MD, a really fun little college town on the eastern shore.  I always visit The Listening Room when I’m there.  It’s been in its current location for over two years now, having moved from its original location in suburban Baltimore.  The owner, Mike, has done a great job of renovating his building over that time, and it’s a welcoming, no-pressure place to shop for gear and vinyl.  The front of the store houses a great vinyl store, with reasonably priced new and very clean vintage vinyl, and the audio stuff is in the back.  Well worth a visit if you’re visiting the Chesapeake Bay area!

I was there this past weekend to see what a top-shelf system sounds like.  Magnepan is a US maker of highly-regarded planar speakers, and their rep was on hand to show off their top of the line speakers, the 30.7s.  It’s an imposing, four piece, four-way speaker system (a “wall of sound” if there ever was one) that doesn’t always make the rounds or is even available to listen to in stores – most of the time you’ve got to visit their Minnesota factory to hear them.  But Magnepan is on a tour right now showing off the 30.7, so: good timing!

The magnificent Magnepan 30.7s

I was lucky enough visit in the morning before the special event that night, and spend some a little one-on-one time with the Magnepans and the incredible electronics driving them: Oracle Delphi MkVI turntable fitted with an SME Series 5 tonearm and Dynavector TKR cartridge, a Rogue Ares Magnum phono preamplifier, an Aurender A10 network music player, Rogue RP-9 stereo preamplifier and Rogue Apollo Dark monoblock power amplifiers, and Straightwire cables.  The Listening Room has a lot of great vinyl for testing, so I had to give the Mobile Fidelity Ultradisc One-Step pressing of Bill Evans’ Sunday At The Village Vanguard a try.  This is a really well-engineered and warm recording of Evans’ legendary trio playing at the Vanguard in 1961, and the half-speed remastered MoFi version is peerless. 

When the stylus dropped on the first track, Gloria’s Step (Take 2), I felt like I was actually at the Village Vanguard.  (I saw Bill Frisell play there a couple of years ago, so I know what the room sounds like.)  I picked this disc because the great Orrin Keepnews recording is really sympathetic to all of the players, especially bassist Scott LaFaro.  Planar speakers characteristically have a “boxless” sound, and these Magnepans are the best examples of that sound.  These speakers reproduced LaFaro’s bass so well you would swear that you were “in the room” in Greenwich Village.  Next up was Analog Spark’s sparkling pressing of Ella Fitzgerald Sings The Cole Porter Songbook .  Although this is a mono recording, it’s really well-mic’d, and the Magnepans reproduced Ella’s voice so well. 

At the very well-attended event in the evening, there were smiles all around as people took turns listening to their favorite discs on the 30.7s.  A fun event all around.  If you ever get a chance to drop into a listening session like this with dream gear, whether it be at your local audio store or an event like Classic Album Sundays, satisfy your aural curiosity and go!

Holding On To That Teenage Feeling

I’m lucky enough to have a dedicated listening room.  After I got married, my stereo bounced around to a bunch of different places, even (horrors!) getting boxed up for a couple of years.  Most of those rooms weren’t optimal – usually a place where the TV was always on, hence little opportunity to really listen, so it was off to the iPod.  Which wasn’t bad at all – certainly better than nothing, but not the same as having a space where you could settle in and just LISTEN.  Then, about 15 years ago, we did the basement over so the kids (and their friends, TBH) could have a place to hang.  Part of the plan included a room that was perfect for listening, where I could put my speakers exactly where they should be, and LOTS of wall space for vinyl.  And yeah, you could crank it up without any complaints from everyone else.

Recently, though, I had a chance to do the same thing upstairs in a room off the kitchen.  My kids are out of the house, and it became more convenient – and nicer – to walk down the hall rather than down to my underground lair.  Basically.  This room was a blank slate – it wasn’t as private as my old listening room downstairs, but I was able to turn it into a comfortable place that could double as my home office as well as a music room.  However, as part of the deal with my wife, the bulk of my vinyl collection had to remain downstairs 🙁 but all of my vinyl has been digitized to my NAS drive, I can access that over my Sonos. 🙂 

The whole experience has been a revival of my yearly back-to-college ritual – pack up the stereo at the end of the summer, set it up in the dorm room, get everything where you want it to be, tweak things here and there.  There’s that sense of newness, the promise of an amazing year, and the social bonding around music (parties, late night listening) that never gets old.  The vinyl revival taps into those very human feelings, which is why it’s lasted longer than the most jaded techies thought it would.  It’s easy to just call up a Spotify playlist and listen, and that (still) is an amazing feat, but the ritual of putting on an LP, or even a CD, and sitting down to listen is something that, once experienced, never leaves you.  Now, please excuse me as I slip into something more comfortable…

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