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2004 CES Show Report: Part
4
Mike Wright
Lots of good music was
heard coming from the 47 Laboratory room. 47 Lab’s
U.S. Distributor Yoshi Segoshi, or “Yoshi-san?as he was
respectfully referred to by one of our associates,
really had the room set up nicely. We enjoyed music
through a system featuring the engaging and tall Cain
& Cain Studio BEN-ES speakers, RS Laboratory
RS-AI Tonearm ($980) on a Rega Planar 9 for
vinyl and the 47 Labs PiTracer CD transport
($25,000) and Progression DAC ($2,700) for
digital. Amplification was via 47 Lab’s Gaincard
($1,500) and Input Chooser ($750). Each piece was
bolstered by its own massive external power supply. 47
Labs pieces are relatively diminutive in size but this
belies the musicality and power that the system
generates.
Back to that RS Labs tonearm for a
moment. I have heard early versions of the Rega Planar 9
turntable on numerous occasions and have never been
overly impressed by it. But with the RS Labs tonearm,
and a Miyabi cartridge, the Planar 9 rendered a
performance that was far more musical than it had been
with any of the early Rega arms. I have yet to hear the
P9 with the new RB1000 tonearm but have been told that
it is a big improvement. Anyone with a P9 would do well
to look into the RS Labs tonearm. The combination is
excellent.
Best At
Show
For me, one of the
?i>best sounds?I heard at the show came from the
Usher Audio room. Stan Tracht and his brother
Carter were very accommodating and put up with all of my
speaker-changing and music selection requests. The
system featured an Usher CD-100 CD player
splitting duty with an Esoteric DV50 SACD player
($5,500) as the source components. The rest of the
system was the sleek and stylish new CP-6311
loudspeakers ($2,100) driven by the P-307
($1,980) preamp and R-1.5 ($2,200) 160 watt
Class A amplifier. Selection after selection was
presented with openness, musicality, and—a rarity at
shows like this—musical involvement. Hearing tracks that
I was intimately familiar with produced the spine
tingling effects I had come to know when listening to
them at home and made the experience that much more
enjoyable. The 6311 is part of the new ? Series?of
loudspeakers from this Taiwanese speaker giant. What’s
more exciting is that the 6311 is the smallest in the
series, which also includes the CP-6371 ($2,900)
and CP-6381 ($3,400). The cabinets come finished
in a gorgeous high-gloss black, white, or silver, and
feature elegantly sculpted wood accents.
Another
one of my ?i>best sounds at the show? was to be
found in the Bertr and Audio room.
Jay Bertrand played music through the wonderful Dali
Megaline speakers ($40,000), driven by the exotic
looking Ming Da MC300B-845 tube monoblock
amplifiers ($12,500) and The Messenger
preamplifier. The source was a Xindak SCD-2 tubed
SACD player ($1,895) and a Zanden Model 5000 Mk
III DAC. Connecting the setup were the
Xindak Gold speaker cables ($1,850/meter pair)
and interconnects ($1,450/meter pair). For smooth
presentation and large-scale dynamics, this was the
place to be.
Also falling in the
category of ?i>best sounds at the show?were the
two systems run in the Acoustic Dreams room. The
main system featured the Lumenwhite Whitelight
($40,000) and Ayon Audio 52-B Reference
amplifiers. A digital front end from dCS and
the VYGER Indian Signature turntable handled the
analog. The smaller system was Ayon’s Dragon S
speakers ($19,225) driven by an Ayon Sunrise
integrated amplifier ($6,900).
A george mark audio
technologies CD player (price unknown) and
DAC/preamp ($5,900) completed this
system. All equipment sat on Acoustic Dreams?own
gorgeous custom-built equipment racks. As a bonus,
Acoustic System’s Frank Tchang stopped by
to demonstrate his Resonators: tiny metal bowls
that sit atop little wood blocks. When positioned
correctly they can have an interesting effect on the
music’s sound. I had previously heard the main set-up
(sans resonators) at a Chicago Audiophile Society
meeting last year and it sounded as stunningly good then
as it did here.
Best Sound
at Show!

My favorite sound at the show
came from the Ascendo Audio room. Clement Perry
has written at length about the virtues of this German
loudspeaker company and now I know why. The System
Z-F3 is outfitted with an 8? midrange/woofer and a
ribbon tweeter that simply dazzles. I asked designer
Jurgen Scheuring (above) to play Can’t Help Lovin?
That Man from the Ray Brown Trio’s “Live At The
Loa.?This was as close as I’ve come to calling
something “sonically holographic.? Airy, spacious, and
detailed were just a few of the words that popped into
my head while listening.
But continued listening
told me that some of the credit for this glorious sound
had to be given to the electronics from a relative
newcomer to the U.S., Phonosophie. The system
comprised of Phonosophie’s Impuls 2 CD player,
BI-Control 2 preamplifier, BI-Amp 1-2
integrated amp and a pair of Spike power
amplifiers with Power Control 3 power
supplies. Something special was definitely going on
here. To put it plainly: it made music from every CD
sound as though the performance was somehow inside the
listening room. Equally delightful was getting to know
the man behind these splendid electronics, Ingo Hansen.
One look at the Phonosophie gear and you’ll swear it’s a
close relative of the great Naim Audio gear.
Another interesting tidbit is that Linn’s Lingo power
supply was named after Hansen. Lingo for
Ingo.
More Good
Stuff
There were many other
fine and notable systems that deserve to be called out.
These were rooms that had smaller, simpler set-ups
compared to most of those that I’ve mentioned so far, but
which I felt were still very musical and thoroughly
enjoyable. The Escalante Design room (photo right show's Budge posing with ST's
fearless leader, CP), featured Tierry Budge’s newest speaker design
called the Pinyon, which has a musical and
engaging sound that will be well worth seeking out. In
the Audio Oasis room, George Tordai’s
Audio Zone AMP-1 was being fed by a Copland CD
player and driving the highly musical Reference
3A speakers. Credit also had to be given to the
Dynamic Design cables, which George said were
dynamic and neutral enough to allow his amp to really
show its strengths. These excellent cables are marketed
by my fellow Chicago-area audiophile, Don Smith, and
serve as a reference in my system. The Zingali
Loudspeaker room featured a host of stunning
Italian-made speakers, but the ones that caught my
attention were the small Cinema M monitors paired
with their OSC 206 subwoofer. A Viva Audio
integrated amp and the Lector CD player drove them to
astonishingly clear musical levels with surprising bass
control.
The Usual
Suspects
There were other rooms that I felt
sounded good but which I won’t go into with great detail,
mostly because they seem to always have a nice sound and
also because I want to make sure some of the rooms that
wouldn’t normally get mentioned, got some press. The
Halcro, Jeff Rowland Design Group, Edge
Electronics, Gryphon, and Joule
Electra rooms all produced great sounds as they
typically do. Burmester also had an exceptional sounding
room and the equipment, as always, was an attention
grabber. We were grooving along, until they went
multi-channel and started playing music through a center
channel that did not seem to image very well. Nothing’s
more annoying than knee-level
vocals.
Multi-channel Madness
To borrow a phrase from my
brother’s hero, Dennis Miller, “Now I don’t want to get off
on a rant here,?but the center channels used in some of
the rooms were just not necessary. Not just in the
Burmester room; in most rooms where they attempted to
demonstrate multi-channel sound, the music sounded
better in a two-channel setup. When some rooms played
music from a small ensemble or trio, with the center
channel in place, it seemed as if part of the stage had
been removed and was instead replaced with something
even more artificial. The transition is rarely seamless.
Some rooms also tried to play bass-heavy synthesized rap
music (sans vulgarity) and the problem was even more
glaring. I just feel that if you have speakers capable
of good imaging, you simply don’t need a center channel,
especially in a normal-sized room. I do feel center
channels work fine for movies, but for music it’s just a
further step away from reality and not closer to it. Of
course that’s just my opinion, I could be
wrong.
Last
But Not Least
In the Von
Schweikert/VAC/Oracle room, the towering new
VR-11 loudspeakers ($125,000) were being
demonstrated and my feelings on the sound were sort of a
mixed bag. Twice I heard music in that room that just
wasn’t quite right. But after a third listen, adjustments
were made and the speaker’s sound improved dramatically.
I’m not sure what the problem was early on, but during
one demo someone did suggest a bass level adjustment. I’m
not sure if that is what did the trick, but once this
system was dialed-in, the sound was phenomenal: huge
stage presentation, explosive dynamics, and spot-on
imaging. The featured system in the room was the
Oracle CD-1000 transport ($7,500) and DAC
1000 ($7,500) along with the Valve Amplification
Company Renaissance preamp and VAC Phi 220
monoblock amplifiers. Not only were these pieces
absolutely gorgeous to behold, but they sounded
wonderful as well. The VAC electronics in particular
sounded much better than when I last listened to them,
and they were fine sounding even then. They were
powerful and detailed, with fast transient response and
tight, extended bass. Kudos to Kevin
Hayes.
All in all, it was a gratifying
experience and I’m already making plans for next year’s
show. I was not able to make it to all of the rooms and
if I missed anyone, hopefully I’ll get you the next
time.
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