| Dave
Thomas’ HE 2003 Show Report |
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| Dave Thomas |
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October 2003 |
Mark Twain is credited with
saying: “The coldest winter I ever spent, was
a summer in San Francisco.” To be completely
honest, I’ve always thought that that quote
came from Mae West in protest of what she
perceived to be a lack of quality male
companionship during a vacation in the city by
the bay. Instead, Twain was supposedly talking
about the weather, which is notorious for
taking bone-chilling nosedives at night.
Fortunately, the days inside the rooms of the
Westin-St. Francis Hotel, were loaded with hot
music and even hotter equipment during the
Home Entertainment 2003 Show.
The Avalon Acoustics room was my first stop.
The Opus Ceramique loudspeakers ($13,995) and
Wavestream Kinetics V8 mono amps was the first
system I heard. It was obvious that they had
spent their time well, getting the system
dialed-in to the room. Kudos to Avalon for
selecting the Wavestream amps. It had been a
while since I had heard a system using these
splendid tube behemoths. Spending time with
that combination was a great way to start the
day.
Terry Cain, the Cain & Cain Company’s
tremendously humble and talented loudspeaker
designer, was showing off his finely crafted
$1,500 Abby (in what Terry called his “Kind of
Blue” finish) and $12,500 BEN (Big ENough) ES
loudspeakers. The craftsmanship of these real
cherry wood speakers has to be seen to be
believed. The BEN ES features a full range
driver and a horn-loaded super tweeter. Paired
with the gorgeous Teres Audio turntable and
Art Audio tube electronics, both speakers
produced wonderfully imaged and detailed
sound. Vinyl, tubes, and horns; live
recordings never had it so good.

Only Stereo Times’ own Copy Editor, Dave
Thomas, could make the stunningly massive
Calix Signature Phoenix Grand loudspeakers
look small. Sonically, they dwarfed him and
filled their rather large listening room,
powered by Edge Electronics through Acoustic
Zen cables. The sound was realistically scaled
with deep tight bass. This is a beautifully
built five-way, five driver system that goes
down to at least 20 room shaking Hz.
German loudspeaker company, Fischer & Fischer,
showed an impressive line of speakers built
with slate cabinets and high-quality magnesium
drive units. The most stunning unit of the
line was the SL 1000, which features 4-piece
modular construction, the famous Dynaudio
Esotar tweeter, and Scan Speak woofers. It
made glorious sounds while being driven by
Canary Audio electronics.
There was plenty of multi-channel DVD Audio
sound at the show, but nobody did it better
than Meridian. And nowhere did it sound better
than through the delicious cherry red DSP 8000
loudspeakers that were used with Meridian’s
state-of-the-art 800 Series system. One person
commented during a demo of a Rolling Stones
disc that the sound “ … was as if you were
right on stage with the Stones.” Having heard
that, I couldn’t help but thinking, “does
anybody really want a listening experience
that puts them on stage during a Stones
concert?” Ah, you can almost hear the clanking
of empty Glenlivet bottles. Give me two
channels and place me fifth row, center thank
you.
Ordinarily I wouldn’t pay much attention to a
speaker system that my girlfriend calls
“cute,” but the Morel Octwin mirror-imaged
mini-monitors sounded mighty fine driven by
Electrocompaniet electronics. The sound was
quite pleasant and I was shocked by the amount
and quality of bass from these tiny boxes. And
yes, they did look kind of cute too.

Ken Christianson is the co-owner of Pro Musica,
one of Chicago’s finest High-end shops, and a
recording engineer for Naim Audio. Here he
shows off the SL2 loudspeaker in a system
driven by the CDS3 CD player, NAC 252 preamp
and NAP 300 power amp. Naim may be perceived
as having a cultist following, but I don’t
know of any company that produces better
sounding products so consistently. And if you
are a fan of pure music and minimalist
recording techniques, no body does a better
job of recording a live music event than
Christianson. Check out his work on the
Charlie Haden & Chris Anderson recording,
“None But The Lonely Heart” [naimcd022].
The Nearfield Acoustics Pipedreams loudspeaker
system sounded better than I’ve heard yet in
show conditions. Of course, the $10,000 VAC
Phi 70 Ultriode mono amps may have had
something to do with that. Unlike Pipedreams
demos of the past, the soundstage was huge but
did not overpower the room.
One of the better sounds at the show was the
$8,000 Silverline Audio Bolero loudspeaker.
Bolstered by the new Conrad Johnson Premier
140 power amp ($6,795) and ART 2 pre amp
($15,000), this three-way floor standing
design uses all Dynaudio drive units and was
finished in a beautiful high-gloss tigerwood
veneer. And get this: each speaker comes with
a specially made cover typically used for
expensive pianos. Silverline’s super-friendly
President, Alan Yun, was as much of a joy to
spend time with, as his speakers were to
listen to. On a humorous note, the only thing
that excited Alan as much as the continuous
flow of traffic into his demo room, was the
huge bedroom of his suite. I think he showed
it off every chance he got. What a guy!
Being a Talon Audio speaker owner myself, I
was very eager to hear the new $26,000
Firebird loudspeaker system; I was not
disappointed. Its sci-fi-meets-hi-fi looks are
interesting, but almost belie the fact that
this is a wonderful reproducer of music. It
uses Accuton ceramic midrange and tweeter
drive units and an 11” Focal Audiom woofer
that produces deep yet musical bass. It was
driven by the fine Canadian electronics from
Sim Audio, including the enormous $29,995/pair
Moon Rock mono amplifier. Great big speakers,
great big amps, great big sound, and a great
big price tag.
Talon Audio Chief, Mike Farnsworth also showed
his dazzling new $8,000/pair Hawk mini-monitor
and monstrously built (and priced) $10,000
Thunder subwoofer. At a combined price of
$18,000, the sound and flexibility of this
tandem (when you consider home theater use)
may be one of the best all-around music and
theater systems available. Musically, this is
one of the most seamless satellite/sub systems
I’ve ever heard. Physically, the Hawk looks as
though someone simply cut the top off of a
Talon Firebird and stuck it on a stand. But
driven by the Electrocompaniet NADA 400-watt
mono amps and bolstered by the Thunder, the
room filled with a soundstage that was
spacious and detailed.
The Tetra Speaker Company was showing off
their Live loudspeaker system which features a
tetrahedron-shaped tweeter-midrange enclosure
on top of a dedicated stand (not a subwoofer).
The tweeter is a Scan Speak treated cloth unit
and the woofer is a Morel NeoLin
Neodymium-damped polymer composite driver.
Despite its smallish enclosure, this speaker
produced surprisingly deep bass and a nicely
focused soundstage.

They’ve come a long way, and so have their
speakers. Mr. Tsai Lien-Shui, founder and
principal owner of Usher Audio and Mr. Paul
Chen, Secretary of General Manager, presented
their impressive and relatively affordable
loudspeaker range, from the small but solidly
built $950 X-718 to the huge $8,400 Model
8871. A couple of years ago, most of the talk
about these speakers was about their stunning
cabinetry and but average sound, but since
adding famed speaker designer Dr. Joseph
D’Appolito to the design team, significant
changes have resulted in speakers whose sound
will get your attention more than just their
good looks. And believe me, they look damn
good. Stan Tracht of Thee High End, Usher’s
U.S. distributor, was a pleasure to talk to
and is uncommonly passionate about the value
that these speakers represent in today’s
high-end market. These speakers (and a
complete line of electronics) are made in
Taiwan. If they were built in the U.S. or
Europe, you can bet that the price tag would
be a whole lot higher.
Von Gaylord Audio (formerly Legend Audio) is
still putting on wonderfully musical, if not
understated, show demos. The Legend Mk II
loudspeakers and Nirvana amps combined to put
on the kind of sonically enjoyable demo that I
have come to always expect from them. Also on
display, but unfortunately not active, was the
new “Uni” 200 watt triode mono amplifier. The
tubes actually sitting in a liquid that helps
to keep them cool. I am told that the sound of
the new amp is very … fluid. (Yeah, I know.
Bad joke.)
Does anything say elegance and power the way
that a Wisdom Audio speaker system does? The
$42,000 M-75 system features a 6’ tall
planar-magnetic line source column and dual
12” woofers inside a separate enclosure. Their
own Wisdom Amps drove them via cables from a
new and exciting cable company called
Soundstring. The system was fronted by a new
Wisdom SACD player, which is based on an
Accuphase model. Sonically, well the only
thing more enjoyable than hanging out with the
good-humored guys in this room was listening
to the late Eva Cassidy come to life before
me. For big speakers, these things imaged
wonderfully. And keep an eye out for these
cables; you’ll be shocked at the level of
quality and performance for cables costing
less than $600.
The Canary Audio Reference One mono amps.
They’re 30” deep and weigh 110 lbs.
Physically, they’re a beast; sonically,
they’re a beauty. Used to drive the massive
Fischer & Fischer SL1000 loudspeakers. This is
an extremely promising amplifier that offers
the most potent 80 watts (via eight 300B tubes
per side!) you may ever hear. A drum solo on a
recording that was being played had realistic
impact and voices had a holographic quality
that at times was downright creepy.

Alan Warshaw of Jason Scott Distributing, is
the distributor of both Electrocompaniet and
Morel loudspeakers. Electrocompaniet was a
winner earlier this year of a “Most Wanted
Component” award from Stereo Times for their
wonderful AW220 Stereo/Mono amplifier. The
award is shown above perched atop the Nemisis
CD Player which is part of the new “N” series
of components which are based on the current
Electrocompaniet product line except with
optional “high class” anodized silver
faceplates.
Coming soon to an audiophile boutique near you
will be the Hovland HP 200 pre-amp. It is a
pure tube design like its predecessor the
venerable HP100, but this new design offers
remote control and no tape loop or onboard
facility for phono. But hey, who gives the
proverbial “rat’s ass” about that. Of course
it sounds good, but this honey also ups the
ante on the chrome and crazy sexy cool blue
accent lighting of Hovland’s Radia solid state
amp and Sapphire tube amp.

Every show has a jaw-dropper and for me this
quartet of 75wpc Ming Da MC300B-845A
amplifiers ($12,500) that were on display in
the Pure Audio room driving the tall, dark and
handsome Dali Megaline speakers ($35K). I
liked the sound from this room on my first
visit and loved it was on my last. Also in
this system was the Ming Da MC67/HA pre-amp,
MBL 1621 transport, Zanden 5000 MKIII DAC and
the fabulous Xindak FS-01 speaker cables and
ASC-2 active interconnects.

One of the nice new finds at the show was the
wonderful line of cables from Soundstring
Cable Technologies. These attractive looking
and sounding cables are ultra-flexible,
miraculously affordable and delivered a
balanced presentation through a complete
Wisdom Audio system that was better than I had
heard at previous shows. This company made its
bones by doing OEM projects for numerous other
companies. Now, they’ve taken what they’ve
learned and put their own stamp on it. The
power cord ($475 for a 6’ cord) features a
unique one-piece molded connector and the
interconnects feature low-mass 24KT gold
plated beryllium copper RCA plugs with cured
wood housings. All of their products come with
a 100% lifetime guaranty against manufacturer
defect. Review to come.
My choice for “Most Fun At The Show”
was the new Penaudio Charisma monitor perched atop
the Chara subwoofer. This lovely speaker
system from Finland can more than fill a room
with an engaging and realistic presentation
that will put you in the best seat of a live
jazz recording. This was one of the few
speakers that sells itself. Think I’m kidding?
Check this out. I brought three of my
reference discs to the very friendly and
accommodating Penaudio rep, Val Kratzman and
instructed him on which tracks on each disc I
wanted to hear. Initially I was the only one
listening so I sat back, closed my eyes and
listened to Can’t Help Lovin’ That Man by the
Ray Brown Trio from “Live at the Loa.” After
the song ended I opened my eyes to find that
the room had filled with people, mostly
non-industry folks who just enjoy good music.
I found myself sitting next to a lovely young
lady who asked to hear another song. So Val
quickly put on the beautiful Night Dream from
Kurt Elling’s “Live In Chicago.” By the time
this song had finished the young lady had
asked Val if she could purchase a pair of the
speakers. That’s what this show and the
industry should be all about. The rest of the
system included the Conrad Johnson Premier 140
amplifier, Premier 17LS line stage, and an
Audio Note CD player.
Andrew Jones and Brett Frank of Technical
Audio Devices (TAD) demonstrated their new
Model One loudspeaker. This was the most
stunning sound I heard all weekend and at a
price tag of more than $40K, it damn well
should be. TAD has developed what I feel will
be a statement product their first time out
and will quickly takes its place among the
upper echelon of the state-of-the-art. As part
of their demonstration, which shifted from
two-channel stereo to multi-channel theater,
they displayed a raw model of the Model One’s
cabinet to show off its massiveness and
rigidity. The cabinet is comprised of more
than fifty stacked layers of laminated birch
wood and finished in a gorgeous high-gloss
plum color. It uses an ingenious beryllium
tweeter/midrange driver and woven Aramid
fiber/foam acrylic composite mid-bass and bass
drivers. They also showed a prototype stand
mounted speaker and center channel. My one
qualm with their demonstration was that when
someone would give them a disc to play, they
played only a small portion of it then went
back to their own demonstration disc. Fellas,
you should know that most folks aren’t going
to get the chance to hear their favorite
recordings on your speakers in their homes so
when someone gives you a disc to play, be kind
and let them hear their song.

The Europa II (pictured here in a beautiful
cherry wood veneer) from German speaker
company Isophon, is a speaker that I have been
dying to hear ever since I first saw them
advertised. This is a beautifully finished
six-driver design that is imported by Symcore
Technologies in Miami, FL. They were being
demoed along with equally attractive
electronics from Vincent Audio, a manufacturer
of a full range of high quality audio products
that is new to the U.S. market. The Europa
II’s ability to image and present a realistic
soundstage was very enticing despite the
confines of a typical show room. Their elegant
styling makes them almost as delightful a
speaker to look at as to listen to. Review
coming.
So that ends my first ever trip to a Hi-Fi
show as a member of Stereo Times. I’d like to
thank Clement Perry and the other Stereo Times
staffers who were there, and to the many
manufacturers, dealers, designers, etc. who
were so generous with their time and
attention. I’d particularly like to say thanks
to all the very accommodating HE 2003
personnel who make navigating the hallways and
conference rooms so easy. And finally, I’d
like to thank the many non-industry music
lovers whose enthusiasm, curiosity, and
interest in our industry make this show so
unique. So now it’s on to Las Vegas for the
2004 CES. See you there!
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