| Birdland
Audio
ODEON-Lite
24-bit
DAC |
|
| Jim
Merod |
| 28
April
2000 |
Specifications
Five
digital
inputs: (2)
RCA/Coax; BNC;
Optical; AES/EBU
32 Hz, 44.1
Hz, 48 Hz,
& 96 Hz
sampling rates
dedicated
on-board
analog-output
volume pot
True
"Dual"
Power Supply
Multiple
Voltage
Regulation
Sources
Local VCO
jitter-elimination
Bandwidth: 5
Hz - 23 KHz
(+0/-1 dB
weighted @ 48
Hz sampling
frequency)
Dynamic Range:
better than
106 dB
S/N Ratio:
better than
114 dB
Channel
Separation:
better than
118 dB
Output
Impedence:
less than 2.5
kilo-ohms
Output Level @
12 o'clock
level: 500 mV
RMS
Output Level @
Maximum: 3.2
Volts RMS (4.5
Volts peak)
Dimensions: 41
mm × 225 mm
× 165 mm
[1.6" ×
8.9" ×
6.5"]
Price $980.00
Birdland
Audio
831.646.0168
email:gilles@birdland.com
Web: http://www.birdland.com/
"I
have written
at length
about the
vast
musicality
of the LINN
CD-12. My
praise for
that one-box
player was
well earned.
One of the
secrets of
the LINN
player is
its
uncolored
but gorgeous
delivery of
sound….It
is never
unmusical.
The Odeon-lite
manifests a
similar
outcome."
I
love the
Odeon-Lite DAC.
It is, without
question, the
most musically
engaging d/a
converter I
have ever had
sustained time
with. It is,
in addition,
the most
uninflected --
the most
neutral and
unobtrusive --
d/a I've yet
heard. That
experience
includes units
that cost more
than ten times
what this
small,
unassuming
dragon-slayer
box sells for.
I am immensely
impressed with
the Odeon-lite.
It has no
"sound"
of its own. It
simply gets
out of the way
of digital
signals fed in
and transfers
the digits
(flawlessly,
musically, and
beautifully)
into dynamic
analog glory.
Perhaps
a more coy
approach to
the sonic
bottom line is
preferable for
some readers.
Let me,
therefore,
build my case
incrementally.
When
acoustic
designer
Gilles Gameiro
first allowed
me hear this
box in its
first
incarnation,
more than a
year ago, it
was not
situated in my
own listening
system. I was
struck, at
that initial
hearing, by
the hugeness
and the
"openness"
of the sound
stage it
delivered. We
were listening
to a very
revealing
system and I
had in my
possession
that day CDs
that I had
recently
recorded. Very
familiar
source
material,
therefore,
provided the
digits for my
first serious
session with
the Odeon-lite
DAC.
I
was so taken
aback by the
ability of the
Odeon-lite to
place
instruments
and voices in
their precise
locations,
with a
palpable sense
of space
between
musicians,
that I mumbled
something on
the order of
"this is
amazing! I'm
having a hard
time believing
what I'm
hearing."
Gilles
Gameiro was
amused at my
amazement. He
had not been
at the live
recording
sessions where
the music had
been captured
and so, of
course, he
could not know
how stunning
the
replication of
spatial
information
truly was.
Further
experience
with the
Odeon-lite
confirms my
initial
impressions.
Not only does
this DAC
deliver
precise
imaging and
dynamics, it
has a tonal
purity that is
rare in any
transfer
between
digital
information
and its analog
reinvention as
musical sound.
I
have written
at length
about the vast
musicality of
the LINN
CD-12. My
praise for
that one-box
player was
well earned.
One of the
secrets of the
LINN player is
its uncolored
but gorgeous
delivery of
sound. The
LINN CD-12
creates music
and more
music. It is
never
unmusical.
The
Odeon-lite
manifests a
similar
outcome.
Regardless of
what digital
material you
feed it, you
receive in
return an
extraordinarily
accurate
transfer of
sonic
information
and, also, an
immensely
satisfying
(somewhat
surprising)
creation of
musical
precision. The
more
beautifully
recorded the
digital signal
fed in, the
more glorious
the analog
reproduction
sent out.
I
use the term
"musical
precision"
because I've
come to regard
the Odeon-lite
as a
reviewer's
friend: an
accurate,
unobtrusive
analytic
instrument.
Unlike some
amplifiers and
speakers which
are extremely
faithful to
the
micro-dynamics
of sound
sources at the
expense of the
"musicality"
(the beauty
and emotional
engagement
that make
music the most
involving
delivery of
human messages
ever created),
however, the
Odeon-lite
does not
sacrifice
musical ease
for the sake
of analytic
exactness.
I
have come over
the years to
regard such
"exactness"
-- which
usually
manifests
itself as an
etched,
sometimes
harsh sonic
quality
("dry"
is another,
gentler term
to apply here)
-- as less
analytically
revealing than
I once took it
to be.
"Before
committing
myself to
this review,
I have taken
a great deal
of time
listening
to, and
working
with, this
unit. The
Odeon-lite
has been
perfectly
faithful to
all of the
master tape
material
that I have
fed it…"
In
fact, if the
musical source
material that
is delivered
to (and
through) a
superior DAC
is not
rendered with
its own
inherent sonic
contours --
which should
carry
"musical"
qualities that
beguile one's
ears and heart
-- then the so
called
"analytical"
reproduction,
depriving the
music of ease
and
relaxation,
has deformed
or constricted
the sonic
truth. Musical
delicacy and
power have
been
compromised or
corrupted.
In
small ways,
compromises
are always at
work from the
moment a
musical signal
is captured by
a microphone
and sent along
its somewhat
circuitous
path to the
final CD or
DVD that a
listener
enjoys. The
trick for a
recording
professional,
as for an
electronic and
acoustics
engineer, is
to minimize
such
compromises.
This ambition
is clearly
Birdland
Audio's
objective.
With the
Odeon-lite DAC,
it has
succeeded
spectacularly.
All
of this no
doubt puts the
case for the
Odeon-lite in
a reduced
frame. This is
a marvelous
musical
companion that
does not
sacrifice
musicality to
any other
attribute. It
is one of the
finest DACs I
have ever
heard and a
bargain at its
retail price
point of $980.
Before
committing
myself to this
review, I have
taken a great
deal of time
listening to,
and working
with, this
unit. The
Odeon-lite has
been perfectly
faithful to
all of the
master tape
material that
I have fed it
and I have
been listening
to this box
for eight
months. The
Birdland DAC
has allowed me
to check
original
master tapes
with
unflagging
accuracy. It
has allowed me
to closely
examine the
results of
mastered
material. It
has never
failed my
needs as a
recording
engineer. It
has never
altered or
confused the
information I
need to gain
from listening
carefully to
all the
countless
hours of work
that go into
mastering a
live recording
for final
production.
I
am, in sum,
not only
impressed by
the Odeon-lite.
I admire it
and I have
come to feel a
kind of
professional
intimacy with
it. My work as
a recording
and mastering
engineer would
be poorer,
less
enjoyable, and
more uncertain
without its
faithful,
magical
presence in my
professional
life.
I
must conclude
by
underscoring
that this is
not an
ordinary DAC.
It features
24-bit, 96 kHz
digital signal
processing
with on board
re-clocking of
the signal in
order to
reduce or
eliminate
jitter
artifacts. So
far, perhaps,
fairly
straight-forward.
In addition,
the Odeon-lite
employs
separate power
supplies for
the digital
and analog
domains, with
both multiple
power
conditioners
and multiple
power
regulators to
suppress noise
and maximize
signal
isolation.
Such signal
care and
design
redundancy is
not a given
with DACs.
Birdland
Audio uses an
analog output
process that
it dubs the
"solid
tube"
design.
Whatever the
proprietary
electronic
protocols that
such black
magic may hide
within, the
outcome is
gloriously
available for
all to hear.
It is both
subtle and not
so subtle.
Transients and
all the
fragile
micro-dynamic
traces of
signals are
subtle, whispy
things. They
are subtle.
They are
preserved
wonderfully by
the Odeon-lite.
The unsubtle
quality of
this box is
its
mega-delivery
of truthful
sound
reproduction.
Anyone
clever enough
to try this
little beast
will find a
variety of
hook up
options. You
can choose
among standard
coax/RCA, BNC,
AES/EBU, and
fiber optic
inputs. The
single-ended
RCA analog
outputs are
soldered right
to the PCB
board, thereby
avoiding
another inch
of wire, more
solder, added
glaze or haze
or sonic
diminution.
Everything
about the
Odeon-lite is
designed for
maximum sonic
truthfulness.
The result is
stunning and
genuinely
inexpensive at
$980. Good
luck finding a
better bargain
in DACs.
One
more thing.
This box has a
volume control
built in,
which allows
it to be
directly
connected to
an amplifier.
It does not
take a brain
surgeon to
tell the
audio-hip
cognoscenti
that direct
coupling from
DAC-to-amp
presents a
cleaner, truer
signal path
than any which
goes through
even the best,
most expensive
pre-amplifier.
There
is a problem
here, though.
If you first
put this box
into your
sound system,
say, at eight
o'clock at
night, an open
bottle of good
vino alongside
your listening
spot you may
climb into bed
mid-morning.
This Birdland
mini-monster
is addictive.
Your 16-bit
CDs will sound
different,
Better… more
"there"
there. Your
DVDs will kill
you. I
recommend you
to audition
this exquisite
unit on a
weekend when
you do not
have to rise
to join the
world of work
too early.

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