| The Origin Live Silver MKII
Tonearm |
| Mark Baker Revamps His Tonearm
Line to Mark II Status |
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|
November 2006 |

The original Silver 250 tonearm was a seminal
product for the English firm Origin Live.
Known until then primarily for their
over-achieving modifications of Rega tonearms,
DC motor replacement kits for AC-motored
turntables, and a line of DIY turntable kits,
the Silver 250 was the first arm that could be
considered a true Origin Live model. Though it
used the Rega RB250 mounting platform, cueing
device and anti-skate, the Silver 250 used an
Origin Live arm tube, pivot bearing, rear
stub, and headshell, all based on Origin
Live’s paradigm-shifting design philosophy. It
seemed to inspire head designer Mark Baker to
a torrid period of intense creativity, as it
quickly led to the ascending line of Origin
Live tonearms: the Encounter, Illustrious,
Conqueror, and their current flagship arm the
Enterprise. This last metaphor is literal; as
Origin Live is located in the English city of
Southampton, the home of the British Navy, the
arms are named for naval vessels.
I have been fortunate to have reviewed all the
Origin Live arms (a review of the new
Enterprise is in the works) and own a
half-dozen of them, including an original
Silver 250, which, mounted on the now
discontinued Standard Kit turntable, served as
my primary budget test mule for analogue
products for 5 years. Reviewing each new arm
as it was released was a fascinating exercise:
each arm seemed an ultimate peak, that is,
until the next higher up arm was released,
leading to ever-ascending performance. The OL
Conqueror, mounted on an OL Aurora Gold
turntable, now serves as my ultimate analogue
reference: I find it the most musically
communicative LP spinner I’ve ever
encountered.
Mark Baker’s run of inspired creativity
continues unabated; in addition to the design
of a complete range of turntables, and
upgrades in the variety of DC-motor
change-over kits, the Origin Live line of
tonearms continues to evolve. The Silver 250,
with the addition of a new armtube, became the
Silver a few years ago, and the lessons
learned in the development of the Conqueror
and especially the Enterprise arm have led to
a re-vamping of the Origin Live tonearm line
which now enters Mark II incarnation. Mark
Baker is enthusiastic about the enhanced
performance of the new MK II models, claiming
that each MK II model outperforms the next
model up in the old line. In effect, the new
Silver MKII competes not with the old Silver
250 or the Silver, but with the old $1495
Encounter, whose MKII incarnation then
competes with the old $2395 Illustrious. The
Conqueror and Enterprise are, of course,
already MKII items.
The
MK II version of the Silver features a new
armtube, a new counterweight, new tonearm
wiring and a host of other improvements that
Baker is loath to reveal for justifiable
reasons. The Silver MKII retains the Rega arm
geometry and mounting hole requirements, which
have become a default standard for most of the
world’s turntables. Tracking force adjustment
is by a non-calibrated sliding counterweight
held by a set-screw, and the arm is statically
balanced, requiring absolute leveling of the
turntable for correct performance. VTA
adjustment is made by either Origin Live’s
threaded collar or by their sliding
pillar/setscrew VTA adjustors. The Silver MKII
retails for $935, just $236 more than a
fully-modified OL Rega RB250, the price of
which includes a new OEM Rega arm. Mark Baker
asserts that unless a purchaser already owns
an RB250 to modify, the Silver MKII is a more
cost-effective purchase than the $699 Full
Monty 250. Considering that the fully-modified
RB250 is the biggest bargain in analogue
playback, this is heady news. It’s always
heartening to see new products offering
increased performance in price ranges that an
average music lover is likely to afford.
I auditioned the Silver MKII on 3 turntables:
the old OL Standard Kit, the Origin Live
Aurora Gold, and a Linn Sondek LP12, which
incorporates Origin Live’s DC-motor
conversion. I ran through a bevy of phono
cartridges and phono stages with the arm.
Rather than apply a tortuous burn-in regimen
on the Silver MKII’s tonearm wires, I just
played LPs with it casually. It took about 2
weeks for the wiring to settle down and come
into song.
It was immediately obvious that the wonderful
and trademark Origin Live way with timing was
intact with the Silver MKII. The most obvious
musical manifestations of timing – rhythm,
tempo, dynamic impact and drive, the entry of
individual musicians at exactly the right time
and that innate sense of them playing together
in service of a common musical goal – are
fundamental to all music. The Silver MKII is
faithful to these fundamentals, leading to
deep involvement with the music while
listening. This is particularly true with bass
and drum-driven music played by actual
musicians. Without unerring depiction of
rhythm, the differences between Charlie Watts,
John Bonham and Keith Moon, or between Art
Blakey, Joe Morello, and Elvin Jones are
obscured. Similarly, listening to the bass
playing of Jack Bruce, Paul McCartney, Kenny
Gradney, Family Man Barrett, Ron Carter,
Charles Mingus, or Jaco Pastorius depends on
rhythm, pitch and dynamics being exactly right
to truly appreciate their artistry. The
greatest evil perpetrated on music is the
utilization of the drum machine and
synthesized bass, robbing music of that living
pulse that manifests human temporal realities,
subsuming them to the lifeless and robotic.
The Silver MKII reveals the difference
immediately.
Origin Live’s products have always been
exceptional musical communicators, faithfully
extracting the expressiveness of what the
instruments are playing as well as the musical
techniques used in that expression. The Silver
MKII allows the music to both dance and sing.
Moreover, its exceptional musical
communicativeness extends to all types of
music, capturing both the physical exuberance
of multiple drum music from polyrhythmic West
Africa and the subtleties of the string
quartet. Delicate and complex orchestral
scoring is extremely well decoded, leading to
clear comprehension of their artistic intent.
This is an arm that allows one to explore the
full range of the Earth’s music to one’s
heart’s content.

Comparing the new Silver MKII to the old
Silver 250 revealed that the MKII is a far
more neutral, refined, controlled and accurate
arm. Mark Baker’s contention that the MKII
Silver’s competition is really the old
Encounter arm was borne out: the Silver MKII
matches that arm’s seamless organic cohesion
while upping resolution and nuance. Playing a
batch of reasonably priced cartridges was a
revelation. The rap against cheap cartridges
(particularly inexpensive moving coil designs)
is that they are either of inherent limited
resolution or possess little control of the
upper frequencies, leading to harshness and
hash. Since cheap cartridges are often played
in cheap arms, this rap becomes a
self-fulfilling prophecy. Playing the $180
Denon DL 160, the Goldring Eroica LX, the old
Sumiko Blue Point, the Audio Technica AT
OC9ML, and the now ancient Talisman Boron
moving coil cartridges on the Silver MKII
defied their reputation for top-end problems.
The Silver MKII is able to extract coherent
high frequency information from these
cartridges without ringing, hash, harshness,
or false and artificial brightness. Never had
these cartridges sounded as good as they did
with the Silver MKII. Whereas I had considered
them “Close but no cigar!” items before, I was
forced to change my appraisal of their merits.
While the new Silver was able to bring out
their hidden merits, it was also able to
reveal their ultimate performance limits.
These results were duplicated with more
ambitious moving coil designs like the Garrott
Brothers-modified Ortofon SPU and the
Dynavector Karat cartridges. The excellent
results attained with MC cartridges of a
variety of designs point to the improved
abilities of the MKII to control the energy
being pumped into the arm tube.
This was further borne out by using The
Cartridge Man’s Isolator. The $150 Isolator
serves as a filter and cartridge de-coupler by
placing an energy-absorbent ‘sandwich’ between
the cartridge and the tonearm’s headshell,
thus saving the arm from having to deal with
much of the extraneous mechanical energy
generated by the stylus tracing the groove.
While its effect on the Silver 250 was a
wholesale night and day improvement, the
effect on the Silver MKII was much more
subtle, centering around the fullness and
‘roundness’ of each note.
Playing non-moving coil designs – the Audio
Technica AT95E, Grado Signature TLZ V, the
sadly discontinued Shure V-15 V xMR, and the
Cartridge Man’s MusicMaker III and Classic -
was equally satisfying in the Silver MKII.
Although the Silver only captures say 90% of
what the astoundingly great MusicMaker Classic
achieves in the OL Conqueror arm, it still is
the cheapest arm I’d recommend with that
wonderful cartridge. Since I’ve previously
heard many of the cartridges I used in other
manufacturers’ arms costing twice and three
times the Silver’s $935 price, and have found
them wanting in comparison, Mark Baker’s new
arm is a stunning achievement. Indeed the only
real competition proves to be Origin Live’s
more expensive arms.
The Silver MKII’s freedom from false resonance
and zippy artificial brightness makes mating
with phono stages easy: one need not fear that
higher resolution and wider bandwidth will
exacerbate or reveal problems. I got excellent
results with my batch of phono sections,
finding that the highest resolution designs
produced the best results, as they should. The
budget champion Acoustic Signature Tango
(which includes low-output moving-coil
preamplification) and the Graham Slee ERA V
Gold and their new $1260 Reflex (review
coming) proved particularly superb matches,
offering high definition, strong rhythmic and
dynamic bass drive, and superb depiction of
musical meaning. The new Silver is forgiving
of LP flaws and foibles. If you’re more
interested in what’s on the LP musically than
in decoding the pressing code information from
the inner groove hieroglyphics, you’ll love
this new arm. The way LP ticks and pops are
replicated offers insight into the neutrality
of an arm, as it does the entire LP playback
system. The Silver added no high frequency
emphasis to them, nor did it add any
extraneous amplitude, indicating that the arm
was not being thrown into resonance by groove
imperfections.
I got excellent results with the three
turntables I used. The OL arms have always
been excellent matches with Linns, which tend
to be very fussy about arm matching. While the
difference between the Aurora Gold and my old
DIY Origin Live Standard Kit was obvious, and
while I wouldn’t consider an Aurora
Gold/Silver MKII to be a price-incongruent
mismatch, it was with that table, running The
Cartridge Man MusicMaker Classic into the
ultra-revealing Sound Lab Dynastats that the
limits of the Silver’s resolution were made
obvious. The Silver MKII couldn’t match the
Origin Live Conqueror arm (also in MKII
incarnation, the ‘MKI’ being extremely
short-lived) in terms of ultimate resolution,
transparency, speed, timbral accuracy, sound
stage and instrumental focus, and the finest
nuances of musical expressiveness. The $1750
MusicMaker Classic’s exceptional ability to
recreate the ambience of the recording hall
and to portray the sound of the instruments
emerging from and decaying into that ambience
was incompletely rendered. Hence my judgment
that the Silver could reveal only 90% 0f the
Classic’s potential. It was also obvious that
the Conqueror was superior in tracking the
transient envelope of notes across the entire
bandwidth, the Silver sounding slower in
initial response by comparison. Since the
Conqueror is almost four times as expensive as
the Silver MKII, and since Mark Baker’s line
of tonearms rationally offer a marked and
obvious improvement at each step up in the
line, the fact that the Silver MKII doesn’t
match the Conqueror is no surprise. Still, in
the context of that reference system,
maximizing performance without added expense
would indicate that running the next up in the
MKII Origin Live line – the $1495 Encounter
MKII tonearm - on the less expensive Aurora
table would have yielded closer results to the
reference.
By any standard, the new MKII Silver is an
excellent tonearm, offering a level of
performance the other manufacturers’ arms
cannot match at twice and three times the
price. The traditional Origin Live way with
rhythm, drive, dynamics, and full replication
of both the obvious and subtle aspects of
musical communication and expression are in
full evidence. The Silver’s way with moving
coil cartridges is also extremely attractive,
important given the popularity of this type of
cartridge. Its slightly forgiving manner with
LP flaws is also a boon. It is such an obvious
recommendation that it seems pointless to
complicate the issue.
A difficulty I find is placing it
unambiguously in the overall hierarchy and
context of LP playback. Some of this context
concerns its $935 price and whether the
potential buyer considers this a substantial
investment or a budget component, in other
words, whether the purchaser considers a
purchase in this price category a final
destination or a step on the way. For, as
excellent as the Silver MKII arm is, the
models higher up in the Origin Live are even
better. Obviously if one’s budget limit is
$1000 for an arm, the choice is obvious: Buy
the Silver MKII. But say that potential user
also has $1500 earmarked for a phono
cartridge. To my mind, music would be better
served by allocating more of that budget
towards the arm – buying the $1495 Encounter
MKII, and purchasing a $1000 or $500
cartridge. Still another reasonable option
would be to jump to the $2395 Illustrious MKII
and to buy a true budget cartridge like the
$180 Denon DL160. Add a turntable and/or phono
stage into the budgeting equation and similar
considerations enter. Obviously, all of these
considerations are part of overall system
building and are not unique to the Silver MKII.
Whether one’s system can reveal the limits of
the Silver MKII and also the jumps in
performance as one ascends the Origin Live
tonearm hierarchy is the central question. So
some care in system matching is crucial in
maximizing performance for dollar.
Fortunately, Mark Baker has always been
truthful and candid about the relative
performance of his products, so some
pre-purchase inquiry should resolve most
system optimization questions.
With the new Silver and the Conqueror tonearm
as indicators of the jump in performance of
Origin Live’s MK II incarnation, Mark Baker
position in the avant-garde of current tonearm
and turntable design increases even further.
Indeed, he is so far ahead of the pack that he
looks about to lap them. Mark Baker is still
The Man - a true master of tonearm and
turntable design and engineering - and his
products are first choice for those looking
for ultra musical LP performance. The Silver
MK II offers increased neutrality and
refinement to the already superb musical
capabilities of the old Silver 250 and MK I
Silver arms without any increase in cost. This
is a benchmark arm.
Paul Szabady
____________________
Specifications:
Statically-balanced, fixed bearing tonearm
with non-detachable headshell.
Price: - $935.
Address:
Origin Live
Unit 5 362B Spring Road
Sholing, Southampton
UK SO19 2PB
tel/fax: +44(0)2380 578877
E-mail:
originlive@originlive.com
Website:
http://originlive.com

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