| The
EAR 834P Phono
Preamplifier |
|
|
|
Paul Szabady |
|
2 December
2002 |
Specifications
Moving
magnet and moving coil
tube phono preamplifier
12 AX7 (ECC 83) tubes
MC amplification by
transformer
Dimensions: 5" W × 4" H
× 9" D
Price: $995 (Black).
Price: $1295 (Chrome).
Address:
US Distributor:
EAR USA
Dan Meinwald
Sound Advice
1087 E. Ridgewood Street
Long Beach, CA
90807 USA
Telephone: 001 562 422
4747
Fax: 001 562 6577
Email:
info@ear-usa.com
Website:
www.ear-usa.com/index.html
and
www.ear-yoshino.com/
One of the major
pitfalls of journalism
is that because of its
pre-occupation with the
news of the day, it
tends to lose
perspective and context.
Mainstream audio
journalism is prey to
the same foible, with
Component of the Month
Syndrome highly
dominant. Probably the
most glaring example is
Stereophile's List of
Recommended Components,
where an older piece on
the list is bumped
simply because of the
time elapsed since it
was reviewed.
Tim de Paravicini's
designs have the
reputation of
withstanding the tests
of time. While the EAR
834P has been available
for a few years now, it
bears listening to with
News of the Day
freshness and currency.
It's one of those "Yes!"
products - where you
know immediately that
something right and good
is happening.
The 834P is a classic
rectangular black box
roughly the size of a
carton of English
International size
cigarettes, featuring
only an on/off switch on
its stately front panel.
The back includes two
sets of RCA jacks along
with a push-button to
select either moving
magnet or moving coil
and a detachable AC
cord. The EAR rests on 4
soft feet. A tube design
utilizing 12AX7 tubes,
the EAR uses
transformers for the
additional gain
necessary to preamplify
moving coil cartridges.
A "Signature" version is
available that will
cosmetically match EAR's
preamplifiers and
amplifiers; the
circuitry of the 834P is
also available within a
full-featured preamp,
the 864.
Although I own 2 sets of
tube electronics (3
pieces of which are
vintage items) in
addition to my various
solid state components,
I don't attribute
musical excellence
purely to a type of
amplifying device: it's
what you do with tubes
or transistors that
matters. I've
experienced intense
musical pleasure from
both tubes and solid
state, so have no
particular axe to grind.
In particular, I don't
find the old stereotypes
- soft and mellow tubes
versus harsh and bright
solid state - to be
dogmatically applicable
to any well-designed
component. Excellent
tube designs do,
however, tend to produce
very believable timbres
with acoustic
instruments and excel in
painting tonal colors,
particularly important
in classical music where
a live reference is
available for
comparison.
The Garrott Brothers
Optim FGS moving magnet
cartridge has become my
reference for affordable
musical communication.
Since Garrott uses tube
phono amplification in
their
listening/development
tests, I first ran the
EAR 834P in an all-tube
system. The musical
results of this set-up
were truly engrossing
and riveting: dynamics,
drive, rhythm and
musical phrasing/accents
were simply exemplary.
The EAR was exceptional
in getting the heart of
music right. I
immediately stopped
listening to my staple
reference
critical-listening LPs,
and began randomly
listening to various LPs
purely for the musical
pleasure: the entire
Procol Harum catalogue,
then The Band's, then
the Buffalo
Springfield/Neil
Young/Steve Stills
nexus, the Doors, and
finishing with Jim
Hendrix. The EAR proved
superb at recreating the
drive, emotional
intensity, and the
literally electrical
intensity of this music.
Jimi Hendrix understood
perhaps more clearly
than anyone that music
is a physical power and
the EAR superbly
reproduced that tangible
electric cosmic power
that Hendrix so
intensely unleashed.
A listening journey
through 50's/60's small
combo jazz proved
equally compelling:
noteworthy was the EAR's
ability to fully
articulate the bass
parts of these
recordings, many of
which (on later
re-issues anyway) seem
to present the bass
player as a weird sort
of background phantom.
Not only was the bass
present as a full
participating member of
the music, but bass
sonorities were rich and
full-bodied, with taut
and excellent transient
control and drive. I was
moved deeply by the
musical expressiveness
of solo instruments -
horns and piano - the
emotion behind the notes
being clearly revealed.
Be it the 'dry martini'
sonority of Paul
Desmond, the studied
cool of Miles Davis, the
gentle 'rain on the
windows' of Bill Evans'
piano or the cosmic
destroyer aspects of
Pharoah Sanders/John
Coltrane in their more
exorcistic moments, I
was getting the heart
and emotion of the
music.
Tim de Paravicini is
perhaps best known for
the tube electronics he
designed for Chesky's
re-issues of the classic
RCA Shaded Dog LPs and
listening to a batch of
these proved an exercise
in natural timbres and a
total immersion into the
music. Smaller scale
music, particularly
string quartets, was
presented with the same
intimacy and
communication that was
so engrossing with jazz.
The pure unalloyed joy
of Mozart's early
Divertimenti was
reproduced with
breathtaking exuberance,
the EAR easily passing
one of my prime
requisites for any
component.
Results with my other
MusicMaster moving
magnet cartridge, the
Rega Exact, were
similarly compelling and
musical enriching and I
was having one of those
pleasant reviewing
experiences where you
know immediately that
the component is
excellent: the question
then becomes just how
excellent it ultimately
is.
I did not play around
with varying AC cords,
or indulge in tube
tweaking, but of
necessity with an
outboard phono stage,
choosing an interconnect
was required. I didn't
find this an
anguish-inducing
experience - the
Clearaudio Sixstream,
van den Hul The First,
and Origin Live
Reference all proved
deeply satisfying -
leading me to believe
that the EAR is not
particularly fussy and
high-strung about
interconnect choice. I
auditioned the EAR
without isolation
devices at first and the
following comments all
refer to the 834P played
'neat.'
Sonically the EAR was
without electronic edge
or glare, with a
non-analytic cast to the
proceedings. It tended
to focus on the entirety
of the music rather than
breaking each recording
down to its component
parts. I find this
ability more musically
satisfying than
components that neglect
the forest for the
trees. Transient control
was very good, with good
tracking of the decay of
notes. Soundstaging and
stereoscopy were
believable and
non-intrusive, though
short of hallucinogenic
intensity. Ultimate
detail and transparency
is short of the very
best, but considering
the EAR's price and its
other sterling musical
virtues, acceptable. I
never found myself
squinting with my ears
or baffled by any aspect
of the musical
proceedings. I found
noise to be a non-issue
also.
Listening to the EAR in
my solid-state system
was slightly less
intense, as parts of its
abilities were lost in
the transition to
transistor
amplification. This is
normal for tube
electronics: their full
flowering normally
requires all-tube
systems to hear to the
fullest. Context plays a
role too. Though I was
unable to audition the
834 in the context of a
full EAR system, I'm
deeply aware that most
of front-rank designer's
products (and Tim di
Paravicini is certainly
one) need to be heard
within their complete
systems to produce the
designer's full intent.
The moving coil section
of the EAR uses
transformers to produce
the additional gain
necessary for their
lower output and Tim de
Paravicini has a
reputation as a master
of moving coil
transformer design.
Running the Audio
Technica AT OC9ML,
Garrott re-tipped Blue
Point Special, and
Talisman Boron revealed
less stirring
performance, due to the
fact that these 4
cartridges are not as
successful music makers
as the 2 moving magnets
I used. My Goldring
Eroica LX, also
re-tipped by Garrott,
however, flowered with
the EAR, as did the
Ortofon Jubilee. The EAR
faithfully revealed the
sonic signature of these
cartridges, and revealed
as much of its own
considerable abilities
in the process, without
forcing its personality
on them. My suspicion,
which I was not able to
verify to any degree of
certainty, was that
moving magnet
performance of the 834P
was perhaps stronger
than that of moving
coil. This was due to
the overwhelmingly
stunning dynamic
performance of the
moving magnet Garrott
Optim FGS, a cartridge
whose dynamic and
musical coherency is
unmatched by any moving
coil cartridge I've
heard, except for
Garrott's $6000 P89.
Those who run moving
magnets exclusively, a
minority among
audiophiles who seem
generally wed to the
moving coil, can opt for
the moving magnet-only
834P, available by
special order for $795.
The EAR clearly revealed
the differences in
tonearms and turntables.
The more traditionally
'audiophile' Clearaudio
Champion Level 2/
Clearaudio Unify
Unipivot arm/ Sigma Wood
moving coil cartridge
front end was stunning
in neutrality,
resolution, and 3-D
stereo effects. Also
highly evident, though,
was this set-up's
intellect-oriented
presentation. My Linn
LP12s, Origin Live
Standard Kit, AR/Merrill
and antique Connoisseur
BD2a turntables were
more in keeping with the
EAR's rhythmic and
dynamic aplomb, musical
lines flowing with the
kind of ease and
believability that one
more normally associates
with live musical
expression.
In standard trim and
set-up, the EAR 834P
rates high musical marks
indeed. The use of
effective isolation
proved transmogrifying -
dispelling any quibbles
about lack of
hallucinogenic imaging
and completely
nullifying my suspicion
that moving magnet
performance was superior
to the EAR's transformer
derived MC
amplification. My
experience with the
state-of-the-art in
isolation products over
the years has led me to
the conclusion that a
component played 'neat'
shows only a fraction of
its true capacities
compared to what it can
produce when removed
from the contaminating
effects of spurious
vibration. The small
size of the EAR
precluded optimum usage
with some of the devices
I had available. The new
Stillpoints, (at $279
for a set of 3, a joint
effort from Paul Wakeen,
ex-Aurios and Larry
Jacoby and Deb Folz,
both ex-Wadia) vaulted
the already excellent
performance of the 834P
into an altogether
different realm.
Stunning and
mind-blowing are
probably the mildest of
adjectives to be used in
describing the 834P when
placed on the
Stillpoints: the sonic
improvements in image
placement and soundstage
transparency, the
superior resolution of
low level information,
the extension of
bandwidth and flow of
dynamic gradations were
matched by an equally
exalted improvement in
the already heady and
deeply moving
communicative powers of
the 834P. Lyric
intelligibility, as just
one example, went from
the very good to one of
the very best when the
EAR was placed on the
Stillpoints. The EAR's
performance with moving
coil was improved to the
point where my mild
suspicions as to its
ultimate capacities were
vanquished.
The highest of
recommendations for the
EAR 834P then,
especially when mounted
on the Stillpoints. Old
news is good news
indeed.

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