| Stealth
"Bullet-Proof"
Microphone
Cables |
| A
Pro's
Point Of
View |
| Jim
Merod |
| 6
February
2002 |
Specifications
Address:
Interlink
House, Inc.
17528 Bowie
Mill Rd.,
Derwood, MD
20855 U.S.A
Telephone
(voice):
240.631.8002
or
800.579.4046
Fax:
240.631.8859
Web: www.stealthcables.com
Email: sales@stealthcables.com
Microphone
cables are the
least
appreciated
part of the
audio chain.
For many
years, several
brands have
dominated the
microphone
cable market.
Unlike the
universe of
high-end audio
reproduction,
where many
(too many,
perhaps) cable
manufacturers
vie for
attention, the
world of
recording
engineers is
defined by a
few standard
brands of mic
cables. That
circumstance
may be in the
process of
changing. If
so, cable
designer
Serguei
Timachev at
Stealth Cables
is one of the
forward-looking
people who is
pushing for
such change.
I
have used
virtually
every
microphone
cable I can
find: Canare,
Mogami,
Belden, Clark,
Radio Shack,
Guitar Center
Off-the-Rack
Specials,
Kimber,
AudioQuest,
Wire World,
van den Hul,
Acoustic Zen,
Lunara, Depth
Charge,
Bombast . . .
you get the
point. That
collection
includes a
wonderful 25'
pair of Magnan
IIIi cables,
custom made by
that
redoubtable
cable master,
Dave Magnan.
They have been
supplemented,
too, by
unearthly
cable
concoctions
crafted by
various
engineering
colleagues
intrigued by
the
opportunity to
check their
cablework at
the expense of
yours truly .
. . laboring
in the outback
of stage left
or stage right
positions
creating live
recordings.
I
list the good
and not so
good (the
spectacular,
the bizarre,
and banal) mic
cables that I
have used
because the
world of mic
cables is
still an
undiscovered
"musical
territory."
I invent that
phrase to
emphasize the
simple but
apparently
controversial
fact that mic
cables DO IN
TRUTH
"create"
music - - in
any number of
positive and
negative ways.
Mic cables are
not a neutral,
invisible,
inaudible part
of the
recording
chain. They
are at the
absolute heart
of the
recording
venture. You
cannot escape
their central
importance if
you are a
recording
engineer. This
simple truth
thereby
explains my
dedicated
interest in
enhanced mic
cable designs
and outcomes.
Stealth's
"bullet
proof"
mic cables are
among those
that have
achieved such
enhancement.
I
cannot attest
to the
internal
construction
of these
remarkable
anti-gravity
devices . . .
but they are
powerful
"get-off-the-ground
and
boogie"
wires. They
levitate. They
make the
initial mic
feed you
capture on a
live recording
wake up and
soar to the
sky - - as
music wants to
do when it is
played and
captured
correctly.
If
I sound
enthusiastic
about Sergeui
Timachev's mic
cables it is
because, in
fact, I am
excited about
their pristine
clarity, utter
transparency,
and
just-plain-musical
attributes.
Mic cables
come in all
sizes and
varieties.
Many engineers
have told me
over the years
that, when you
"measure"
mic cables,
you find they
are all the
same unless
there is a
broken wire or
frayed, bent,
beat up and
mangled
deformation in
the cable.
The
world of mic
cables may be
more complex
than many have
thought.
Signal
"flatness"
can be
measured. The
good old
square wave
test proves
that this
Edsel mic
cable is no
different than
that Rolls
Royce cable.
They are
measurably
identical. So
much for
measuring
instruments
and their
numerical
delicacy. I
trust another
instrument --
my ears. What
else does a
recording
engineer have
to trust if
not well
chosen,
well-set up
equipment, and
one's own
hearing?
I
have spoken
recently to a
veteran studio
recording
engineer back
East. He will
remain
anonymous
since he
swears by the
orthodox logic
that affirms
that wire is
wire; mic
cables are all
alike.
This
very astute
and longtime
masterful
recording
veteran avers
that he was
flat out
astounded not
long ago after
I had urged
him to swap
out a single
short run of
cable at the
very center of
his studio set
up. He placed
a two-meter
pair of
Acoustic Zen
"Silver
Reference"
cables at an
important crux
of his mixing
set up. The
result -- in
recording, in
mastering, and
in monitoring
his
mixes-on-the-fly
-- surprised
him. In fact,
he said that
the result
"flabbergasted"
him. A single
relatively
short run of
cable (at the
gathering
point of his
entire mixing
console)
heightened the
clarity and
vividness of
the whole
ensemble. He
could not
believe his
ears - - and
yet the
evidence
stared at him,
second by
second, day
after day,
directly in
the ears.
Hearing
is the
evidence one
ought to
trust. This
savvy
recording
veteran is not
a convert to
cable
upgrades.
Nonetheless,
he will not, I
am told,
remove the
Acoustic Zen
cables from
their
new-found home
in his work
station.
On
another hand,
Denny Purcell,
the Grammy
Award-winning
mastering
engineer at
Georgetown
Masters, in
Nashville, is
a huge fan of
good cables.
But then,
Denny Purcell
is one of the
music-making
engineers who
long ago
discovered the
virtues of
getting all
cables in the
sonic chain to
the point of
greatest
resolution.
One wonders
sometimes, why
Maestro
Purcell hears
such low level
and subtle
differences
and others do
not. Is it
that Purcell
learned that
the additive
results -- the
incremental
addition of
low level
resolution-enhancement
that
multiplies
dozens of
times with the
assemblage of
each cable
feed to the
whole mix --
are essential
parts of the
"magic"
that a
superior
mastering
engineer can
count upon if
he is to work
his sonic
magic in the
first place?
It
may be that
the standard
orthodoxy
still
insulating the
recording
proletariat
from mic cable
rebellion
serves its
purpose
perfectly. It
may be that,
like any
dogma, this
one
perpetuates
the status quo
. . . the
better to keep
hard working
recording guys
from pursuing
yet another
potential will
o' the wisp.
Many tricks
and tweaks,
and even
"standard"
practices that
are dispensed
as crucial
items in the
recording
engineer's
daily
workaholic
grab bag, are
bugaboos. One
must discover
the tricks
that work on
one's own. No
"book of
recording
rules"
can ever cover
the infinite
contingencies
that confront
an engineer
working in the
field or up
against time
constraint
pressures
commonly
encountered in
the studio.
When it hits
the fan, you
need to have
been there
already,
having solved
this sort of
dilemma
previously. Or
you'll need
luck or
instantaneous
creative
brilliance.
The
bottom line is
this: improved
mic cables
mean improved
sound capture.
Stealth cables
are clearly
dedicated to
that goal. Dr.
Timachev at
Stealth has
not dubbed his
custom-made
mic cable
creations
"bullet-proof";
I have. These
cables are
strong. They
are impervious
to the sort of
routine abuse
that mic
cables receive
on stage as
performances
are underway.
The Stealth
cables are not
rigid (such as
the wonderful
Silverline
power cords),
but they are
solidly
insulated by
metal-like
sheathing that
gives them
protection
from
enthusiastic
musicians
stomping and
strolling and
clattering all
across the
work area
(read
"stage")
where their
music is in
excited
motion.
None
of that
protection
would be of
any use or
interest if
the signals
the Stealth
cables
conveyed to
the recording
console were
not special.
The Stealth
mic cables do
their job in
spades. You
hear more and
better from
the point of
reception. The
music thrown
at your board
by the mic of
your choice
swoops through
these cables
with grace and
clarity. They
are
"musical."
What more can
a music lover
or a recording
engineer ask
for?
I
regard the
Stealth mic
cables to be,
among the
literally
dozens I have
used and among
the thousands
of feet of mic
cables that I
have been
"exposed
to",
perhaps the
most
extraordinary
and the most
musical I've
yet tried. At
the very
least, they
are among the
small group of
elite cables.
They are
beautifully
made. They
look good and
sound even
better. They
are a
recording
"tool"
to be sought
out by any
serious and
creative sound
engineer.
The
secret
ingredients in
these cables
are extremely
thin strands
of silver
wire. Stealth
configures the
braid in such
a way that
skin effect
cannot destroy
the mic feed.
I find no
blurring or
smudging of
any kind at
the point of
signal
reception.
Instead, one
hears a very
fast, clean
feed that
translates
precisely as
you want it to
on your
console.
If
you are a
minimalist
recording
engineer, if
you believe in
the least
amount of
equalized
alteration at
the point of
signal
reception --
preferring,
instead, to
tailor sound
by the choice
of microphones
and the choice
of mic
placement --
these mic
cables will
allow your
"minimalist
creativity"
all the room
you will need
to work.
At
the moment, I
am not at all
certain if
Stealth is
producing
large
production
runs of their
boffo mic
cords for the
market. If
they're not,
they should.
Let's
celebrate
superior mic
cables since
they celebrate
music. The
musical
enhancement
that superior
mic cables
provide --
such as those
from Magnan,
Kimber,
Acoustic Zen,
and Wire World
-- benefits
everyone.
Among those
very high-end
performers,
Stealth has a
world-class
product that
deserves wide
professional
acknowledgement.
Stealth mic
cables have
earned my
respect.

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