| Magnan's
"Silver
Bronze"
Cable |
| A
Pro’s
Point of
View |
| Jim
Merod |
| 9
March
2001 |
Specifications
Silver
Bronze
Interconnects:
Micro-thin
silver and
bronze ribbons
with
Teflon-air
dielectric
4’
unbalanced
RCA: $1,000
4’ balanced
XLR: $1,200
Address:
Magnan Audio
Cables
355 N. Lantana
#576
Camarillo CA
93010-6038
Telephone:
805.484.9544
Fax:
805.484.9544
E-mail: info@magnan.com
Web: www.magnan.com
Dave
Magnan has
been making
extraordinary
cables for a
long time,
sometimes
laboring in
semi-obscurity,
a condition
that superior
craftsmen and
great artists
understand too
well. His
"Signature"
interconnect
has been one
of my
reference
cables for
years and I
have written
about its
unusual glory:
a relaxation
and musical
"rightness"
that are
difficult to
describe but
easy to live
with in a good
sound system.
The Magnan
"Vi"
cable is also
a standard to
live by at a
price point
that is modest
for what it
delivers.
Enter
now the Magnan
"Silver
Bronze"
interconnect,
a sonic
instrument
unlike any
other in the
Magnan lineup,
unlike any
anywhere.
Let
me say
immediately
that Dave
Magnan’s
website posts
information
that may help
many skeptics
who believe
that all
cables are the
same. The site
discusses
somewhat
technical
issues such as
the importance
of reduced
skin effect
for maximum
clarity in
signal
delivery.
Magnan looks
at issues of
ground return
as well, but I
will not
rehearse what
he writes
within easy
reach. The
bottom line
for any audio
product is its
sound. It is
very hard to
describe
sound. We all
know that. The
sound of the
new Magnan
"Silver
Bronze"
is more
difficult to
describe than
most.
Begin
with the fact
that this
cable grows on
you across the
many hours of
its break-in
period. I
heard nothing
onerous or
unusual during
break-in.
However, I did
find myself
increasingly
mesmerized,
even
perplexed, by
the cable as
it continued
its movement
toward and
past
maturation.
The
mesmerizing
quality of the
"Silver
Bronze"
is its wide
sonic
spectrum. I
have seldom
heard any
interconnect
approach this
cable in sheer
width of
frequency
extension. One
is almost
shocked by a
quality that
lead to the
sense of
perplexity I
experienced
over a long
span of time.
The
first album
that I
listened to
with these
cables in the
chain, between
DAC and
pre-amp, is
the classic
Miles Davis
session for
Columbia,
"Milestones,"
newly mastered
in the Sony/
Columbia box
set recently
issued as a
"Miles
and Coltrane"
retrospective.
Perhaps
that choice
was
inadvertently
on target in
dialing in the
ferocious
sonic power
that this
album
delivers.
Columbia’s
late ’50s
engineers used
their famous
tunnel
reverberation
effects on
this material.
One finds a
sharp, quick
sonic attack
married with
medium reverb
decay, the
whole creating
an unusually
fat if
somewhat eerie
effect.
It’s
a sound seems
to have been
created so
that the
"Silver
Bronze"
cable can show
off its
strengths. A
quality
peculiar to
the original
three track
recordings is
the
predominance
of sonic (and
musical) heft,
or weight, in
the upper
mid-range. The
original
"Milestones"
sessions are
not in any way
sonically
neutral.
No recordings
easily fit a
perfect
description of
sonic
neutrality.
But these
"Milestones"
sessions are
truly
eccentric. You
will like or
hate their
sound
immediately.
The music is
extremely
self-confident,
and the sound
has a similar
attitude. No
doubt the
emerging and
increasingly
successful
partnership
between Davis
and Columbia
lent itself to
two things
that appear in
spades here:
powerful and
aggressive
sound values,
and Davis’s
influence on
the
presentation
of his music
in every
aspect of its
marketing. My
point here,
invoking my
initial
experience
with the new
Magnan cables
in the company
of such strong
performances,
is simply
this: I had
never heard
the full
degree of
sonic attack
on this
material as I
did when I
listened with
the
"Silver
Bronze"
cables.
To
say that these
cables have an
"up
front"
quality is
both accurate
and deceiving.
I do not mean
that they are
tilted up or
forward and
bright. They
are not. Nor
do I mean that
these cables
exaggerate
what they
transmit. They
do not. The
special
quality these
cables lend to
reproduced
music is a no
nonsense
get-out-of-the-way
quality that,
in certain
respects, goes
further in the
direction of
sonic
neutrality, or
accuracy, than
any other
cable I know
of. You cannot
as a listener
deny that
these cables
confront you.
You are
confronted
with the full
force and
detail of the
recordings you
send through
them.
That
is a daunting
experience. I
dare say that
many –
probably most
–
audiophiles do
not really
want the whole
hog:
unadulterated
sound without
any editorial
shaping
whatsoever.
Believe me,
once you find
an accurate
but
unforgiving
let-it-all-go-through
interconnect
like the
"Silver
Bronze,"
it will force
you to a
decision. Do
you want to
experience everything
that sits on a
recording? Is
your sound
system up to
the challenge
of reproducing
such dynamics
and
micro-dynamics
without
sounding
bright, edgy,
or any other
discomforting
sonic quality
that a
flat-out, full
delivery of
sonic truth
produces?
To
hear
"Milestones"
(both the
track and the
album as a
whole) with
Magnan’s new
wire is to
hear the
radical force,
that
deliberate
attitude of
evil energy
that Davis and
his
engineering
collaborators
at Columbia
aimed for.
For
me, the result
is appealing
and more. To
hear a session
that I’ve
known for more
than forty
years now
presented,
warts and all,
with all of
its impact and
appeal,
daunting but
glorious, is
stunning. The
"Silver
Bronze"
simply digs
out all of
this
confrontational
music. It gets
out of the way
to let you
hear what
Davis did and
what the
Columbia sound
sculptors
accomplished.
That is a
significant
and
magnificent
achievement.
Let
me add that I
have used
Magnan’s
IIIi as runs
of mic cable.
They have an
ability to
capture low
level
information,
especially at
the bottom of
the sonic
scale, that is
ear-opening.
You will not
easily be
surprised –
if you’ve
already
experienced
Magnan’s
"Signature"
cables – to
find Dave
Magnan, once
more, leading
us all toward
greater daring
in facing the
full-bore
truth of
reproduced
musical sound.
That
is precisely
what I think
has been
achieved here
with the
"Silver
Bronze,"
a
take-no-prisoners
refusal to
back away or
roll off any
dollop of
sound it is
fed. This is a
cable, perhaps
eccentric
(since one is
not easily
prepared to
hear such
force all
across the
spectrum), but
capable, as
few cables
are, of
re-educating a
caring
listener’s
already
well-trained
ears.
I
intend this as
a compliment
from me to
Dave Magnan
and his
"Silver
Bronze"
cables, and
from Dave
Magnan to us.
These
interconnects
bear the
Magnan
pedigree. They
are also a
labor of love,
requiring each
listener who
hears them to
think about
what his sonic
and his
musical values
truly are. And
that, I think,
is a good
thing in a
world that
rounds too
many sonic
corners and
makes the
notion of
musical
confrontation
into a purely
aggressive
event. Magnan’s
"Silver
Bronze"
cables
confront us
intellectually,
emotionally,
and
aesthetically
– where we
live and love.

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