| Acoustic
Zen’s
"MC-Squared"
Digital
Cables |
| A
Pro’s
Point of
View |
| Jim
Merod |
| 21
December
2000 |

Specifications
Zero
Crystal"
silver 110-ohm
digital cable
One-meter RCA:
$298
One-meter XLR:
$328
Each
additional
meter: $200
ACOUSTIC ZEN
TECHNOLOGIES
800 Los
Vallecitos
Blvd. Suite P
San Marcos,
CA. 92069\
Telephone
760/471-4899
(fax)
760-510-9188
Web: http://www.AcousticZen.com
"The
very best digital
cables get out of
the way and let
music emerge on
its own terms. The
"MC-Squared"
cable does that in
spades but with a
ne plus ultra
quality of
indescribable
rightness and
exquisite aural
intimacy . . . at
a dirt-cheap price
point."
Recently
I was given an
assignment by a
remarkable and
gifted musician who
wanted me to
transfer out of
print LPs of his
music to compact
disc. The exercise
is not particularly
onerous. It does,
however, demand a
certain degree of
care in preserving
as far as possible
those hard-to-define
but wholly
discernible
"analog
quality" that
superior vinyl
recordings deliver.
I was, in short,
asked to minimize
any pops and hisses
that the vinyl
grooves may hold
while, in the other
sonic direction,
maximizing analog
"warmth"
and musical
fluidity.
I
like such
assignments. One can
merely
"transfer"
the LPs to discs and
let it go at that.
Alternatively, one
can set up a sonic
transfer chain that,
on one pass or
several, minimizes
vinyl grunge while
preserving vinyl
beauty. For this
particular
assignment – two
full LPs transferred
(if possible) to one
compact disc – I
chose an initial
sound path that led
from a Linn LP-12
table, using a Grado
"Sonata"
cartridge. I
employed Acoustic
Zen’s "Silver
Reference"
interconnects direct
to a Crane Song
24-bit HEDD
{Harmonically
Enhanced Digital
Device}, whereupon
the analog flow was
converted to digital
chunks and sent to a
Marantz CDR 615 for
burning music onto
plastic.
The
Acoustic Zen
"MC-Squared"
digital cable was
the purveyor of
final musical
delivery. Without a
hitch, all went as I
imagined it would. I
used the initial
digital transfer to
scope out how pops,
hisses and other
vinyl irritations
could be eq’d into
oblivion or, at
least, increased
silence.
On
the second transfer
to create gentle
upper end sonic
shaping, I used one
Acoustic Zen
"MC-Squared"
cable between my
modified McCormack
digital transport
and a Z-Systems
rdp-1 (Glenn
Zelniker’s magic
machine that stormed
our digital world to
great effect not too
long ago). I used a
second
"MC-Squared"
cable between the
rdp-1 and the
Marantz CD
duplicator.
I
have already
discussed my
admiration for the
rdp-1. Suffice it to
say that this little
monster box sits up
and sings if you
give it a chance to
do its work. If you
compare the rdp-1 to
a Manley
"Massive
Passive" box,
you will find how
utterly different
the worlds of eq
calibration and
adjustment can be.
While the rdp-1 is
unobtrusive in every
sense of the term,
the Manley imparts a
gorgeous (undistracting)
golden hue to sound
that passes through
its circuitry. Or,
at least, the Manley’s
tube circuitry
allows such golden
sonic warmth to
appear on your eq’s
masters. Note: this
warm signature is
not an intrusion. It
is very much like
the view of an
Italian piazza near
sunset -- a subtle
golden light that
caresses the scene
with understated but
dramatic
illumination.
Z-Systems’s
rdp-1 demurs. It
refuses to add
golden light or any
light at all except
the glow, sheen or
shimmer of what a
sonic signal
delivers upon entry.
You can alter the
sound spectrum of
any recording by a
deft use of the
rdp-1, but you’ll
never find that you’ve
enhanced or altered
it with chiaroscuro
light.
I
love both machines.
They are made for
different sonic
purposes. For the
task of transferring
an already beautiful
(tube-based) vinyl
recording, the rdp-1
was the way to go.
But there is a
caveat that
structures your use
of the rdp-1. It
will reveal,
perfectly, any
signal shaping
inherent to the
digital cable that
sends it musical
information. Choice
of digital cable is
extremely important,
therefore.
After
I had set up my
second transfer, so
that hisses and pops
might be lessened, I
was pleased. While
all the vinyl grunge
that one might
ideally want to
disappear was not
eliminated, I heard
(nonetheless) a vast
improvement in the
original LP sound.
The rdp-1 did
exactly what I asked
it to do. Short of
running the sound
through a Cedar
declicker, or some
such
state-of-the-art
vinyl vacuum
cleaner, the sound I
heard coming from
the rdp-1 was
remarkable: warm,
coherent, and
precisely aligned
musically with the
original LP copies
that stood behind
its improved sonic
reality.
"I
am still a fan of
Nordost’s cable
work. They have
set a certain
standard for
musicality over
the last few
years. I have a
difficult time
dismissing these
fine wires merely
because I find
here, with the
"MC-Squared,"
a digital cable
that is more
musical."
After
the transfers were
complete -- as an
exercise in sonic
"what
if?" -- I
decided to swap the
"MC-Squared"
input cable. I tried
eight different
digital cables:
Nordost "Moonglow,"
Kimber "KCAG,"
XLO, Wire World,
Harmonic Tech,
Apogee, and Wonder
Link. In each case,
the music shifted
its basic sonic
frame. With the XLO,
the soundstage
narrowed. With the
Moonglow, a greater
heft in the lower
mid-band was added
and a slight
thinning in the
upper sonic region
appeared. The Wonder
Link came close to
equaling the
"MC-Squared,"
but it was slightly
veiled by
comparison, a very
subtle difference,
in fact, since the
tonal and dynamic
values of the Wonder
Link are similar to
the Acoustic Zen
cable. Neither
the Harmonic Tech
[Robert Lee’s
earlier digital
design] nor the
Apogee cables (the
Apogee is a
remarkable value, by
any standard) came
close to the sonic
glory of the
"MC-Squared"
wire.
Just
for added
information and
sustained
inspection, I made a
test disc using each
different digital
cable with the same
piece of music. I
wanted to have more
than a momentary
audition of these
cables. The disc let
me hear, repeatedly,
what I heard
immediately as I
switched and swapped
digital cables.
I
am still a fan of
Nordost’s cable
work. They have set
a certain standard
for musicality over
the last few years.
I have a difficult
time dismissing
these fine wires
merely because I
find here, with the
"MC-Squared,"
a digital cable that
is more musical. The
Acoustic Zen wire,
in ways that are
very clear to
discern, goes beyond
not only the
excellent Nordost
wire but beyond
other high-end
digital cables, as
well. The
distinctions that I
hear (directly and
via the comparison
test disc) among
these nine digital
cables are not all
that subtle. One
hears significantly
greater soundstage
height, depth and
width with the
"MC-Squared."
One also hears more
inner detail,
especially the
subtle decay of long
transient edges as
they decrease and
the wispy
evaporation of
ambient decay
reverberations. One
hears a much greater
sense of the
acoustic space where
live music has been
recorded when the
Acoustic Zen cable
goes into the sound
chain. Since my work
is to record live
"in
performance"
music, such
information is
extremely important
to me.
A
word here about
analog to digital
conversion. As a
test of the
resolution that is
possible with 24-bit
digital masters, I
transferred a recent
master tape that
arrived for final
mastering work. The
chain began with a
Tascam 45-HR that
fed the master to
the HEDD 24-bit A/D
& D/A. That was
then sent to the
Marantz. In doing
this, I employed two
sonic
"routes."
First, I transferred
the 24-bit
information via the
TASCAM’s internal
D/A. Second, I
transferred the same
information directly
from the balanced
digital
"out" of
the Tascam … both
transfers going
through the HEDD.
With
the first route,
using the TASCAM’s
internal D/A, the
HEDD converted the
analog signal back
to a digital feed.
Of course, the HEDD’s
circuitry is not
perfectly inaudible,
even if there is
only a very (very)
slight veiling that
appears when this
(more circuitous)
route is used. In
the second
iteration, the HEDD
stood as a silent
"pass
through" for an
all-digital signal.
Its circuitry again
added more sonic
hurdles to achieve
the end result. But,
again, the HEDD
demonstrated its
clean, clear,
undamaging signal
delivery. I am, in
one word, impressed.
This Crane Song A/D
and D/A box is
special.
The
point of this twin
exercise was to hear
how the TASCAM’s
A/D and the Crane
Song’s D/A (and
A/D) conversions
"shape" a
musical signal. A
subsidiary point was
the chance these
exercises offered to
hear differences
among digital
cables: to discover
sonic degradations
or changes
exacerbated in the
process of
less-than-ideal
signal transfers.
This
double transfer of
identical musical
information allowed
a close
"look"
into the ways that
individual digital
cables alter, or
impose their sonic
signatures upon,
transferred musical
material. A few
years back, I ran a
lengthy, somewhat
difficult and
cumbersome series of
comparative cable
tests (in that
instance, microphone
cables) for a
top-end cable
manufacturer.
Differences then, as
now, were uniquely
revealing of each
wire’s way of
delivering – and
tailoring -- low
level musical sound.
I
am sure that such
laborious, somewhat
addle-brained
exercises with
cables are the work
of a kid who never
grew up. Beyond the
enjoyment of
affirming less than
systematic
impressions of
equipment (such as
the wonderful Crane
Song HEDD), these
exercises reveal how
additive and
indisputable are the
imposition of
individual cable
identities. The
bottom line is this:
when supplemental
cable lengths are
included in the
(intentionally
oblique) transfer of
music from original
master to copy, the
innate sonic
signature of
each cable is
magnified.
The
end result of this
daylong fiddling
with cables
confirmed previous
auditions. Nordost
wire is still (of
course) a very good
wire. One’s work
or listening is not
at much loss when it
sits in the signal
path. The Wonder
Link digital cable,
not so easy to find,
it seems, is a
remarkable digital
cable that deserves
the praise it has
received. But the
new Acoustic Zen
"MC-Squared"
digital cable
achieves a level of
performance --
enormous soundstage
replication; musical
beauty by the bushel
loads; timbral
accuracy and
unequaled dynamic
heft and slam –
that makes it stand
out among a strong
group of top-end
digital cables. The
very best digital
cables get out of
the way and let
music emerge on its
own terms. The
"MC-Squared"
cable does that in
spades but with a ne
plus ultra
quality of
indescribable
rightness and
exquisite aural
intimacy . . . at a
dirt-cheap price
point.
One
can afford to have
two or three of
these digital cables
because they are
priced well below
their true value.
They are a genuine
(massive) bargain
among high-end audio
gear. In the near
future, I am going
to throw more
challenges at Robert
Lee’s
"MC-Squared"
cable.
I
have the sense that
I have not yet
gotten to the bottom
of this remarkable
digital cable’s
full musical truth.
I think that’s the
case because, when I
put an
"MC-Squared"
cable in the
mastering or
auditioning sound
chain, a seductive,
arresting,
essentially
emotional but (also)
vividly detailed
experience of
"being there
with the music"
sweeps my monitoring
room up into it.
This is a strange
thing to say about a
mere cable -- a
digital cable, at
that. But the
illusion one gets
when the
"MC-Squared"
wire goes into the
musical equation is
that something
undefinable and
wholly glorious
happens to the world
around you. It is as
if your listening
room is transported
to another place: to
the place where the
music you are
hearing was made.
I
am slightly
uncomfortable saying
such things as this
because someone may
think I have been
sniffing glue.
Perhaps the after
dinner apple pie was
baked with
hallucinogenic
raisins. None of
those. Only music
that I’ve
recorded, a superior
playback system, and
Acoustic Zen’s
very welcome
addition to the
sound of REAL music:
live music in REAL
SPACE . . . the
space where I
recorded the music
long ago or, more
memorable yet, last
week. This illusion
of being taken back
to places where I
recorded (and, live,
first heard) such
great music is
spooky but awesome
and wholly
gratifying as well.
With the
"MC-Squared"
digital cable,
Robert Lee’s magic
touch is still at
work: unimaginable
and inspiring.

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