| THE MAGNIFICENT C.E.C. TL-51XZ
BELT DRIVE CD PLAYER |
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October 2005 |

“I attach more importance to the
purity of brushstroke – I try to give it
maximum purity and intensity. It is the
passion for beautiful colors which makes us
paint the way we do and not the love of “dots”
as foolish people say.” - Paul Signac
(Impressionist Painter, 1863-1935)
In the mid-1800’s, a new school of painting
emerged out of the French Impressionist
movement which rejected the technique of
applying thick broad brush stokes of mixed
color to a canvas. The artists in this new
movement, known today as “Pointillists,”
utilized the painstaking method of applying
tiny “points” of pure color to a canvas
relying upon the observer’s eye to mix the
colors. One of my favorite masterpieces of
Pointillism, created by the artist Camille
Pissarro, hangs in the Fogg Art Museum here in
Cambridge, MA., and is entitled “Mardi-Gras on
the Boulevards” (1897). [This is not the
Mardi-Gras of New Orleans, but of a scene of
Mardi-Gras as celebrated on the boulevards of
France in the 1800’s. Viewing this Mardi-Gras
scene, it still gives pause to the recent
devastation in New Orleans and the death and
displacement of thousands, particularly the
poor who couldn’t escape the floods.
Pissarro’s vision only reaffirms the role of
art as a healing force in such times as ours.]
One of the amazing things about Pissarro’s
creative vision is that if you stand very
close to this canvas, all you see are tiny
points of color and wisps of short
brushstrokes. Yet, once you view it from a
proper viewing distance, all of those tiny
points of color and texture become faces in
the crowd lining the street, horses with
musculature with riders appointed in bright
costumes, as well as magnificent colorful
paper streamers that fall from the skies
decorating this parade of animals and
humanity. The natural harmony of color,
texture, line and composition is
extraordinarily achieved in this masterpiece
of Pointillism technique.
If we can make an analogy from the visual arts
to the world of audio, I would submit that the
magnificent achievement of the C.E.C. TL-51XZ
CD player is that it achieves the pinnacle of
the Pointillist’s aesthetic goal in music
reproduction: reproduce from exquisite points
of color, notes and texture, a harmonious,
natural and whole sonic presentation which
results in transporting the listener closer to
an understanding and sheer pleasure of a
recording and its artists’ musical intentions.
The TL-51XZ accomplishes this with such a
sense of ease and natural flow to the music
that it is very much like viewing a great work
of art such as the Pissarro, where one never
tires of both dissecting the inner detail of
the art form while also simply luxuriating in
its full presentation and breadth of meaning.
Analog
Roots
Given
its sheer musicality and ease of expression,
it comes as no surprise that the design of the
TL-51XZ is derived from research and design of
analog turntables and high precision phono
motors, which C.E.C. has been designing and
manufacturing since the company’s founding in
Tokyo in 1954. The TL-51XZ is a fully
integrated player, incorporating a drive unit
and a 24-bit 356kHz DAC. (C.E.C. also offers
this model as a transport only model, called
the TL-51X). The drive unit utilizes a low
torque motor that drives a heavy ceramic
stabilizer via a precision belt and a high
precision turntable shaft. According to C.E.C.,
the stabilizer not only secures the CD but
also increases its inertia and provides
excellent vibration absorption and a strong
flywheel effect. C.E.C. claims that such a
belt drive design is free from acoustic
feedback, has a higher signal-to-noise ratio
and virtually eliminates jitter. The heavy
drive mechanism floats on a dual suspension
system optimized for high noise absorption
that isolates the drive and laser motors
electronically and magnetically from the laser
pickup. The TL-51XZ is a top-loading player,
with a sliding door and a heavy gauge puck for
securing the disc. Its build construction is
beyond reproach, with a modern, low slung and
sleek aluminum design reminiscent of my old
favorite affordable player, the Creek CD Model
53.

Around back, the unit contains all of
the modern digital output interfaces (AES/EBU);
TOSLINK; Coaxial; Super-Link) as well as a set
of balanced and RCA outputs and power
connector for a detachable power chord. All
functions on the front of the unit and its
remote are laid out ergonomically with the
only complaint being that the display is a bit
tough to read from a distance.
I first became aware of C.E.C. at HES 2005 in
the Lamm Room, where Lamm electronics were
partnered with a C.E.C. front end. After
listening to the glorious music making in this
Room, I cornered Vladimir Lamm (sitting near
his treasured LP collection of course) and his
advice lead me to contact Pascal Ravach of
Mutine Inc. (the distributor of C.E.C. and
other audio products in Canada and the USA),
and his colleague, Bruce Kennett, of former
Listener magazine reviewer fame. Bruce invited
me up to his serene barn house near Conway,
NH. where he has constructed a dedicated
listening room for invited guests to audition Mutine product lines while listening to their
favorite music. After spending an afternoon
with Pascal and Bruce spinning CD’s on the
TL-51XZ (partnered with Audiomat electronics,
Actinote cabling, Equation loudspeakers and of
course, tasty NH cider), I couldn’t see myself
leaving without arranging for more time with
the TL-51XZ. I reluctantly bid adieu to Pascal
and Bruce, two of the kindest and devoted
audiophiles you will find on the planet, and
headed home to await the TL-51XZ’s arrival.
My Toes
Just Touched The Water…
The first thing I did when the TL-51XZ arrived
was to substitute it for my long term
reference, the Electrocompaniet EMC-1 player,
keeping all other components and wire in place
as before. (The TL-51XZ unit I received was
the same unit that I heard in Bruce’s
dedicated listening space, so break in time
cannot be accurately reported in this review.
Check Mutine Audio’s website for more
information on break in time suggestions).
With the TL-51XZ in place, I was immediately
immersed in a totally new musical event with
my favorite recordings, transported by the
TL-51XZ’s uncanny sense of naturalness, ease
and musical flow. The TL-51XZ captured the
Pointillist perspective perfectly: the
smallest of musical detail yet also the grand
strokes of overall musical composition and
message.
To best illustrate this virtue of the TL-51XZ,
I would urge readers to grab Nora Jones’ disc,
Feels Like Home [Blue Note 7243] and listen to
the first cut, “Sunrise.” I have always loved
Jones’ deep and breathy delivery on this disc,
but never until the TL-51XZ was in place did I
appreciate the musical nuances of her backing
band’s creative accompaniment. With my
Electrocompaniet player, I had heard “Sunrise”
many times, not quite sure what the soft
banging wooden sound was in the background of
this piece. Substituting the TL-51XZ, there
was a new world revealed to me of knuckles
being hit on the wood of acoustic bass and
drum, with the released air from hollow
cavities clearly revealed. What a creative
percussive background this was, revealed for
the first time so clearly and naturally! I
also heard for the first time on “Sunrise” the
sparkling of an acoustic guitar, the shimmer
of a banjo’s light high treble caress near its
end - ah, the colors of the band’s palette
were finally revealed! Turning to my favorite
cut on this same disc, “Toes,” the TL-51XZ
presented a deep, wide river of a soundstage,
filled with the colors of brushed cymbals,
gentle breezes of acoustic strings in their
full natural sense of timing, and the moving
well of Jones’ delivery with every one of her
sibilants natural, easy and light as air.
Juxtaposed to Jones’ disc is Ani DiFranco’s
Evolve, a catharsis of a different kind. The
title track is one emotional ride, as DiFranco
pounds out acoustic guitar and bass lines with
frenetic pace, raging up and down her great
vocal register. With the TL-51XZ, I literally
heard this cut for the first time, so fresh
and alive it was. When DiFranco sings: “I am
finally waking UP” – the “P” was delivered
with such texture and natural force that I
almost feel out of my chair, literally
watching as DiFranco drew her mouth around
this word, formed her lips around it and dealt
it in the direction of her close positioned
mike. The TL-51XZ even exposed the naturalness
of DiFranco’s miscues when she rapidly scraps
her guitar strings without hitting them clear
and clean – adding to the natural texture of
her frenetic, searing delivery.
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