| The
Talon
Khorus |
| A
Subjective
Commentary |
| Stuart
A.
McCreary,
Positive
Feedback
Magazine |
| 5
February
2001 |
"And
now for
something
completely
different…"
(Monty
Python's
Flying Circus)
It
does get a bit
tiresome after
a baker's
dozen or so
loudspeaker
have come and
gone. It's
hard to be
original,
insightful or
the least bit
excited when
you're talking
about the same
old dynamic
drivers in a
wood box.
Maybe it's got
a neat
sculpted
baffle, trick
mid/tweeter
module
isolation, or
the largest
flared ports
you've ever
seen, but is
it really all
that different
in form,
function and
sound from all
the others?
All too often
the answer is
no. Sure, they
all sound a
little
different, but
it's a
continuous
scale with
very fine
increments and
the pendulum
rarely swings
too far.
It's
this
reviewer's
rare pleasure
to have in the
Talon Khorus a
loudspeaker
that really
shakes things
up, gets the
juices flowing
again, and
reacquaints me
with my
passion for
music.
Clement
Perry did an
outstanding
job of
describing the
Khorus's
unique
features and
technical
aspects. That
leaves me with
the fun stuff.
We agreed to
this division
of labors
early in our
Talon journey:
I get "techie"
with the Bel
Canto EVo and
Perry does the
heavy lifting
with the Talon
Khorus. I
think I got
the better
part of the
deal, because
the subjective
side of the
Khorus
experience is
extraordinary
and chock full
of anecdotes,
and the
technical side
is daunting,
to say the
least. Let's
get down to
it, shall we?
The
Stage is Set
(and the
Gauntlet
Thrown)
The
original
claims of
Talon as
presented in
their website
and white
papers are so
outrageous
that you might
think you're
reading from a
Monty Python
script. Ten
times faster,
100 times less
distortion, a
ten inch
woofer that
handles
midrange up to
2.2 kHz,
incredible
power handling
and bass
extension from
just over one
cubic foot of
air space…geesh!
As incredible
as all this
sounds, Talon
has plausible
engineering
explanations
for each
claim, along
with patent
applications.
Me, I'm from
the So-What
School. If it
doesn't sound
better to some
significant
degree, then
it's all just
meaningless
engineering
hoohah.
This
was my mindset
when I
un-crated the
Khoruses and
moved them
into Stu's
Place for a
serious
listen. Perry
had started
his phone
campaign weeks
before and I
could detect
these were not
your ordinary
run-of-the-mill-loudspeakers.
He was excited
by what he was
hearing and
couldn't help
himself. We do
this to each
other often.
It's part of
the ritual and
fun to call up
your audio pal
and let him
know that your
listening room
ceiling just
opened up and
you were
visited by an
archangel.
"OK, OK,
I'll be sure
to sprinkle
the holy water
and burn some
incense,"
I told him
with just a
touch of
smugness in my
voice. I can't
be rolled by
anyone, not
even my Bro'
from the Big
City. I was
not about to
abandon my
critical
nature.
I'd
gotten emails
from several
audiophile
friends
extolling the
virtues of
these
speakers, with
statements
like,
"the best
I've ever
heard"
and
"clearly
superior to
the XYZ's you
love so
dearly."
This kind of
thing has a
negative
effect. Rather
then being
excited to
share their
experience, I
found myself
getting more
cynical and
more willing
to cut against
the grain.
Breaking
in, or
Deflating the
Cynical
Balloon
The
Khorus is not
your average
dynamic-driver
loudspeaker
and this
realization
arrives right
out of the box
in the first
few hours of
play. While
most
loudspeakers
start off by
sounding dry,
thin and
constipated,
the Khorus was
the complete
opposite. It
was
immediately so
full bodied
and over-rich,
that I was
stunned. The
bass was
phenomenal,
the midrange
was a bit
overblown
(particularly
the lower mids)
and the
treble? -- it
sounded rolled
off. No, I
think recessed
is the better
word. It was
there but
distant,
lingering more
toward the
back of the
stage. Now,
except for the
bass, this
wasn't
promising. I
thought the
holy water
might be
needed to
dispel the
audio demons,
rather than to
invite the
heavenly host.
Nevertheless,
there was
something else
I heard that
intrigued me
and gave me
the patience
to weather the
arduous
break-in
process.
Through
that ripe,
warm sound, I
detected a
background
silence that
was uncanny.
I'm not
talking about
silence
between
musical
passages; I'm
talking about
silence
between and
around the
instruments.
The pesky
treble halo,
haze and glare
were absent,
gone, adios,
bye-bye.
This
"haze"
I used to
think inherent
to all
loudspeakers
diffuses the
edges of
images and
fills in the
gaps all
around them,
consequently
decreasing the
focus and
spoiling our
perception of
stage depth.
When that haze
is removed,
the solidity,
precision and
three-dimensionality
of the
soundstage
stand out in
striking
relief. These
over-ripe
Khoruses
removed the
haze like no
other
loudspeaker
I'd heard. It
made such a
strong
impression
that I knew in
the first hour
of listening
that something
extraordinary
was taking
place.
This
was a
déjà-vu
experience.
The Bel Canto
EVo amplifiers
had also
exhibited this
lack of halo
and haze and
in my review
of them, and I
commented
extensively on
this. Perry
called the EVo
the
"Talon
Khorus of
amplifiers."
With the EVo,
I concluded
that its
incredibly low
distortion
gives it this
unique
property. So
what about the
Khorus?
The
air was
starting to
leak from my
cynical
balloon. Could
low distortion
claims of
Talon be true?
Could this
"group
phase"
thing and
unique
compound
driver loading
significantly
lower
distortion
like the EVo's
digital
technology?
Hmmmm.
So
there I was on
my first
evening of
listening with
loudspeakers
that arguably
had the best
bass I'd heard
from something
other than a
dedicated
subwoofer
(much more on
this later), a
quiet, haze
free
soundfield,
but with an
over-ripe,
almost tubby
midrange and a
recessed
treble. Argggh!
How
frustrating! I
was used to
listening past
the break-in
problems, but
I had serious
doubts that
this sound
would improve
over time.
After all,
this was not
how fresh
loudspeakers
are supposed
to sound. If
they got any
riper through
break-in, I
wouldn't be
able to take
it. The
cynical
balloon was
starting to
re-inflate.
Fortunately,
Talon had the
good sense to
say something
about this
break-in
process in the
manual that
came with the
speakers. It
warns that 50%
break-in takes
upwards of 250
hours of play
and you're
still not home
after 500
hours. About
the 500-hour
mark the
manual says, "85%
of break-in:
Midrange
becomes more
expressive,
more
dimensional
towards the
rear. Extreme
highs come
forward from
the rear of
the sound
stage,
creating more
of a spectral
match with the
rest of the
range."
Ah-hah! That's
what I was
looking for!
With a sigh of
relief and
major cynical
deflation, I
knew that my
hearing was
all right and
that there
would probably
be light at
the end of the
break-in
tunnel.
Another
comment in the
manual
intrigued me.
Under the
heading Burn-In
Note, the
manual states,
"In view
of the burn-in
time involved
with the
Khorus
speakers,
Talon has
designed-in
two 'elements'
which minimize
the actual
change in
sound over
time…as time
passes, these
'elements'
will diminish
their overall
effect, in
order for the
system to
maintain a
consistent,
and correct,
tonal
balance."
Hmmm, well,
well. Could
this be why
these speakers
have such an
ass-backwards
break-in
progression?
Are these
'elements'
what make it
so intensely
rich until the
upper-mids and
treble come
in? I would
wager that
they are.
Armed
with a little
knowledge, I
set upon the
break-in
process with a
sense of
mission. I
played the
Khoruses
non-stop for
three weeks
with the
volume cranked
while the
family was
away during
the day. I
used Purist
Audio disc
extensively as
I did my
Dorian Organ
recordings.
When I sat
down for some
serious
listening
after two
weeks, things
were improved,
but not to the
degree I had
expected.
On
closer
examination, I
discovered
that the
compound
loading of the
ten-inch
woofer yielded
very little
cone
excursion. The
accordion
surround was
still quite
stiff and I
doubted
whether I had
played the
speakers loud
enough to
really give
them a
workout. The
specs say that
the Khorus
will take a
1000 watts and
produce a
continuous 120
dB. Well now,
that's really
loud! Much
louder than I
was playing
them.
For
the next week,
I waited till
the kids were
off to school
and the wife
at work and
played them at
levels that
shook the
house. For
fear of
damaging my
ears, I wore
shooting
headphones
while in the
room and used
my Radio Shack
decibel meter
to check the
sound pressure
level. With
the Bel Canto
EVo monoblocks
pushed near
their limit, I
was getting
close to 120dB
peaks.
After
the first day
of this
regimen, I
knew that I
was hitting
pay dirt. I
could smell
what seemed to
be fresh
lacquer in the
room and I was
finally seeing
some
reasonable
cone
excursion.
Much to my
delight, after
a full week of
this torture,
the speakers
settled in
just the way
the Talon
manual said
they would.
The treble did
in fact move
forward from
the recesses
of the stage
and the upper
mids fleshed
out nicely as
well. The
speakers still
had a rich
sound, but no
longer
over-ripe. The
low bass,
which I
thought was
already
outstanding,
was now
incredibly
good --
powerful, full
and oh my God,
the pitch
definition!
The
Talon
Controversy
On
various
Internet chat
groups, these
speakers have
elicited some
of the most
polarizing
comments I
have ever
read. Some
folks fall
under their
spell
immediately,
while others
make
disparaging
remarks about
their
listening
experience.
Why is this?
Why the love 'em
or hate 'em
reactions?
I
have my own
thoughts on
why this may
be happening.
Let's dispense
for the moment
with those who
may not have
heard a broken
in pair and
those who have
a vested
interest in
another
loudspeaker
and can't
stand to hear
praise heaped
on a
competitor.
Even with
these folks
eliminated,
I'm sure there
is still a
small number
of honest,
well meaning
people with
reasonably
good hearing
who just don't
like the way
these speakers
sound. I hear
the occasional
comment of
"it
sounds rolled
off,"
"not
enough
bite," or
"there's
something
weird going on
with the
midrange."
Now,
far be it from
me to label
these people
as tin ears
who "just
don't get
it." The
Khoruses are
not some audio
philosopher's
stone that
separates gold
from tin.
There is
plenty of room
for personal
preferences
and
disagreement
here. However,
given
technology
claims of
Talon and the
unusual
properties of
this speaker,
I wouldn't be
much of a
reviewer if I
didn't state
my own
position and
vigorously
defend it.
I
have reached
the conclusion
that it is the
Khorus' speed
and low
distortion
that is
messing with
people's heads
and ears. What
may sound to
some as rolled
off highs is,
I believe, the
lack of treble
halo and haze.
I have
confirmed this
for myself by
going back and
forth between
several other
loudspeakers I
have on hand.
There appears
to be no
treble
information
missing from
the Khorus.
What is
missing is the
low level hash
and haze that
typically
rides along
with the upper
mids and
treble like a
halo around
the
instruments.
It
does take some
getting used
to. The
initial
absence of
this
"filler"
can produce
some strong
cognitive
dissonance. I
admit that it
was a bit
weird at
first, but in
my case, the
acclimation
occurred
quickly. I was
able to
identify what
it was and
embrace it in
my first hour
of listening.
There
are some who
say there is
no such thing
as speaker
break-in, only
listener
break-in. The
Khoruses make
a strong case
for speaker
break-in.
There's no
mistaking the
sound of the
fresh-out-of-the-crate
speaker with
one that's
been playing
for 300 hard
hours. But
this speaker
makes an
equally strong
case for
listener
break-in.
Clement and I
have walked
several other
owners through
the
listener-acclimation
process. It
was getting so
commonplace
that we gave
it a name. We
call it
"the
bends."
Like a
deep-sea diver
who comes up
to the surface
too fast, the
audiophile who
experiences to
the Khorus
after
listening to
conventional
loudspeakers
may suffer.
The recovery
time is hours
for some, days
for others,
and some will
never get over
it.
A
less severe
agent of the
audio bends is
the speakers'
ability to
deliver and
instrument's
bass, midrange
and treble
spectrum in a
way that makes
it appear to
emit from the
same point in
time and
space. The
treble does
not leap out
at you, nor
the bass lag
behind the
midrange. It
comes in a
very natural
envelope that
makes you
think of real
instruments
instead of
loudspeakers.
Now, I know
this is
subtle. There
are any number
of good
loudspeakers
that do not
have obviously
disjointed
treble,
midrange and
bass. We're
talking about
degrees here.
The Khoruses
sound just
that much more
holistic in
the sense that
it all emits
from the same
point in the
soundstage,
thus making
the imaging
that much more
believable.
Could it be
because there
is one
compound
driver
handling
frequencies
from 20 Hz to
2200 Hz? Is it
because there
is a series
crossover to
the tweeter
and no low
pass to the
super-tweeter?
I don't know
and I'm not
writing about
the technical
aspects. All I
know is, it
works!
Midrange
and Treble
With
haze and glare
gone, the
extended
treble takes
on a delicacy
and sweetness
that one
seldom, if
ever, hears
from a dynamic
loudspeaker.
The midrange
melds with it
very well;
that is, the
midrange is of
the same
character, cut
from the same
cloth, so to
speak. The
absence of
haze and glare
is also
noticeable in
the upper
midrange. The
mids are not
aggressive or
forward. If
anything, I'd
say slightly
subdued, as
compared to
what I'm used
to. Maybe it's
the
"holistic"
thing again.
The absolutely
seamless bass
to midrange
transition
makes it
difficult to
dissect the
midrange
sound. That's
to be expected
given the dual
role of the
compound
mid/woofer.
What I didn't
expect was
such a smooth
transition
from midrange
to treble.
There may be a
slight dip in
the frequency
response (or
power
response, due
to radiation)
around the
crossover
point which
may contribute
to the subdued
character, but
it is slight,
certainly no
more than I
have heard in
many other top
shelf
speakers. My
eyes see a
great big
10-inch driver
below a
1.5-inch dome
tweeter and my
brain tells
me, "Nah,
no way can
these blend at
2200 Hz -- way
too high for a
ten-inch and
way too
different
dispersion."
Again, the
proof is in
the pudding.
It works!
Talon has a
technical
explanation
(and, as
mentioned
patent
applications)
for how this
is
accomplished,
and it's a
bit, even for
me.
Notwithstanding
the
complexity,
I'm glad that
there is a
plausible
explanation,
because
without it,
I'd probably
keep staring
at those
drivers and
thinking my
ears were
playing tricks
on me.
I'm
a big fan of
acoustic music
-- strings,
woodwinds and
brass in the
classical,
baroque and
jazz milieu.
These
instruments,
especially
strings, are
notorious for
their complex
sonorities. If
you look at
the spectral
balance of
say, a cello,
playing a
C-flat, you
will see an
incredibly
complex
signature.
There is a
strong spike
at the
fundamental
frequency, but
a host of
other
frequency
spikes
representing
over and under
tones,
resonance
characteristics
and
miscellaneous
spuriae all
with time and
amplitude
components.
Taken together
these are what
make the cello
sound like a
cello instead
of a viola.
The
problem with
typical
high-end audio
systems,
particularly
loudspeakers,
is that the
spectral
signature gets
filtered in a
way that
condenses the
spikes in both
the amplitude
and time
domain. It's
like looking
at a MLSSA
frequency
response after
you apply a
"smoothing"
algorithm. You
get a bleached
out, sanitized
version of the
cello. I think
our playback
systems do
such a good
job of this --
bleaching and
straining out
the harmonic
texture of
real
instruments --
that we accept
the sanitized
version and
underestimate
how rich and
sonorous these
instruments
actually
sound.
When
you hear the
Khorus
reproducing
that same
cello note,
the first
response will
probably be
"Wow,
that's
rich."
There is some
real gristle
and meat on
the bones that
may be hard on
the
audio-vegetarian's
taste buds.
The question
then becomes,
is it more
accurate, or
is it
over-done? To
answer this
for myself, I
performed a
little
experiment.
I
have a sister
who is a music
instructor and
between her
and her
teaching
partner, they
can play
almost all of
the wind and
string
instruments
you find in a
typical
orchestra. I
invited them
to my
listening room
and asked that
they bring a
full
complement of
instruments
with them. I
sat right in
the
"sweet
spot",
had them play
for me while
standing well
behind, and
centered,
between the
loudspeakers.
There is no
substitute for
this
experience.
You can claim
to have heard
dozens of live
concerts, but
until you hear
the live
instruments in
your listening
room, I don't
think you can
adequately
judge what’s
real and
what's just
"hi-fi."
I'll be blunt.
The dynamic
energy and
richly
textured sound
of live
instruments
made a mockery
of my system.
Were the
Khoruses too
rich, too
"full
bodied?"
Not even
close! They
sounded more
than thin,
compressed and
sterile in
comparison. I
had no idea of
the amount of
resonant bass
energy a cello
can produce,
or a bassoon
for that
matter.
Although the
Khoruses were
a step in the
right
direction,
they, and the
rest of my
system, still
had a long way
to go before
they could
substitute for
live music.
I
had new
respect for
the Talon
sound after
this
experience and
it only
increased when
I substituted
other
loudspeakers.
All that I
tried (and I'm
not going to
pick on them
here by naming
them) were
even more
efficient
strainers of
harmonic
texture. The
deficiency
became obvious
when playing
any good
recording of
piano or
strings. The
Khorus left
more of the
spectral
signature
intact. The
Khorus
strainer had
bigger holes
and let more
information
through.
I
have often
used Carol
Rosenburger's
Delos
recordings as
an example of
how much more
full-bodied
and bell-toned
a Bosendorfer
piano is
compared with
a Steinway.
Performers
often prefer a
Steinway for
its ability to
cut through
the orchestra
and keep to
center stage.
The
Bösendorfer
is warmer and
more powerful
in the bass
scales. When I
heard
Rosenburger's
Bösendorfer
on the Khorus,
I just about
blew a
cochleal
gasket. Oh my
god is that
ever rich and
powerful! I
played
Horowitz,
Brindel and
Ashkenazy and
damn, the
Steinways
sounded better
too! -- not
nearly as
strident as I
was used to. I
might even
learn to love
Steinways the
way they sound
on the Khorus.
Oh,
and the
strings? No
question
there, the
best massed
and solo
strings
rendering I
have heard in
my room,
period! I use
Corelli's Concerti
Grossi
on Harmonia
Mundi and
Chesky's
Chamber
Orchestra
performance of
Vivaldi's Four
Seasons
as my long
term strings
test
recordings.
After
reaffirming
what they
sound like
live in my
listening
room, I had no
doubt that
Khoruses got
the strings
more
"right"
than any other
loudspeaker
that has
visited this
room.
I
had a
loudspeaker
designer over
at my place.
He brought a
prototype of a
design he'd
been working
on. After
listening to
these
recordings on
his speaker, I
coyly
suggested,
"Now,
would you like
to hear more
of what these
strings are
supposed to
sound
like?" I
disconnected
his speakers,
hooked up the
Khoruses and
cued up the
Vivaldi. Oh,
the look on
his face!
Priceless! To
his credit, he
admitted that
he had some
work to do. It
was that
obvious.
Basso
Profundo
One
thing I can
state
categorically:
the Khorus
loudspeakers
have
"state of
the art"
bass. I used
to think that
detail and
definition
were the
business of
midrange and
treble
domains. Not
any more! I
was blown away
by the
information
coming through
in the lower
bass octaves.
The pitch
definition and
localization
of bass is, in
my opinion,
without peer.
By pitch
definition, I
mean the very
subtle changes
in pitch that
let you know
that a flat or
sharp has been
played, or
even a half
step between.
Perhaps as
subtle a thing
as a change in
the tremolo
frequency of a
huge organ
pipe would be
audible. It's
pretty
stunning when
you put on an
old bass
favorite and
discover that
there is a lot
more
"music"
way down
there. What
may have
sounded like
an amorphous
wash of
droning low
frequencies,
now has real
notes and
colorations of
pitch. That
old war-horse
"Way Down
Deep" on
Jennifer
Warnes'
"The
Hunter"
is a fine
example. I
must have
heard that
piece a
hundred times,
but until I
heard it on
The Khorus, I
really didn't
appreciate how
tuneful and
complex all
that bass drum
work is.
I
had the same
revelatory
experience
with my Dorian
Organ
recordings. I
could hear all
of the big
pedal stops as
clear as a
bell. I could
actually count
the bellows
cycles as the
air was pumped
through the
big 64
footers. I
measured low
20's in my
room when the
big pipes
opened up.
That, folks,
is going low
with authority.
Is
this
astounding
bass
performance
the by-product
of speed and
low
distortion? I
don't know.
Again, it just
works.
Now,
as for
"localization,"
I choose this
word carefully
to distinguish
it from
"imaging."
Low bass
information
doesn't
"image"
the way
midrange and
treble does.
It doesn't
carve out a
fixed image in
space like you
hear when a
saxophone is
playing. It's
the higher
frequencies
produced from
the mallet
striking the
skin of a bass
drum that
fixes it in
place, not the
lower
fundamental
notes that
emit
immediately
afterwards.
However, when
you have
something like
a bass organ
pipe that is
not
"struck,"
there is very
little higher
frequency
information to
fix it in
place. Oh,
perhaps a
faint click of
a stop opening
or some
"chuffing"
of the wind in
the pipe, but
if the
recording is
mic'd at any
reasonable
distance, you
really aren't
going to hear
much. So,
these low
organ notes
aren't going
to
"image"
in true
audiophile
vernacular.
But, with
truly great
low-end
reproducers
like the
Khorus, these
notes will
"localize."
You will get a
very good
sense of where
in the hall
the bass pipes
are located—are
they far
behind the
chorus? To
their left, or
right? At the
same height,
or above? The
Khoruses
answer these
general
location
questions
better than
any
loudspeaker
I've heard.
What
about the
congas,
tympanis, and
bass guitar,
those
instruments
that are
struck or
plucked and
produce more
mid-bass
frequencies?
Because these
do have
midrange and
treble
components,
they should be
easily fixed
in space. Most
any good
loudspeaker
will do a
reasonable job
of placing
these images
on the stage.
The problem is
that after the
strike or
pluck things
can go a bit
awry. The
midrange and
bass
frequencies
that follow
don't quite
match up with
each other or
with the
treble in
terms of
timing. As
I've said,
this timing
phenomenon is
a subtle
thing, which
the Khorus
does to a
degree better
than what I've
heard from
other full
range
loudspeakers.
The key here
is "full
range."
Small
two-way
monitors have
always
excelled in
this as do
coincident
drivers.
Perhaps it is
because of the
simplicity of
their
crossovers and
the fact that
a single
driver is
handling both
their bass and
midrange
frequencies.
Up till now,
the only
drawback to
these monitors
has been their
limited bass
response. With
the Khorus's
technology you
get your cake
and can eat it
too: the
holistic
qualities of a
two-way
monitor with
outrageous
bass
extension.
You
hear this best
on recordings
with string
bass and
congas, like
the
outstanding
Buena Vista
Social Club
that features
righteous
Cuban classics
and Chesky's
new recording
of The Conga
Kings. The
Conga Kings
are featured
on Chesky's
SACD
compilation
disc, and when
I heard it in
SACD, I
suffered a
traumatic case
of mandible
distention. It
was sensory
overload –impact,
texture,
pitch,
imaging...good
Lord, this
stuff is
amazing!
It's
one thing to
say that a
speaker has
excellent
pitch
definition
when playing
at moderate
levels. I'm
sure there are
a few speakers
that can make
that claim.
It's another
matter
altogether to
maintain that
accuracy at
live listening
levels peaking
over 100db.
This is where
the Khorus
really sets
itself apart.
These speakers
maintain their
purity and
poise at
absolutely
ridiculous
listening
levels. I have
never heard a
speaker go
this loud
without
smearing and
congestion. As
a result, my
average
listening
level has gone
up a few
clicks, and
that's a good
thing.
If
you can listen
comfortably at
a louder
level, you
will hear a
lot more of
what's on the
recording. I
have long
maintained
that a lot of
the ambience
cues and
"live
mojo" are
at very low
levels in the
recording,
often
lingering
around the
noise floor.
You will hear
more of it if
you lower the
noise floor
(which is
preferred), or
if you raise
the overall
sound level.
The problem
with the
latter is that
at louder
constant
levels, the
peaks often
get compressed
and distorted.
The wonderful
thing about
the Khorus is
the huge
amount of
dynamic
headroom they
provide. Since
the peaks are
not distorted,
you can
comfortably
listen at
levels that
would normally
sound like
fingernails on
a blackboard.
With higher
continuous
levels, those
"way back
there"
rear
soundstage
cues are easy
to hear, as
are the
plethora of
human
affectations,
like humming,
grunting, and
the passing of
gas.
It's
the Music,
Man...
At
the end of the
day, it all
comes down to
the enjoyment
of music.
Forget about
the
vivisection we
reviewers are
obliged to
perform. The
final
questions we
should all be
asking are:
-
Did
the
speaker
heighten
your
listening
enjoyment
as
compared
to others?
and
-
Did
the
speaker
give you
any new
insights
with your
favorite
music? and
-
If
the
answers to
one and
two, are
yes, are
the
benefits
commensurate
with the
price?
My
answer to one
and two is an
emphatic yes.
The Khoruses
produce
beautiful,
intoxicating
music. The
presentation
is so natural,
so devoid of
artificial
haze, glare
and
congestion,
that I can sit
contentedly
for hours,
just lost in
the music.
This is
unusual for
me. In recent
years I've
gotten very
restless and
finicky, more
interested in
watching a DVD
movie than I
am in
listening to
complete CD.
That has
changed with
the Khorus.
They draw me
in and seduce
me with their
sound. I'm not
bored any
more, because
even when
listening to
familiar
music, I'm
discovering
all kinds of
interesting
things.
As
for the price?
Well, it's
difficult to
put a price
tag on this
level of music
enjoyment. As
compared to
other high
priced audio
products I've
had, I would
say that the
Khorus
loudspeakers
yield a very
high return on
the
investment.
These are not
your ordinary
dynamic driver
speakers in a
wood box. If
you are like
those who
recover from
the bends, you
will
appreciate
what these
differences
mean and will
embrace them
as I have.
My
skeptical view
of Talon Audio
and my cynical
attitude have
been
permanently
checked at my
listening-room
door. You can
count me in as
one of the
audiophiles
who believes
that Talon
technology
works. Hey,
Perry, I'm a
convert, and
it didn't take
an Archangel.
Now, let me
tell you about
the preamp
I've got. The
other night I
swear the
front wall
parted like
the tearing of
the Temple
curtain and
Moses himself
appeared
before me…

|