| The
Sonus
Faber
Concertino
Loudspeakers |
|
A
Message
from the
12 ×
12: |
|
Heru
Wesley |
|
8
March 2000 |
Specifications
System:
10 liters two-way
bass reflex
Nominal Impedance:
8 ohms
Power Handling:
25-120 watts
Frequency
response:
55-20,000 Hz, + 3
dB
Crossover: First
order attenuated
Sensitivity: 86
dB/1 watt/1 m
Drivers
Woofer/Midrange:
140 mm PP treated
cone
Tweeter: 20 mm
silk dome
ferrofluid
Connection:
Bi-wiring
Cabinet:
Combination of
leather and solid
walnut (review
pair)
or black piano
lacquer
Dimensions (H × W
× D): 320 × 220
× 290 mm (12 × 8
× 11 in)
Packaged Weight:
33 lbs. (15 Kg)
Price pairs (US
Retail): $950
walnut, $1300
piano black, $450
fixed type stands
Address:
Sumiko (US
Importer)
P.O. Box 5046
Berkeley, CA 94705
Tel (510) 843-4500
Fax (510) 843-7120
Web: www.sonusfaber.com
"The
Concertino’s
appearance
really stood out
from the crowd.
They look so
classy – an
interior
decorator’s
mix of walnut
side panels and
black leather
surround."
Twelve
by twelve are the
dimensions of my
listening room (w/
an 8ft. ceiling).
Yeah, we all know
the horror stories
concerning small
listening room
anomalies but
controlling the
standing waves in
a small square room
has been a regular
butt kicker!
(Thank God for the
zdp-1, the room
lens and the
echobuster
products!)
I’ve
been fortunate
enough (thanks to
my lovvvvvin’
wife) to have a
dedicated
listening room
which is actually
our spare bedroom.
Many of my audio
buddies who have a
similar living
situation, a
studio apartment,
or a small
multipurpose
living room, have
expressed their
need for
information
concerning good
audio in ‘confined’
spaces. To which I
submit my first
review concerning
the all-important
question: What’s
a good
loudspeaker?
For
a little over a
couple of years
now the Sonus
Faber Concertinos,
along with its’
family – the
Concert Series,
have been out on
the US market
(distributed by
Sumiko). I
remember first
hearing about
these little
babies from a
fellow musician
(drummer) who was
also a salesman
(God forbid!) for
a local NY audio
retailer.
"Come on down
to the shop",
he shouted across
the bandstand
"you’ve got
to hear these new
monitors we’ve
been using in our
small home theater
showroom".
"What’s
funny, he
continued is that
a lot of audio
engineers (you
know, the guys who
record the
stuff we listen
too so dearly) are
picking them up
like crazy".
They all say
" Now that’s
the way we hear it
during playback in
the control
booth".
"Oh really",
I thought.
Touched
for the Very First
Time
"The
Concertinos had
me doing the
dread-locks-flying-in-face
seat
dance."
About
a week later, I
showed up for an
audition. As per
my request, my
friend had setup
one of the smaller
showrooms (these
spaces are
sometimes so
dreadful sounding
with the clutter
of electronics
& speaker
pairs all around).
The Concertino’s
appearance really
stood out from the
crowd. They look
so classy – an
interior decorator’s
mix of walnut side
panels and black
leather surround.
Browsing through
the company’s
brochure, I see
that "…speaker
designs are
inspired by the
concepts of
stringed
instrument
construction"
(Hey, there’s a
thought, "Let’s
build speakers –
which reproduce
sound – the same
way they build
instruments –
which produce
sound").
Yeah, but looks
(and construction)
ain’t everything…
He
slaps in one of my
favorite CDs,
Michele Camilo’s
"One More
Once"
(Columbia – CK
66204), that’s
the one with the
big band, into an
Arcam CD player.
Anthony Jackson’s
contrabass guitar
volume swells
& muted
B-string thumps on
the intro to
"Suite
Sandrine, Part
III" fill the
room with some
impressive low
end. Not
overwhelming, of
course, but just
the way I hear it
in the studio when
I myself am laying
down tracks. Then
just before the
funky brass vamps
in, a single
triangle tap pans
back-and-forth
across the
soundstage with
butter sweet ease.
"Ooh, that’s
nice". The
following
onslaught of horns
and percussion is
a real workhorse
for any
loudspeaker
system. The
Concertinos had me
doing the dread-locks-flying-in-face
seat dance. While
still recovering
from the previous
wave, Billie
Holiday’s "Lady
in Satin"
(Columbia CK
65144) was slipped
into the mix, I
remarked "Now
that’s midrange
detail and then
some", as the
first track, ‘I’m
a Fool to Want You’,
just knocked me
back into the
leather seat. I
was quick to turn
to my friend,
"You know I
have to take a
pair home to
really test the
waters".
"Sure, I’ll
have a pair ready
for you in a
couple of
days".
Procrastination
Is the Enemy of…
"Oh,
and just to let
you know, behind
my listening
chair is a wall
of bookcases –
filled to the
brim with nerdy
college
engineering
textbooks, audio
mags and
musician bios -
measuring 7 ft.
tall by 12"
deep, or as I
like to refer to
it, my poor man’s
diffusor."
A
year later (O.K.,
maybe a good
excuse would be
something like
"Man, all
those tours, gigs,
studio dates and
rehearsals kept me
so busy I just
couldn’t get out
to the shop … Yeah
right!), I ran
into my
drummer/salesman
friend on the
street. "Just
pickup the
speakers tomorrow.
You know they’re
still one of our
top sellers".
Also, around the
same time I
stumbled upon
Lewis Lanese’s
fine review
of the
Concertinos big
brother, the
Concertos.
A
pair of fixed
height (27
½"), sand
fillable,
iron/walnut,
spiked stands
accompanied the
speakers (the
adjustable stands
were currently
out-of-stock).
This height wasn’t
a problem since my
listening chair
places my ears at
level with the
Concertino
tweeters (but I do
recommend the
adjustable stands
to allow for
greater tonal
flexibility). I
hooked the
speakers up to my
then current
system – Rega
Plant CD player,
Naim Audio NAC 92
preamp, Flat-Cap
Power Supply &
NAP 90 stereo
power amp. If the
speakers allow,
which the
Concertinos do, I
almost always
chose to bi-wire
(I tried listening
both ways but
there was a little
better imaging
with the bi-wire
termination). This
is a very kind
system to vocals,
strings and all
things midrangy.
The Italian
speakers mated
well with the
all-British front
end.
As
you would think,
the 12 × 12
requires some
thought on speaker
placement. Upon
consulting the
Owner’s Manual,
a nearfield
speaker setup is
suggested to even
out the overall
frequency response
(eliminating
excessive early
reflections and
bass
reinforcement) and
to "place
some air"
around the
speakers. I first
placed the
speakers about
30" out from
the front wall and
35" from the
sidewalls with a
slight toe in.
This produced an
amazing sense of
immediacy, like
being front row at
the live event.
But I could
somehow sense that
the room was still
part of the
equation. That
50-100 Hz region
was slightly
booming (This was
verified with my
trusty Digital
Sound Level Meter
(Radio Shack Cat.
No. 33-2055) and
the test signals
from Stereophile’s
Test CD 2). I
wanted to get rid
of the room! So
after a couple of
moves, I settled
on 43" from
front wall,
30" from
sidewalls and a
35-degree toe in.
This presented the
best compromise
between a good
center image and a
realistic
soundstage. Oh,
and just to let
you know, behind
my listening chair
is a wall of
bookcases –
filled to the brim
with nerdy college
engineering
textbooks, audio
mags and musician
bios - measuring 7
ft. tall by
12" deep, or
as I like to refer
to it, my poor man’s
diffusor.
Let’s
Turn Off the
Lights, Fire Up a
Couple of Candles
and Throw On Some
Ella & Louie
During
this time, I had
just purchased
"The
Complete Ella
Fitzgerald &
Louis Armstrong
on Verve"
3-CD box set (Polygram
314 537 284-2).
Ella’s
feathery-like flow
captures you
quickly on ‘Isn’t
This a Lovely Day?’
The Concertinos
caress every note
making it feel
like a Sunday at
twilight time.
Satchmo’s haspy
growl is so there
that you just want
to laugh along
with him. Over the
next two weeks I
enjoyed tossing
Marvin, Sarah V,
Sinatra, Robert
Johnson and Mr.
Marley (Bob that
is) at the
Concertinos. Cut
after cut, I kept
finding myself
more involved with
the essence
of the vocalist.
Oh, by the way, my
wife is really enjoying
these speakers
too.
How
Low Can You Go
"That
baritone sax of
Bluiett was
hitting me right
square in the
gut. Even with
the added kick,
the speakers
held up
(negligible
clipping) during
full volume
throttle…"
Now
it was time to
test the bottom
with Ray Brown,
John Clayton and
Christen McBride’s
"SuperBass"
(Telarc20
CD-83393) recorded
live at Sculler’s
Jazz Club in
Boston. The three
acoustic bassists
dangled within
their own spaces
as the second
track ‘Blue Monk’
started to quake.
Details of
fingerboard slides
and dips made me
want to reach for
my old beat up
upright standing
in the living
room. But atlas,
the mini
Concertinos could
not produce those
voluptuous bass
bodies
convincingly. As
mentioned by
Lanese, here is
where the
inclusion of a
subwoofer may be
necessary
(depending on your
tastes of course).
Not to stir you
wrong, these
little boys can
deliver enough
booty-shakin’
lows that my wife
and I were dancing
all over the
apartment while
checking out some
thumping club
grooves from
D-Influence’s
"Good 4 We"
(east/west records
america 7
92122-2).
My
friend’s
inevitable phone
call came.
"So, how you
like ‘em".
"I’ll bring
you a check
tomorrow".
To
Upgrade or Not to
Upgrade…
When
I chose to upgrade
my system last
October (about 95%
revamped), the
question aroused:
"Should I
change the
speakers?"
The Concertinos,
like the rest of
its’ family,
thrives on power.
All along, they
were sitting back
waiting for that
hefty,
single-ended,
class A, Pass
Labs. The Naim
Audio amp just
didn’t have the
balls to deliver.
In addition, the
transparency of
the Aleph 0s
opened up new
levels of
resolution. The
speakers were able
to breathe
a little easier. I
tried out the new
Mapleshade CD (I love
the sound of this
label’s live 2-
track recordings)
from Hamiet
Bluiett and Larry
Willis "If
Trees Could
Talk"
(06332). That
baritone sax of
Bluiett was
hitting me right
square in the gut.
Even with the
added kick, the
speakers held up
(negligible
clipping) during
full volume
throttle (who
listens like this
anyway in a small
room, unless of
course you still
live in your
parent’s attic
with your
beer-drinking,
guitar-crunching
buds! Oh-oh,
flashback!) I’m
really flyin’
high with my Sonus
Fabers! The
Concertinos are
staying for now.

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