| Focus Audio Signature Series
Model FS68SE Loudspeakers |
| An Inspired Muse |
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May 2006 |

Before you met me-I was a fairy princess
I caught frogs and called them prince and made
myself a queen.
Before you knew me-I traveled around the world
I slept in castles and fell in love because I
was taught to dream.
I found mayonnaise bottles and pocked holes on
top to capture Tinkerbell.
And they were just fireflies to the untrained
eye but I could always tell.
I believe in fairytales and dreamers dreams
like bed-sheet-sails
And I believe in Peter Pan and miracles and
anything I can to get by…
And Fireflies.
- Lori McKenna, “Fireflies” from Pieces of Me
[Gyrox Records]
Sitting in the rear orchestra seats of Boston
Symphony Hall on a recent Friday afternoon, I
sat on the edge of my seat listening to the
stately march that begins the slow second
movement or “Allegretto” of Beethoven’s 7th
Symphony. I had read in the program notes that
Beethoven led the premier of this Symphony at
the University of Vienna in December, 1813.
According to the reports of that concert,
Beethoven literally flung himself into the air
from the podium on the Symphony’s loudest
sections (the only ones he could hear) and all
but crept under the podium on its stately slow
movement. The Allegretto starts with a soft,
slow march in the cellos that gains momentum
as it spills forward into the violins, violas
and woodwind sections. It was on those very
first stately notes struck by Principal
Cellist Jules Eskin that I understood
perfectly the wonder of hearing music live in
a place like Symphony Hall, where the lone
cello carried its beautiful, harrowing march
within a suffusion of natural air and space.
Eskin’s cello was not superimposed on a
blacker than black background. On the
contrary, the air inside Symphony Hall was
alive and far from black and silent, and
served actually to cradle the cello’s tone in
its broad, airy depth. The space surrounding
the cello served to lend it a relaxed halo,
enhancing its natural tone and making for a
deepening of its true harmonic pitch and
structure. Maybe this was what is meant by the
term “Bloom,” defined as the impression that
individual instrumental images are surrounded
by a halo of air. According to Robert Harley,
bloom gives a soundstage a more natural, open
and relaxed feeling. Harley points to another
term of art, “Action,” describing the sense of
bloom expanding outward into space from an
instrument, the way the cello expands into
space as the instrument gets louder. [The
Complete Guide To High End Audio, 3rd Ed. p.54].
All I know is that when the Allegretto came to
a slow, soft conclusion in the cellos again, I
was held transfixed by how the Hall’s ether
held the natural suffusion of air and space,
cradling this live performance and lending it
such expressive power.
I have come to think of this sonic priority of
mine captured in the image of a Firefly.
Nature’s nighttime is filled with currents of
air-not a dark tomb of blacker than black
quiet by any means. Moreover, if you have been
fortunate enough to observe a Firefly’s glow
at night, it is a glow which casts light
outward and then fades slowly back into the
surrounding night. A Firefly’s glow
silhouetted at night is not like an artificial
flashlight beam that goes on and off
precipitously. Rather, it illuminates ever so
briefly, and then naturally fades back into
the surrounding firmament. We enjoy the
magical sighting of a firefly only within the
context or fabric of the surrounding night
air, the enveloping wind moving trees or the
blowing of meadow grasses in the dark. This is
similar to what I heard in Symphony Hall, as
the beautiful and stately notes of the cello
were enjoyed within the suffusion of natural
air and space that cradled those notes and
served as the background within which those
notes decayed slowly and naturally. Now when I
listen to new components or complete audio
systems, one of my priorities will be to
listen to see if I hear, and to what degree,
my “Firefly Element” being conveyed on
particular recordings which contain such
spatial clues.
Robust
Beauty
Coming in from watching fireflies circling
around leaving their luminescent trails as
they decay in the soft night air, let’s turn
our attention to one magnificent Firefly
Effect speaker, the Focus Audio Signature
Series FS68SE. This monitor speaker speaks
with one voice, clearly challenging the
definition of a monitor design in offering the
kind of robust, open presentation that one
would expect only from a much larger
floorstanding design. The FS68SE is a creation
of the talented engineering team at Focus
Audio, celebrating their Tenth Anniversary in
designing loudspeakers. It consists of a two
way design combining one 1-1/8” specially
coated ferrofluid soft dome tweeter with a
second 5-1/2” Nomex/Kevlar Hexacone woofer
with a specially designed heat pipe
configuration. According to its talented
designer, Kam Leung, the proprietary heat pipe
configuration serves to reduce distortion at
high volume and improves its phase coherence.
The FS68SE incorporates a crossover frequency
at a relatively high 2.5kHz with a proprietary
design using high purity litz copper coils and
polypropylene/polystyrene capacitors. Kam says
that the drivers and crossover components have
been selected to achieve a very close
tolerance to achieve a stable soundstage and
sharp images. The FS68SE is rated at 85dB with
nominal impedance of 8 Ohms. I found it sung
best with a good amount of power behind it,
like the Mark Levinson 383 solid-state
integrated rated at 150W into 8 Ohms or the
hybrid tube design Pathos Logos integrated,
rated at 110W at 8 Ohms. The FS68SE’s cabinet
is solidly built with 1 inch thick multilayer
MDF with internal damping materials chosen
carefully to lower unwanted resonances. Cardas
bi-wire binding posts are provided, offering
excellent and flexible connectors. The rock
solid build quality of the FS68SE would make
any Tenth Anniversary celebrant proud. My pair
came in an astonishing deep purple finish,
called Piano Finish Tiger Eye. Burl wood
veneer is dyed in a deep purple color and then
more than 10 coats of high build polyester are
applied. Finally, the finish is polished to a
high gloss mirror quality on top, which
results in one of the most beautiful wood
finishes I have seen in a speaker line. The
Piano Finish FS68SE is a genuine museum piece
to the eye, making a robust artful statement
to any listening room.
Robust
Sound
Speaking of robust, this speaker boasts not
only its gorgeous looks but also its sonic
qualities with glorious abandon, capturing my
heart from the beginning of our time together.
One caveat: like in most human relationships,
those sonic qualities took some time to reveal
themselves, so be prepared for a lengthy
break-in period for things to really open up
to reach their full potential. What we have
here in the FS68SE is a new amphibian: a
monitor design that breaths like a much larger
floorstanding design, at home in larger room
environments than its size and design would
indicate. Its most cherished virtues were its
openness and sheer power of presentation, with
globs of natural, Firefly Effects cradling
real instruments within a natural halo of
spacious air and ether.
First,
lets step into the arena of Texas blues and
witness how the FS68SE captures the blistering
opening solo of Stevie Ray Vaughan on
“Texas Flood” from the album of the same name
[Epic SACD65870]. The cut begins with a sheer
wallop of slow blues chords set over Tommy
Shannon’s articulate bass lines. Utilizing the
ML 383 driving the FS68SE, I was treated to an
expansive soundstage of suffused air within
which Vaughan’s crackling slow blues and
staccato bent notes were perfectly rendered in
space and time. I had never heard this kind of
openness and energized air surrounding
Vaughan’s pyrotechnics from such a small
monitor, and I was viscerally transported to
the claustrophobic recording session.
Coherence in this speaker was staggeringly
good, showcased by the tumulus cut, “Testify,”
where Vaughan ventures off into a blues foot
race with his compatriots coursing over
screaming treble notes. The natural splashes
of Chris Layton’s cymbals and Shannon’s quick,
driving bass lines were captured by the FS68SE
as one piece of the musical fabric in this
power trio onslaught.
Switching
from a small studio environment to an
expansive live recording venue, one road to
sonic nirvana involves hearing Joni Mitchell
fronting her incredible band assembled at the
Santa Barbara County Bowl in September, 1979,
recorded on her live album, Shadows and
Light [HDCD version Asylum 704-2].
Listening to “Dan’s Solo” into “Dreamland”
through the FS68SE transported me into the
visceral center of this concert, with
absolutely no electronic artifice separating
me from the experience. The FS68SE placed Don
Alias’ congas within that special envelope of
live air lending a wonderful alive quality to
each tap of hand to drum, reverberating out
into the expansive stage with wonderful
natural decay. When Joni begins her vocal duet
with Alias on “Dreamland,” her voice is
rendered beautifully with clear, pure and
fragile treble tone, made even more natural
because the FS68SE cradled it in an abundance
of charged air. This entire recording is
magnificent music making, and holds many gems
of spatial clues that the FS68SE mines to
perfection. From the soaring vocals of Joni to
the guitar colors of Pat Metheny and the fat,
deep bass lines from the incomparable Jaco
Pastorius, the FS68SE was in its element. The
FS68SE played lithely to very high volume
before there was even a hint of congestion,
even with Joni and her band kicking it into
high gear with the added complexity of Michael
Brecker’s searing sax and the soaring
Persuasions adding a cappella treats on “Why
Do Fools Fall In Love.” Speaking of the
Persuasions, the FS68SE did a splendid job
recreating the midrange and treble magic of
this vocal group on Chesky’s great disc, The
Persuasions Sing The Beatles [Chesky JD220].
There was a small sacrifice on upper vocal
extension and detail, but the FS68SE more than
made up with its special gift of a halo of air
around the Persuasions, allowing their
semicircle formation in this Church recording
space to be uniquely rendered. I never felt
that the FS68SE lacked dynamics or bass
extension in offering such visceral listening
experience, even in my largest listening room
(31’ by 12’). The FS68SE filled both my small
and large listening spaces with a natural,
open and dynamic presentation augmented by its
special gift of that great “Firefly effect”
for such a diminutive speaker design.
It is never too late to discover the joys of a
new recording label, like I did recently in
discovering Dorian Records, with its venerable
cornucopia of modern and ancient musical
offerings. Taking up our theme of the FS68SE’s
special gifts of surrounding halos of air
around individual voices and instruments,
Dorian presents several wonderful “Airs” or
short pieces composed by Handel, Purcell and
others performed by the New York Kammermusiker
on A Baroque Celebration [Dorian
90189). The treble and midrange performance of
the FS68SE was first rate on this recording.
Individual strings were light, palpable and
naturally drawn while oboe and other woodwinds
were naturally integrated into the lovely
flowing lines of the harpsichord. The bass
drum in this small ensemble was also
reproduced with nice attack and pitch
definition, again part of the musical whole,
not divorced or overwhelming the small string
and wind ensemble. The key here again was the
excellent imaging and coherence of this
monitor speaker design, with the added gift of
that wonderful suffusion of surrounding air
around individual instruments. As for large
orchestral works, the FS68SE handled all of
the collective and individual dynamics and
colors presented on those wonderful Living
Stereo SACD’s with all of the swagger of a
larger floorstander. (Indeed, the wonderful
sonic clues that I find enhanced by great SACD
recordings only heightened the enjoyment of
the FS68SE with its gift for mining such
clues). For example, listening through the
FS68SE to the sinuous clarinet solo which
opens Gershwin’s Rhapsody In Blue
[Living Stereo SACD 82876] offered a cohesive
whole of this musical moment, with clarinet
full and woody winding its way through brass
that was punchy and full of bite. Earl Wild’s
piano was delivered velvety and smooth,
cascading with that halo of air surrounding
each individual run or trill. The Boston Pops
Orchestra’s huge clash of cymbals and brass at
the conclusion of Rhapsody rung all the way
back to the last row of Symphony Hall in the
FS68SE’s airy presentation.
A Robust
Statement
Before I head back into the backyard to watch
fireflies, let me conclude with comparing the
FS68SE to some of my favorites below and above
its price range: Silverline’s SR11 monitors
($1500) and Harbeth’s Super HL5 ($3895). The
SR 11 really shines in a small listening
space, whereas the FS68SE presents a more
robust, deeper soundstage and shocking dynamic
range for its size even in much larger spaces.
The Silverline trumps the FS68SE in the areas
of treble extension and last octave detail,
but the FS68SE provides more spaciousness in
the mids and down below, and lots more of that
special halo of air around instruments and
voices. The FS68SE also gives little away to
the larger enclosure Harbeth HL5. I love the
Harbeth’s special natural tone, accurate
timbre and dynamic midrange, but the FS68SE
brings a lot of these same qualities in a
smaller enclosure with the assets of great
imaging to boot. The HL5 is still my champ
when it comes to my Firefly effect, but the
FS68SE comes very close to the Harbeth in its
special way with placing instruments in their
natural firmament. I could live happily with
any of these speakers.
Come and meet me out back by the Fireflies and
we can compare listening notes under the night
sky.
Nelson Brill
______________
Specifications:
Frequency Response: 45Hz-25kHz + 3dB
Sensitivity:85dB/1Watt/1meter
Impedance: nominal 8 Ohms
Recommended power: 20-200 Watts per channel
Crossover Frequency: 2.5kHz
Termination: Cardas bi-wire binding posts
Finishes: Piano Black, Burl Walnut, Birdseye
Maple, Limited Edition Purple Tiger Eye
Dimension: (H x W x D) 13” x 7” x10”
Weight: 20 lbs each
Price: $2,050
Company Information
Focus Audio Inc.
43 Riviera Dr. #10 Markham, Ont. Canada
Tel: (905) 415-8773
Website:
www.focusaudio.com
USA Dealer:
Sonic Spirits, Inc.
Tel: (201) 750-9948
Website:
www.sonicspirits.com
E-mail:
info@sonicspirits.com

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