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The Origin Live Encounter Tonearm |
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A Close Encounter of the Musical Kind |
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Paul Szabady |
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21 January 2003 |
Specifications
Fixed bearing alloy tonearm w/ VTA
adjustor
Rega-based arm mounting geometry
Price: £825 GBP plus shipping from UK
(approximately $1,330 USD at press time)
Address:
Origin Live
Unit 5 362b Spring Road
Southampton, Southampton
UK SO19 2PB
Phone: +44 (0)2380 578877 Fax +44 (0)2380 578877
Website:
http://www.originlive.com
Email:
originlive@originlive.com
I've reviewed a variety of Origin Live's products
over the years and have been consistently impressed
with Mark Baker's skills as an engineer and designer.
Baker's designs are informed by a musical
intelligence that pays close attention to the
essential aspects of music making and musical
communication, resulting in deeply musical, extremely
effective, and eminently affordable designs.
Origin Live has built its reputation on their superb
modifications of the Rega tonearms and their equally
excellent DC motor upgrade for existing AC-motored
turntables. Baker possesses a fertile and restless
imagination, constantly improving and expanding OL's
product range, and has been evolving OL's tonearm
designs away from their Rega roots. The
Silver marked the
first appearance of a true Origin Live arm, as one
distinct from a highly modified Rega arm. The new
Encounter tonearm continues that odyssey.
The Encounter retains only the cueing mechanism and
arm pillar/tonearm geometry from Origin's Rega-derived
products. Priced at £825 GBP,
approximately $1,330 USD
at today's rate of exchange, the Encounter is not as
insanely cheap as the OL RB250, yet still lies in the
approachable price range for dedicated vinyl lovers.
Origin's flagship arm, the Illustrious, sells for £1336 GBP,
or about $2,150 USD.
Mark Baker's designs tend toward the holistic,
incorporating a wide range of inter-related factors
that contribute to the product's performance, rather
than single-minded obsession with a single design
parameter. A superficial glance at the Encounter
compared to OL's £509 GBP
(roughly $820 USD) Silver
tonearm, and one might assume a mere cosmetic
upgrade. Closer perusal and audition reveal a list of
differences whose function is performance-based. The
plastic arm base and cueing mount of the Silver (and
the Rega arms) is gone; the wide-set bearings are
enclosed in an encompassing yoke; the thicker,
tapered arm tube is hewn from billet; the de-coupled
cartridge platform is thicker and the Rega magnetic
antiskate is replaced with a thread/ bob
weight/pulley device. The counterweight arm stub is
the time-tested OL classic design. The Encounter
exudes precision and quality in appearance, though I
must admit that physical appearance is the lowest of
my priorities when choosing a component. If a
component truly delivers the music I care not one
whit if it's been whomped with the ugly stick.
Set-up of the Encounter was straight forward, aided
by OL's inclusion of their threaded VTA adjustor and
the standard Rega arm mount and geometry. As usual, I
used the Ringmat system of shims to fine tune VTA
with individual cartridges and records. Tightening of
the arm pillar lock nut just so is a critical
adjustment on Origin's arms: following the
instructions exactly is essential to optimize the
arm's performance. I've always found thread and
hanging bobweight anti-skating devices enormously
aggravating to use, and rue the loss of Rega's
sliding, hassle-free magnetic set-up. OL claims
increased accuracy of calibration with the bobweight
design, but that doesn't prevent me from disliking
its pendulum-like swinging of the bobweight each time
the arm is manually moved. The anti-skate worked
extremely well in playback, presenting no sonic
anomalies. An Allen wrench is included to lock the
antiskating adjustment down.
Working through my review regimen of different
cartridges, phono sections, and turntables revealed a
consistency of performance and a readily perceptible
signature. Break-in occurred quickly in roughly a
week and a half of play. Since performance out of the
box was so good, the break-in process was far less
than the usual tedious chore.
The most immediate perception was of an exquisite
rendering of detail. This high resolution encompassed
the entire bandwidth and produced instantly
recognizable timbre with both small and large music
ensembles. Moreover, this accuracy of timbre was
without false brightness or edge, instruments
sounding more natural and organic. Common to all my
applications of the Encounter arm was a sense of ease
and effortlessness in playback, a perception that
extracting subtle details of timbre, tonality, and
soundstage localization were simply a piece of cake
for this arm, not even raising its pulse. The
Encounter was in complete control. In comparison, the
Encounter's less expensive brother, the Silver,
sounded a bit like an over-achiever, less confident
in its ability and so pushing harder to make a good
impression and occasionally losing control. The
Encounter did not produce any superficial sonic
special effects to draw attention to itself; it
simply played on unobtrusively and somewhat
invisibly, allowing the quality of the music to be
the encounter with the listener. The Encounter truly
serves the music.
Bass response was well controlled: tight, deep, with
superb punch and slam and exceptional tonality and
pitch. High frequency percussion and cymbal work was
articulate, fast and clean. There was a slight
diminishment of contrast in tonal colors ('golden
bronze' sounds were a bit silvery) in some cymbal
reproduction, but since this varied according to the
phono section used and was least noticeable with the
tube-based EAR 834P, I hesitate to assign the effect
to the tonearm itself.
Origin Live's arm designs have traditionally been
exemplary with rhythm, pulse, tempo and drive and the
Encounter is no exception. The arm was also
exceptionally transparent to phono stages and
cartridges used. I used the Origin Live Standard Kit
turntable for most of my auditioning, figuring that
the arm was developed on an Origin table, and was
rewarded with consistent and musical results with the
various ancillaries used. Use of the Encounter on my
Linn Sondek LP12 (with Origin Live DC motor) was
somewhat more ambiguous with certain cartridges.
Compared to results of the OL RB250 on the Linn, bass
and rhythmic drive had less sass and swagger with the
Encounter . In particular, the Garrott Optim FGS
cartridge, normally a nonpareil dynamic and rhythmic
was only 'good' on the Linn/Encounter, though still
superb on the OL/Encounter set-up.
The Encounter's grace and subtlety flowered
particularly with unamplified acoustic music. Its
strong ability to reproduce unambiguous timbres made
complex and subtle orchestration in classical music
instantly accessible to perception. Vaughan Williams'
Pastoral and Sixth Symphonies as performed by
Adrian Boult were extremely well served by the
Encounter's ability to recreate the subtlety and
nuance of the scoring, communicating the complex and
often contradictory emotions that inhabit the music.
Acoustic jazz was also extremely well rendered.
Individual artist's stylistic signatures, as well as
the timbre of their instruments were, again,
immediately identifiable. Notable was the arm's
ability to allow its level of detail to be heard at
quiet playback levels. No need to blast the volume to
get the music to come alive. Strong stereophony,
verging on stereoscopy, aided orientation to a very
believable sonic illusion.
Mark Baker's arms have always excelled in
communicating the essence of music and the Encounter
hits new and quite exalted levels of accuracy,
nuance, and subtlety. Every reviewer's final task
when completing a review is asking whether they
absolutely have to own the item reviewed.
Given the honesty of Baker's product descriptions,
only the knowledge that the Illustrious (OL's premier
$2500 arm), exists and begs for audition keeps me
from raiding the HiFi Kitty immediately. The highest
of recommendations for the Encounter tonearm: a new
benchmark for musical communication, natural detail
and timbral truth. All at a price that, considering
the quality of its performance, can only be called a
bargain.

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