I’m sorry to say that I’ve suspended recording at Old Forge Studio until we all get clear of the novel Coronavirus. Please check back once sheltering in place has ended and restrictions on gatherings are lifted. Thanks!
Author: David Cope
Old Forge Distributes Wand
I am very pleased to announce that, effective immediately, Old Forge Studio will import and distribute DesignBuildListen’s (DBL) Wand products.
At present, DBL’s Wand product lineup is comprised of six tonearms: two performance levels, (Plus and Master) in three lengths at each level. The 9.5” arms are drop-in replacements for Rega geometry arms. The 10.3” arms are both the longest length the Linn LP12 will accommodate and is also compatible with Technics’ turntables. The 12” arms may be used wherever 12” transcrition arms are currently being used.
Accessories, mounting plates and the like are available to support use not only on the LP12 and Technics (1200 and 1500 series) tables, but also SME slot mount, Thorens and Lenco turntables as well.
in early August I will receive a final prototype of the Wand 14-4 Turntable, which, according to Founder/Manager Simon Brown, will be released this Fall.
i will be attending the California Audio Show July 27-29 to discuss DBL and Wand products with any retailers interested in carrying Wand products as well as any interested journalists.
If you’re an interested retailer but won’t be in Oakland, please send me an inquiry via the Contact page.
Heading to CAS in Oakland
i’m heading to Oakland for the 8th California Audio Show in two weeks. I won’t be exhibiting this time around, but I’ll be meeting up with old friends, doing a little shopping, some eating, a bit of drinking and, oh yeah, announcing the addition of an import/distribution wing to Old Forge Studio.
Since the manufacturer involved will not be making the announcement until I’ve received and approved my first shipment, and said shipment is wandering the Earth, I’m not quite ready to drop the other shoe. I hope to do so early next week.
A Winning Formula
I received the Aqua HiFi Formula xHD DAC about a week ago and immediately set about breaking it in, using the Innuos ZENith music server and the also just-arrived Sugden LA4 line stage pre-amp, which includes a balanced pair of inputs. I meant to run it 24/7 in order to reach the suggested 400 hour break-in time as soon as possible. As luck would have it, I assembled a play list of ‘only’ 16 hours and haven’t been at the Forge every day this past week, so I suspect I’ve only reached about 100 hours.
I was going to wait longer, but at a ‘mere’ 100 hours, the Formula is already astonishing. It really plumbs the depths of subtle detail, both timbral dynamic, teasing the tiniest shifts and inflections. Bass is fantastic: extended, forceful and tight as a drum. Instruments and voices have real body and clear placement in space, as opposed to the oft-encountered vague ethereal phantasm hanging about out there ‘somewhere.’
Despite the fact that the boffins at Aqua have brought an awful lot of tech to bear in achieving this level of performance, this still feels like some kinda magic . . .
All listening so far is happening with a generic XLR cable from Formula to Sugden LA4., continuing on to the Shindo Monbrison and, for this week, the DeVore Orangutan 96. I’ll get around to both a better interconnect, explore a single-ended RCA connection to both the LA4 and Shindo Monbrison, switching in the Auditorium 23 Hommage a Ken and Rethm Maarga speakers, but I’m in no hurry. I’m enjoying the ride!
Time to SPU
So, this past week I dipped my ears into the Ortofon SPU experience, buying an SPU #1S from NeedleDoctor.
First adjustment – swap out the smaller weight for the larger one on my EMT 997 arm. 32g is a lot of weight to counterbalance, even when you want 4g of downforce!
I started out listening via my Auditorium 23 Denon 103 SUT while waiting for my A23 std SPU xfrmr to arrive. Initially, with arm height undisturbed from the setting for my Midas’d Denon 103, the cartridge was bottoming out, so I reduced downforce to 3.5g, which bought me a hairline of daylight, but sounded all wrong.
While I pondered this, the A23 SPU SUT arrived and I swapped it in. Much better tonal balance, but still not right.
After returning to 4g and increasing the arm height incrementally several times, I hit the Aha! and/or Eureka! Moment where tonal balance peaked (near-oxymoron?), and the system slipped the bonds of time and space, which weirded me out for a few seconds.
“But it’s a 17um conical bonded stylus tracking at 4g in a 32 oz contraption! It can’t be as good as a MODERN cartridge!” Cue the Batman slap meme. 1980 called; it wants it’s ‘conventional wisdom’ back.
Now, I can sell you the arm, the step-up transformer, the JC Verdier La Platine Nouvelle, indeed, the entire rest of that system, (Shindo electronics, Rethm speakers), but (as of this writing), I am not an Ortofon dealer, so when I tell you that, assuming you have right sort of arm, this cartridge is an absolute delight at its price, you can skip the grains of salt.
If you’re within driving (or train-riding) distance of Mystic, CT, come listen for yourself!
Well Tempered Trip
I’m happy to announce that Old Forge Studio is now a Well Tempered Lab dealer.
The Forge will receive a Simplex Mk II turntable and arm in the next few weeks, along with their TLC moving magnet cartridge.
I’m looking forward to pairing it with the Leben HiFi Phono stage and both the Leben CS600 and Sugden A21SE integrated amplifiers.
AXPONA Bound
Tomorrow I head out to the Windy City for audio shenanigans at the 2018 AXPONA. While I certainly hope to reconnect with friends I haven’t seen much of, or at all, since leaving ‘show biz’ in mid-2016, I’ll also be checking out new and newly updated products from lines I presently carry, namely the Innuos ZENith Statement – a two box, top dog music server and the Aqua HiFi La Voce S3 – a discrete R2R upgrade to the LaVoce S2, both being introduced this weekend in Chicago.
Further, I’ll be shopping for analog front end bits: a turntable line for those who feel faint upon hearing the JC Verdiers’ prices and a cartridge line or two to provide broader options for those not yet ready for EMT. I will NOT simply be looking to fill price points; that’s easy. I’m in search of top shelf performance at middle shelf prices – a far more difficult task.
Sounds like hard work, no? Well, that’s why there are bars, great restaurants and perhaps even a cigar. It all evens out in the end.
FUD-Free Digits from Aqua
If you have been charging down the digital trail, whether in computers, phones, cameras or audio gear, you know that substantial FUD factor is perpetually in force. FUD? Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt! “If I buy something now, will it be superseded, outdated, yesterday’s news, by dinner time?” You know the odds are not in your favor.
So what’s a digital audiophile to do? The best answer has usually been, if you need Thing A to do what you want to do NOW, go ahead, make a choice, make a purchase. Otherwise, you’ll never decide, never make a purchase, never get to enjoy it!
Now, at least in DACs, there’s a much more satisfying answer: Aqua Acoustic Quality. Aqua‘s DACs are modular, which allows you to enjoy your cake today, and an enjoy an improved (tastier?) version tomorrow, without that appetite killer ‘sell at a loss and rebuy.’
Case in point: The Aqua Acoustic Quality La Voce DAC. I ordered a La Voce S2 a couple weeks ago. It arrived last Friday. It sounds lovely – not as lovely as the La Scala MkII Optologic, but truly musically satisfying and outstanding in its own price range. One of the noteworthy differences? The La Voce S2 uses a chipset; the La Scala MkII Optologic uses discrete resistor ladders.
Yesterday I saw something on Instagram that, from anyone else, would inspire FUD. Aqua‘s top dog, Cristian Anelli, posted a picture showing a discrete resistor ladder board with the comment “Introducing the S3.” The next generation – La Voce S3 – is (apparently) imminent, and this one change alone, (there may be others), is quite significant. And here I sit with a brand spankin’, moments-from-being-outmoded S2. Oh dear!
Fret not. Aqua‘s U.S. distributor Mark Sossa, (Well Pleased A/V), assures me that as soon as the S3 is released, I will be able to get mine upgraded, turning my S2 into an S3 like some digital Cinderella, but without the glass slipper and pumpkin coach.
Are you thinking about a new DAC? Give me a call; drop me a line. Somewhere between the La Voce, La Scala and Formula, Aqua has the right choice for your system and budget, with the extraordinary benefit of peace of mind.
What’s Newvelle?
I wanted to say, “Quelle est Newvelle?”, but a quick check with Google Translate informed me that “What’s New” would actually be “quoi de neuf?” in French, so there went the clever title/intro.
Anyway . . . Having stereo gear with astonishing abilities is all very nice and keeps a lot of us busy, either as a business or hobby, but what use is it without wonderful recordings? No use at all, is the inevitable answer.
So, I was thrilled when a vendor, (hint: he’s extremely tall), turned me on to Newvelle Records, founded by Elan Mehler, a New York jazz pianist and composer, and Jean-Christophe Morisseau, a Parisian business executive. Their plan?
“We are building an association of likeminded music lovers, interested in acquiring new music available solely on vinyl. We are offering memberships to receive a new pressing bimonthly of some of the finest artists in the world and we are offering it in a format that is completely exclusive.”
They sell memberships which entitle the subscriber to an LP every other month, which becomes a box set at the end of the year. Their first season, (which I’ve just ordered), consists of the following albums:
- Frank Kimbrough Quintet
- Jack Dejohnette Solo Piano
- Noah Preminger Quartet, featuring Ben Monder, John Patitucci and Billy Hart
- Don Friedman Trio, featuring the music of Booker Little with Phil Palombi on bass and Shinnosuke Takahashi on drums
- Ben Allison Trio, featuring Ted Nash on saxophone and clarinet and Steve Cardenas on guitar
- Leo Genovese Trio, featuring Esperanza Spaldingon bass and vocals and Jack DeJohnette on drums
The second season is complete and, as I write this, still available, and the third season is underway.
If you’re a jazz fan, please support live musicians, both through attending live performances and purchasing their physical media, rather than buying the same ancient and venerable albums in yet another format or tip-toeing through streaming services which hardly keep a musician in stamps, much less meaningful support.
Feel the Rethm – Maarga
I’m jumping the gun a bit here. Having spent the last week getting acquainted with the Rethm Bhaava with their new 8” full-range driver, I’m hungry for more. As it happens, the pair of Maarga used in the Soundstage Ultra review had become available, so I pounced.
As it happens, reviewer Tom Mathew used the Shindo Laboratory Monbrison pre-amp and Haut Brion and Cortese power amps in his review. I’m listening to the latest revision to the Monbrison and the latest Cortese F2A with the Bhaava here at the Forge. Need one go that far? No, of course not, but try it if you have a chance. (Pro Tip: You have a chance! Contact me via the form on the contact page and we’ll set up a nice, uninterrupted listening session for you.)
i’m listening to the Bhaava in the Forge’s front listening area, which is much taller (12’+ wood and beams vs. 9’ dropped acoustic tile), and deeper, (30’ vs. 20’) than the back listening area. While they sound wonderful there, the space is a good bit beyond Rethm’s recommended room size for this model. The logical next move? Jump two models up the line to the Maarga, which is more sensitive and has a larger pair of Isobaric woofers driven by more powerful amplifiers.
I can’t wait to hear what the Shindo/Maarga combo is capable of. Stay tuned!