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Recorded music has always been an important part of my life but it's taken a
while for me to realise how essential it is to have a really good system in order to actually hear all the
musical information available on my records and CDs. I also have to admit that, halfway through the 1980s, I was totally brainwashed into getting rid of my records and switching entirely to CD. What a mistake to make! All was not lost though
and, some 13 years ago, I started collecting records again and haven't looked back since. Many early CDs had a very poor sound and couldn't communicate the soul of
the music I wanted to hear and even now I still often get more of the 'message' from my records than those shiny discs.
My first turntable since picking up the vinyl bug was a Garrard
Zero 100SB which I used with a simple Ortofon cartridge in
combination with an Audioanalyse PA4 amplifier and Tannoy 609 dual
concentric speakers. The Garrard is a nice turntable which can be tweaked
in all kinds of ways (see
the excellent info at TNT Audio) but the system as a whole didn't have
the clout I wanted and my friend Rudolf Bruil advised me to try a Sony PS-X70 turntable
via a Tandberg 3002 preamp into a Technics SE-9021
power amp.
At the beginning of 2005 I decided to
do something about the poor resolution of my system and, after some surfing of
the web, started by getting a pair of Yamaha NS-670 speakers.
These are 1970s 3-way consumer speakers using similar drivers to the cult NS-1000 studio
monitors which featured specially designed mid- and treble units using beryllium.
The Yamaha NS-670s are amazingly fast, informative and musical speakers and their arrival set me off on a mission to find suitable amplification.
They love valve gear so I went
on the internet in search of affordable solutions. After toying with the idea of various second-hand solutions as well as a couple of Chinese built
designs I came across an 'out of the ordinary' site going by the name of Eminent
Audio which had a neat little Preamp called the
Vitale that came with an excellent MM
Phono stage as standard (perfect!) and it had also received rave reviews in Hifi News and HiFi
World. I also discovered that this wonderful piece of gear was built by the legendary
Glenn Croft.
His avowed mission was to design amplification which would recreate as accurately as possible the actual musical performances available via Vinyl, CD,
Tape and Radio sources.
Check out some past reviews of this little beauty
and you'll see I'm not the only one to get excited by it's beguiling sound !!
After a few weeks of 'running in' the thing simply sounded so good that I could hardly get up and move away from my listening chair (to look at my email etc) without being drawn back again by the musical performances conjured up in my attic
listening room. Mozart and Britten string quartets, the
wonderful sounding Debussy Cello Sonata and other chamber music,
orchestral music and opera sound equally fine. Jazz simply swings and
sounds the way it should - musical, rhythymical and timbral elements are
presented in a wholly natural, almost matter of fact way (aural honesty/the
heart of the matter) as if it simply couldn't sound any other way. Rock music
sounds better than it ever did, singers are 'there in the room' and all the
different threads of mixes and electronic music are revealed with no problems
whatsoever.
Not to say that what I now hear doesn't reveal the other areas of my
system that could be improved on but rather that, despite the 'minusses', there are simply so many 'plusses' that any criticism seems churlish in the face of such heavenly music.
I
eventually threw it the 'ultimate test' - a Melodiya recording of Prokofiev's War and Piece opera which kicks off with a huge choral piece that my old system couldn't cope with at all. The
Vitale and Yamaha NS-670s had no problems with it, revealing with apparent ease all the strands of the choral and orchestral writing. Even when the wailing soprano
Galina Vishnevskaya appeared on stage the system didn't go into shock and gave a very natural presentation of her voice with its
'particular' sound qualities without exaggerating it in any way. I was
gobsmacked. Since my initial purchase of the
Yamaha NS-670s I've been lucky enough to pick up two pairs of their bigger
brothers, the NS-690s, as well as another two pairs of NS-670s which I am now using
with my PC and for other audio and DVD duties. I reckon I've become rather
addicted to their sound. Everything simply comes to life in front of my eyes
with this combination - in fact, as the
weeks and months have passed, it's as if the Vitale has simply unfolded its wings and started to
fly!
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So my current system is the Sony PS-X70 turntable
and Denon DCD-1560 feeding the Croft
Vitale preamp and the Technics SE-9021
power amp into Yamaha NS-690 speakers. The recent addition of some The Missing Link Cables and
Eichmann Cablepods
have brought everything into focus.
The "finishing touch" in my system is a combination of the The
Universal Record Stabilizer Weight and the Universal Record Stabilizing
Ring, both designed by
audiophile and musiclover Rudolf Bruil. Visit his site Soundfountain
(an extensive and invaluable source of audio and
analogue hints/links/aids, info on turntables, cartridges, equipment etc.)
to read more about the Record
Stabilizing Ring & the Record
Stabilizer Weight: both are, in my opinion, unmissable aids to vinyl reproduction. They
improve tracking, speed of transients, solidity of vocal & instrumental
images, depth of soundstage and aid the flow of musical information.
Cables Galore
The marketplace is full
of companies selling cables offering to do all kinds of amazing things
for your system and often for ridiculously exorbitant prices. I recently decided to upgrade my
interconnects and, again after much surfing of the web, I finally found the people at
The Missing Link who have a rather wonderful site with everything to fulfill your cable &
plug needs. Their excellent hifi cables
are handmade by designer Mark B. Sears and, in my humble opinion, they will
certainly improve your
system. They sell everything you might possibly need in
the way of plugs, interconnects, loudspeaker cables, power
cables, blocks etc. They even offer cables on loan, so you can try them out at home, and also
offer a retermination service for your existing cables if you so wish. Give them
a call and have a chat with Jan who's waiting to take your order and have a
friendly chat into the bargain! Their prices are extremely competitive and
their service is excellent.
I chose to start off with 3 pairs of their
Coppermine interconnects terminated with Eichmann Bullet plugs to link
up my Vitale with the Technics power amp as well as the 'ins' and 'outs'
of my Tascam CD-recorder. Together with the fitting of a couple of
Eichmann Cablepods to my NS-690s the result has been a substantial
increase in quality of sound and musicality. Much improved are bass
extension/definition, instrument and voice imaging/placement, allround
natural tonal colour, reduced sibilance & distortion. The sounds are
all more
realistic & well defined, delivering clean, clear audio and getting
me ever closer to the performances, whether live or in the studio. As you can gather I'm pleased with these products.
Windows on the Past
The musical intimacy available via the Vitale and my NS-690s
grants me glimpses of
history, musical moments in time and space, resurrected in my room
so I could enjoy all the atmosphere of the original recording sessions. Transported via the
sonic wormholes the Croft preamp opens up I can bask in the radiance and glory of artists who are often dead and buried (or very close to being). I've had a lot of fun
rechecking out many of my records - ranging from some 70s and 80s Pablo recordings of
Count Basie in small group settings with Oscar Peterson, Dizzy Gillespie, Zoot Sims, Harry "Sweets"
Edison et
al or my old CBS Ellington sides. Yves Montand - Live in Paris (a Japanese pressing of an old 1958 Philips HI-FI recording),
Miles Davis - Seven Steps to Heaven (an original CBS "360 sound" pressing), Duke
Ellington's Great Paris Concert on Atlantic and his
CBS Indigos LP (another "360 sound" pressing), Miles Davis - Nefertiti & Bitches
Brew, Ralph Towner - Solstice, Brubeck, Mulligan & Desmond -
We're All Together Again for The First Time, The Bothy Band & The
Chieftains, Alex Harvey's Faith Healer and Charlie
Mingus' CBS Dynasty
LP as well as Bach keyboard music by Alicia de Larrocha and Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto by
Boris Belkin on Decca.
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