Try GOLD - Free
The Stick Palace and the SIT-4
Stereophile
|October 2024
Throughout my hundred years, I've told everyone who'd listen: If it's adventure you seek, the best way to find it is to stand on the right corner at the right time wearing the right hat, and when the limo pulls up and the driver says, "Get in," do not ask where it is going.

This strategy has served my life story well. It has placed me without striving in countless cinema-worthy locations, hanging with all types of legend-worthy characters.
Lately, that corner where I stand wearing the right hat is in front of the Polish newsstand at the intersection of Manhattan and Greenpoint Avenues in Brooklyn.
Twice in two weeks, I woke up early to be standing by that newsstand at the right time for my friend Beau to pull up in his metallic blue saloon. Both times I got in, I neglected to ask where we were going. Both times, I ended up somewhere like Oz or Wonderland. Both times, I came home thinking "Wow, I am blessed to be a traveler in this audiophile hobby. It keeps putting me on roads, opening doors, and introducing me to wizards, scholars, monks, and abbots."
The first time, I thought we were driving to see our friends Dave and Jeffrey of Salt Cellar EMIA fame,' but when I stepped out of the car, I was standing in tall grass in front of a raised-bank barn built in the 1830s. The barn's nearest door framed its far side door, which framed a miles-deep landscape on the leeward side of the structure. (See photo.) For a long moment, the scent of clover dominated my attention. Then I spied acres of it all the way to the forest at the edge of the valley. "So, Beau, where are we? Did we crash on the highway and pass through the Vail?"
Just then, framed in the first doorway, I spied the Paganini-like silhouette of my old friend Pern, an authentic audio monk, whom I've known since I was building amps under the tutelage of mutual friend and humble wizard Arthur Loesch. Pern was Arthur's running buddy and part of a gang I was a member of.
This story is from the October 2024 edition of Stereophile.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Stereophile

Stereophile
THE GRIMM TRUTH
A Q&A WITH AUDIO DESIGNER EELCO GRIMM
15 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
Bruce Springsteen's later-career back catalog
Seeing Bruce Springsteen perform live in the 1970s and early '80s, pre-Born in the U.S.A., could be a life-changing experience. Bruce was the hungry leader of a relentless, turn-on-a-dime R&B band. A burning star streaking across the rock'n'roll sky, he threw his fiery young self into maximum shows full of urgency (to invoke one of his best rhymes) and those wordy, anthemic pleading/strutting urban fairy tales. He was leagues beyond almost everything and everyone else in those days.
3 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
Kimber Kable Carbon Series
SPEAKER CABLE AND INTERCONNECT
6 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
Weiss DAC204 - D/A PROCESSOR
Weiss Engineering D/A processors are widely known for their high quality, in both home audio and pro-audio circles.
11 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
GRAMOPHONE DREAMS
The newest star of the Schiit show
12 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
Rollin' with Leo
Horn players were always the show ponies of bebop.
3 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
Magico S5 2024
I have lost track of how many loudspeakers I have measured with DRA Labs' MLSSA system since Stereophile started accompanying its reviews with measurements in the late 1980s, but it must be close to 1000.
11 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
Eversolo AMP-F10
A century ago, pioneering psychiatrist Carl Jung had a wild encounter with the power of sound.
13 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
PSI Audio AVAA C214
ELECTRONIC BASS TRAP
10 mins
August 2025

Stereophile
Treehaus Audiolab "The Preamplifier"
Imagine navigating the hectic rooms of an audio show at which a sea of similar-looking, similar-sounding gear blends into a predictable thrum, drawing a chorus of familiar nods.
9 mins
August 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size