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Who's the next 007?

Stereophile

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November 2025

Walking through any big art museum, even at a brisk pace, it's impossible not to notice how boldly each object wears the unique stamp of its time and place of manufacture.

- BY HERB REICHERT

Who's the next 007?

It doesn't matter whether the artist worked in Paris or Polynesia, in the 15th or 20th century. The force of the creator's persona, united with the constraints of the cultural system that supported the making of that type of art, determines the vibe the object emits. That vibe is what I'm hoping to grasp.

Whether I'm examining a Zulu beer pot or a John Cage drawing (both of which I've lived with), my first step toward entering the mind of an artwork's creator(s) is to penetrate the cultural force field that surrounds the object. That invisible shield prevents the uninitiated from grasping the object's more esoteric intents.

If my knowledge and imagination are too limited to grasp the object's original purpose, the object will remain foreign and other—a mysterious curio from another place and time made and used by people I shall never mingle with.

In my tribal hut, playing old recordings with exotic new and vintage audio gear is exactly this type of anthropology, though applied to audio recordings not objet d'art. It's a branch of the audio hobby that doesn't mingle much with the mainstream. The technical, sonic, and aesthetic differences between a Jules Futterman OTL amplifier, a chrome-bumper Naim NAIT, Hiroyasu Kondo's Ongaku, and a Bruno Putzeys amplifier module are such that these tribes tend to ignore each other.

Similarly, audiophiles who came of age with wood boxes on the living room floor don't mingle much with today's young head-fi crowd.

This month's Gramophone Dream will describe the new, "Advanced & Reimagined" Stax SR-007S Earspeakers ($2390). I hope this Dream will inspire readers of all ages and levels of experience to learn the 007's long backstory by reading Stereophile's previous Stax SR-007 reports: Jonathan Scull's 2001 exposé of the SR-007 Omega II electrostatic headphone1 and Tom Norton's milestone 1995 report on Stax's original SR-Omega.2

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Life in the emerald beyond

If you find yourself in Monaco on a Sunday night, make your way to La Note Bleue, a cozy restaurant and music bar on the beach by the Avenue Princesse Grace. There, you're likely to find a legendary world/fusion guitarist sitting in with a group of young jazz musicians eager to cut heads with the acknowledged maestro of inner awareness and otherworldly spirits. Forever known to some as “Mahavishnu,” you can call him by his birth name, John McLaughlin.

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

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36 sides of late Bowie

I Can't Give Everything Away is the sixth and last of the Bowie box sets that survey specific periods in the artist's career. The first was Five Years 1969–1973, released in September 2015. That was followed by Who Can I Be Now? (1974–1976), A New Career in a New Town (1977–1982), Loving the Alien (1983–1988), Brilliant Adventure (1992–2001), and finally the new set. Together, the six sets are an impressive testament to a musical giant—a heavyweight tribute figuratively and literally. You could use this last installment to pump up your biceps.

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

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Is this the ultimate old-school analog move?

Dedicated readers know that lately in this space I’ve been on something of an analog kick. Two months ago, in the October issue,¹ I wrote about refurbishing and modding my old McIntosh FM tuner. Last month’s column (November) was on the much-discussed but little-understood topic of the skating force on a phono cartridge stylus.²

time to read

4 mins

December 2025

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STEREOPHILE'S 34TH ANNUAL PRODUCT OF THE YEAR 2025 AWARDS

Stereophile's Product of the Year Awards were first published in 1992.1 I decided at that time that, in contrast to other publications' awards schemes, we would keep the number of categories to a minimum.

time to read

21 mins

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DeVore Gibbon Super Nine

LOUDSPEAKER

time to read

11 mins

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Some marketing claims are true

None of the amps I build are better than the others,” Justin Weber of Ampsandsound told me not long after we met. “They are just different.” I may have smirked inwardly. According to his company’s website, Weber makes no fewer than 23 amplifier models, many capable of driving both headphones and speakers, ranging from the $2700 Kenzie OG to the $38,000 Arch Monos. Are they really all equally good?, I wondered. Surely this was just a clever Buddhist ploy to distract us from some of his amps’ high prices. Doesn't the extra $35k spent on the Arch Monos buy you something more desirable than the performance offered by the little Kenzie? Writing for an audio magazine means I hear a lot of marketing claims, some more risible than others, and I have learned to take them with an entire seabed worth of salt.

time to read

11 mins

December 2025

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Lotti Golden

Her life became a whirlwind. Taking the train in from Brooklyn to Manhattan to pitch songs and experience the East Village scene, she landed a song-publishing deal at age 14. In 1968, at 18, after a chance meeting in an elevator, a legendary songwriter/record producer was interested in assisting her in making her debut album. Released on Atlantic Records in 1969, Lotti Golden's Motor-Cycle was wildly experimental and ahead of its time. Seemingly poised for success, the album and her career suddenly vanished.

time to read

4 mins

December 2025

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Baby you can drive my car(tridge)

While I was coming to grips with this month's review subject, the idler drive Garrard 301 Advanced, I began to think about the various methods that have been used to spin turntable platters over the years. Since the transition a century ago from windup clockwork to electric motors, there have basically been three ways to spin a turntable platter: idler drive, belt drive, and direct drive. True, there have also been a few designs that go their own unique ways, such as the rare, water-driven Oasis made by David Gillespie of Saturn Audio in the late 1970s and the gear-driven H.H. Scott 710 I once owned and foolishly sold. But almost everything made since the 1950s uses one of the three main drive systems. Even the Omega Drive system, which was used by Wilson Benesch on their extraordinary GMT One turntable, is at its core a direct drive design.

time to read

10 mins

December 2025

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Audio Research Reference 330M

MONOBLOCK POWER AMPLIFIER

time to read

19 mins

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MANUFACTURERS' COMMENTS

MoFi Distribution would like to thank both Ken Micallef and John Atkinson for their time and effort reviewing the HiFi Rose RA280 integrated amplifier (November 2025, p.93).

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

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