Ga onbeperkt met Magzter GOLD

Ga onbeperkt met Magzter GOLD

Krijg onbeperkte toegang tot meer dan 9000 tijdschriften, kranten en Premium-verhalen voor slechts

$149.99
 
$74.99/Jaar

Poging GOUD - Vrij

Alta Audio Alyssa LOUDSPEAKER

Stereophile

|

November 2020

It was a “Wow!” audio moment I’ll never forget.

- HERB REICHERT

Alta Audio Alyssa LOUDSPEAKER

It happened just after Ladies Who Lunch, our regular Friday afternoon lunch-n-chat for audio poobahs at the Grand Sichuan restaurant in Chelsea. It was dark at 4 o’clock, and the first snow of winter looked enchanting under the 24th Street streetlamps. Audiophiliac Steve Guttenberg and I were accompanying our turntable setter–upper friend Michael Trei to Bob Visintainer’s Rhapsody Music and Cinema, where Trei was scheduled to install a Lyra Etna SL cartridge on a TechDAS Air Force III turntable. I tagged along to chatter with Bob and listen with Steve to Alta Audio’s tall, open-baffle Titanium Hestia loudspeakers.1 Rumor had it that this was a happening system.2

Michael shushed us as he dropped the Lyra’s exposed needle on Duke Ellington’s “C Jam Blues” from the album Blues in Orbit, recorded in 1959 not far away at Columbia’s 30th Street studio (LP, Columbia CS 8241/Analogue Productions AAPJ 056). I have heard this recording on countless, very expensive stereos, but none of them generated such dense, full-size musicians in such eerily specific locations.

I sat frozen in the leather La-Z-Boy gawking at the holographic spectacle. At one point, I got up and walked around to see if I could stand in the soundstage and maybe touch a musician.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Stereophile

Stereophile

Stereophile

ICONS AND INNOVATORS AT DEFINITIVE AUDIO

Definitive Audio in Bellevue, Washington, near Seattle—one of the premier dealerships in the Pacific Northwest—continued its 50th anniversary celebration with an event it called “Icons and Innovators.” Highlighted by showings of the new JBL Everest series and Bowers & Wilkins Nautilus and 801 Abbey Road edition loudspeakers, the event drew a full house to the first of two sessions.

time to read

10 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Stereophile

Touched-up Beatles and Ringo in color

Opinions vary, but like everything connected to The Beatles, charged arguments over Giles Martin's ongoing remastering of, and sonic tinkering with, the band’s hallowed recording catalog are unending.

time to read

3 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Stereophile

Traveling through time and space

In the April 2024 issue of this magazine, a piece by Editor Jim Austin appeared in the “As We See It” space. It was titled “On assessing sonic illusions,” and it has haunted me for more than a year. Jim’s thesis was that a music recording is a “synthetic, whole-cloth creation ... a complete fabrication.” He writes: “Very few recordings correspond to an actual performance. Most are studio concoctions with pieced-together instrumental tracks and artificial ambience that document no sonic event that ever occurred.”

time to read

4 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Stereophile

EgglestonWorks Andra 5

Big loudspeakers are where diligent hi-fi reviewers really earn their pay.

time to read

16 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

RECORD REVIEWS

Why award Recording of the Month to a project whose vocal soloists, though thoroughly committed, are in some respects less than ideal?

time to read

3 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Stereophile

Doshi Audio Evolution Stereo

Nick Doshi is cautiously reserved when he talks about his amplifiers, preferring to let the products speak for themselves.

time to read

14 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Stereophile

Sticking with it

David and Alma Wilson must be doing something right. They’ve been married for 50 years, and for 36 years, they’ve owned and operated Accent on Music on Main Street in Mount Kisco, New York, about an hour north of New York City. In a recent, lively Zoom conversation with the Wilsons, it became apparent that staying the course is a viable approach, for marriage and for business.

time to read

4 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Period-style listening

Last night, I sat on a bright yellow velveteen sofa eating red beans and rice while listening for three hours to blues and jazz from rare 78rpm records. I walked out feeling gospel-level raised up, with a head full of dreams and cultural memories.

time to read

12 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Stereophile

CH Precision L10

TWO-CHASSIS LINE PREAMPLIFIER

time to read

16 mins

February 2026

Stereophile

Rock don't give a shit, you know

Punk rock was never meant to grow old. For their first three studio efforts, The Replacements epitomized the punk ethos. Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash (1981), the EP Stink (1982), and Hootenanny (1983) are loud, bashy fun.

time to read

3 mins

February 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size