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BRILLIANT CORNERS

Stereophile

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August 2024

Stereo is the most successful audio gimmick of all time. While dashboard record players, quadraphonic LPs, and MQA have gone the way of Ron Popeil's hair-in-aspray-can infomercials, stereo remains king. And I am guilty of loving it.

- ALEX HALBERSTADT

BRILLIANT CORNERS

That old expression "men love with their eyes" applies to listening, too. Enabled by the advent of a second channel, the fanning out of musicians across a soundstage fills the room and gives the eyes-and not only the ears-something to do. And I happen to enjoy the soundstage. It may be an utterly artificial delight, but who doesn't love hearing a tambourine coming from 10' to the left of the left speaker? So when I came across an article in which someone likened mono to listening to music through a hole in a wall, the metaphor made sense. Why would anyone want their music congealed in a blob directly in front of them when they could hear it separated out in space?

As always, though, it turns out that things aren't quite so simple. A number of listeners I respect-often the very same folks who enjoy low-powered tube amplifiers, vinyl, vintage gear, and horn speakers-consider the soundstage a distraction, or at least a compromise whereby we trade some of the music's life force for a visual spectacle created not by the artist but by the engineer.

I've often wondered what these listeners were going on about. For me, their conviction simply wasn't borne out through personal experience and seemed like one of those perversely contrary hipster positions, like preferring a foot-pedaloperated sewing machine to an electric one. When listening to stereo and mono versions of the same record, I've consistently preferred the stereo mixes (here I'm talking about stereo-era records, not "electronically rechanneled" records from the mono era, which are the sonic equivalent of a bad hairpiece). For me, even early stereo Beatles LPs, and other examples of awkward hard-panned left-right mixes, were preferable to music emerging from a single point between the speakers. So for years I scoffed at mono records from the stereo era as something anachronistic and embarrassing, a sop for Luddites who desperately clung to the past.

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T. REX- Electric Warrior

Once Marc Bolan uttered the famous line \"You're dirty sweet and you're my girl\" (from \"Get It On (Bang a Gong)\"), it was clear that Electric Warrior had transformed the former Tolkien-enthralled folkie into a luminous star.

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In his third delight-filled foray into operetta, tenor Jonas Kaufmann continues his journey from Berlin and Vienna to Hungary, the birthplace of Franz (Ferenc) Lehár and Emmerich (Imre) Kálmán.

time to read

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These two scores, like the symphonies, allow us to appreciate Rachmaninoff's more venturesome idiom-beyond the straightforward framework he uses in the popular concerti.

time to read

1 min

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As I was previewing Ben Stapp's Uzmic Ro'Samg, my thoughts drifted to Jim Self, who passed away 10 days after the album's release.

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LOST NIGHTS, FOUND SOLOS

THE PENTHOUSE TAPES PRESERVE A SLICE OF SEATTLE JAZZ HISTORY

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Over more than two decades, Kyle Thomas has crafted an unpolished strain of rock under the name King Tuff. His music has always felt raw, channeling the spirit of Thin Lizzy but with less concern for hitmaking.

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1 mins

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HOLST: The Planets; BAX: Tintagel

This is The Planets' second go-round on LSO Live, which, decades ago, brought us one conducted by Sir Colin Davis. I'd forgotten this label has been around as long as that!

time to read

1 mins

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SNAIL MAIL- Ricochet

\"Tractor Beam,\" the lush and expansive opening track on Ricochet, wastes no time reaching altitude. Its confident introduction draws listeners in.

time to read

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Building a music ecosystem in Birmingham

Hifi listening bars have expanded far beyond Tokyo, which was their Ground Zero.

time to read

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