Poging GOUD - Vrij
Canor Hyperion P1
Stereophile
|July 2025
PREAMPLIFIER
Just when I thought my equipment reviewing schedule was locked in for many months, an unavoidable last-minute cancellation sent me scrambling for an alternative.
Jim Austin to the rescue. To his query, “How would you like to review a tube preamp from Canor, of Slovakia?” I answered with an enthusiastic “yes!”
In addition to the exciting prospect of reviewing the first tubed preamplifier to come my way in a long time, hearing the Canor Hyperion P1 preamplifier ($12,500) in my system would enable me to get a handle on the sound of gear I'd only encountered once, at High End Munich 2024.¹ As is often the case at shows, I left without a clear sense of the preamp's contribution to the system's sound, let alone its ultimate potential.
The Canor Hyperion P1's price is far lower than that of my two reference, solid state preamps, the Soulution 727 ($74,975) and the D'Agostino Relentless ($150,000). Because of the huge price discrepancies, this was a review where it only made sense to explore the sound of the gear at hand without comparing it to gear with a heftier price tag.
A brief historyCanor was established in Slovakia in 1995, a mere two years after the separation of Czechoslovakia. Although Canor has designed its own equipment since day one, the Canor brand took a back seat to the company's primary role as an OEM/ODM (Original Equipment Manufacturer/Original Design Manufacturer), anonymously designing and producing equipment for other brands.² The company first began to seriously market equipment under the Canor name in 2020. Five years later, Canor products are distributed in at least 30 countries; US distribution is handled by Scott Bierfeldt’s New Jersey-based Verdant Audio.
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