Capital Audiofest, save thyself!


This is a message to the brand exhibitors at Capital Audiofest. I've got an idea for next year: Don't bring any of YOUR boring music to the show and advertise the event as an all-audience choice show. That's right, WE bring our music and you play whatever it is, whether you like it or want it or not. Yes, you want to show off your equipment in a controlled environment, but I would venture to say the music I brought with me on CD does it better than the somnolent elevator or atrium with a waterfall music you all kill us with. We - or I - want to hear audiophile grade sources, of course, but also modern music that people not living in the high-end audio bubble - a place called the real world - listen to. We also need some damn life at the show. Not a single room in the hotel had sound coming out of it I was rushing to for the MUSIC. A show like this MUST include that facet, not just great equipment. Hell, even just play some Joni Mitchell (always flawlessly recorded). Something, anything. WAKE UP!

Every one of the rooms I visited were manned by equipment designers or sharp and mostly reasonably friendly salespeople who hadn't a single clue about how to bring out the best of their systems to normal people. Nothing had a beat, few were playing music with horns or voices, none of it - zero - had anything to do with what sells today - just terrible ambient, rudimentary garbage with a variety of percussive sounds. I would have settled for some old Blue Note jazz. I ran screaming from the hotel at the end of three hours there and my friend and I vowed to never return.

That said, we still heard some superb equipment. I took no notes, so can't remember everything, but here are a few quick-take impressions . . . The great Jeff Joseph manned the room showing off his sumptuous top-of-the-line Pearl floor-standing speakers (about $39,000 or so), but the room with his Pulsar2 Graphene mini monitors was far more effective and appealing. At around $10,000 they are indisputably ranking among the very best speakers in the world. Vivid, popping, wonderful soundstage, startling bass, tonal excellence. They have no drawbacks whatsoever, period, and they set the standard we measured by in every other room.
Good guy Bill Hutchins, the chief designer at LKV, has two winners in his effort to bring more affordable equipment to market. We loved his LKV PWR-3 power amp (I think $3,350) and the new Veros VNL phono pre. I'm pretty sure this was coupled with the Pulsars. Top shelf all around. Bravo. LKV was new to me, and I'm mostly a tube guy, but this was wholly impressive.

The all-Audio Note room was expensive and an absolute standout. I believe they were running their AN-E speakers, the 8w P3 Tonmeister amp, and I believe their TT-3 or coming TT-3 Half Reference turntable with cart. The whole system had good flesh to it, despite how boring the music was, with an appealing human-scale and dimension. I like when it sounds life sized. We got to play our own music (Christine and the Queens' "People, I've Been Sad" on the Audio Note CD player (I think it was the 5.1x) and I would have opened the wallet and taken that player home in a heartbeat if I hadn't purchased a Bryston BCD-3 a couple years ago. Another round of bravos. If my somewhat needy speakers could play nice with an 8w tube amp and whatever the pre-amp was, I wouldn't hesitate to break the bank and go Audio Note.

The Amped America room did nothing for us. Lifeless, flat, compressed sound.

On Sunday, the large Democracy Room at the hotel was in the hands of Command Performance AV and they were showing off a massive Gryphon power amp. I can't remember the speakers but if you like huge, all-enveloping sound, far beyond scale, get in touch with them about this system. They knew how to fill a big room. Bad music, enjoyable experience.

Tried twice to get into the little Border Patrol room, set up horizontally, but it was packed and we didn't want to stand in the corner by the door to try to hear.
Couldn't find Conrad Johnson, which was hugely disappointing because they were high on my list.

Enjoyed a Pear Audio turntable in Room 307.

Merrill Audio's Element 116 monoblocks (I'm pretty sure that was the model) and the Genesis Maestro (pretty sure that was the model!) speakers, a design I hadn't seen before and worth looking up, produced exquisite sound and I wished there was less talking in the room and less bad music and a little more volume showing off something worth listening to. I would have sat there happily for an hour. VPI had it's 80-some-pound 40th Anniversary Classic Direct turntable on display in there but not hooked up and it was a beast to behold. Would have loved to have heard it.
I didn't see it advertised on the Capital Audiofest website, but one room was showing a Kronos turntable (can't remember which one) and lord the music coming out of that thing was beautiful. I can't see owning a table that looks so bling, but rich people in the market should not ignore this company.

McGary Audio - maker of a very striking KT88 tube-based SA2 amplifier was back again this year with Salk speakers. McGary himself declined to allow a switch flip from ultralinear to triode on his very versatile amp because it would change the volume level, as if that wasn't adjustable. Don't bring in a system you can't adjust the volume on. When your amp is before the public, find a way to flip a switch to triode if asked. We're there to hear the amp, not just half of it. I liked the McGary-Salk match better the last time I heard it, so it must have been the room, setup or (yawn) music. Still, really good-sounding equipment by both, although I'm still not thrilled from an aesthetic standpoint with the SA2's unbalanced RCA interconnects being on the front panel. He's got a sound reason, as the designer, but I'd sacrifice whatever little incremental betterment that is to have them in the back. One of the most beautiful amps on the market (a shade under $8,000), and I'd love to fiddle with it - and its user-adjustable global negative feedback knob - when no one is saying no to me. This amp remains coveted.

Finally, VAC took over the massive Atrium room again with a system that probably cost about $450,000. Teamed with Von Schweikert speakers. It was better-sounding than the last time I remember it, and that's saying something, but I didn't hear any music playing I'd want to play at home (the theme of this post). I asked if I could play a CD and the gentleman in charge said I could - after he played a few things he wanted to hear - so I rolled out. There were maybe three or four other people in there. This is the second Capital Audiofest I've attended at which VAC has displayed its beautiful Sigma 170i integrated with KT88s - probably the most affordable amp in its lineup yet still plenty expensive - but not had it plugged in. I'd love to hear this thing (and others in the lineup) some day, not just the company's most untouchable components.

The music vendors in the lobby were not getting much action on Sunday and had a bevy of audiophile discs and vinyl records for sale. I didn't snap up a thing but was tempted. I would have LOVED to have heard a "Still Crazy After All These Years" MoFi one-step ultradisc, but at $200 I decided to take the money up the road for some cheap and delicious Northern Chinese dim sum at the venerable A&J on Rockville Pike. If you like authentic Chinese food, that stretch of road is a wonderland of options.



beeswax

Showing 14 responses by beeswax

p.s. - the LKV Veros VNL phono pre was Class A gain circuitry, no opamps. Excellent.
Darnit, Faxer! I was sorely in need of rescue by you and your room, then. Clearly, you get it, so much appreciation and I'm sorry I missed out.
That problem was not in evidence on Sunday. Ugh, Diana Krall.These exhibitors should literally hire someone who knows about music to work their room for a weekend. I just can't understand how they don't get the importance of this in winning over customers. The ones streaming especially should just ask whoever is in the room what they want.

jond, did you like the LKV or did the hum just kill it for you?
Totally agree, bhvf. No hostility toward taste, and at least we agree on the crappy music. If I knew a way to get a mass complaint to these people about it I would.
Great advice, tubegb, thanks.
Douglas, thank you, too. When you put it that way, I think my idea would be great for Sundays, traditionally the show's slowest day (right?).
Also, yes! They put the nooses around their own necks.

Here is me at the show: Love equipment, know a little (almost enough) but not technically savvy, believe firmly in my good ears, have a decent system at home, read the trades on dailyaudiophile.com, I love music and have thousands of records and CDs - and, to makers, most importantly - I have money. I'm the ideal candidate to be lured in to take the plunge on something that costs up to $10,000 or maybe even $15,000.
So, I should be having fun. A LOT of it.
I saw some young couples making the round, too. I would never bring my girlfriend - into me, into music, into me being into audio, but not, herself, into audio - to the show because there's nothing in it for her (i.e. good music).
Jallan, great comments on the sound treatment. they new exactly what to do with their baffles in the Command Performance room. I like when they get it right like that.

As for fsonicsmith, this is my post and you can say whatever the hell you want here. Doug, too, of course. The way you described the vibe was dead on - but not across the board. People were rude and clubby. But some of the old men with the cologne are actually the geniuses who design this stuff and they're doing their best after a big run of covid and probably a million hours too many in the basement tinkering. Also, unfathomable layout until you spend a couple days there. It feels like a house of mirrors. I got to two rooms and there were signs on the door that said, "Enter from other hallway." What other hallway? Finally figured that out.  I did want to get to the Conrad Johnson room and never found it. Still, all your bullets points are accurate, even if I'm with Doug about not wanting the shows to just disappear. It just felt lame.
I wrote, as suggested, to Gary who runs Capital Audiofest and now I just feel shitty. He comes off a three-day event it takes him a year to prepare for and he gets me criticizing two days out. I wrote back and apologized. I was trying to be constructive and titled the note "constructive criticism" but I can get how I came off very badly. Bah. Can't win.
Yes, the divergence on AudioNote is fascinating. I've heard them at Deja Vu in Virginia and their speakers stood toe to toe with the Harbeths on hand.
Thanks jond, I appreciate that. For a while I wrote restaurant reviews and I learned that good restaurants want constructive feedback, good or bad, but I think timing is important and I was insensitive in this instance. I could have just stuck with what I wrote here. I'm sure they'll run through the threads about the show on a variety of sites.
I missed the Overture room.
When the head of this show wrote me back, he said that some vendors complained that when they allowed people to play their own music, at times guests would walk out. You don't want to be responsible for driving people away. Personally, it wasn't like I was playing crazy out there cacophony. There is not accounting for taste.
fsonicsmith, the floor is yours!

minorl, with all due respect, I don't want to hear Dire Straits again either. I have nothing against Diana Krall. If she's good enough for Elvis, she's good enough for me. I just want some adventurousness and creativity and excitement and the new at the show. We just keep replaying the same records again and again and again. I LOVE audiophile pressings but many are of records we all have long since ingested for years. We can hear them anew but really? Example: The Paul Simon "Still Crazy After All These Years" $200 (now after selling out) ultradisc. That record when it came out sounded magnificent, so, yeah, it may be improved upon after 30 years, it's kind of played. I'd like to see the shows getting more cutting edge musically. They aim so high with the equipment, why is the music so tired and predictable? Hire some people who know what's going on NOW and also know what is well recorded and turn them loose.

no oddball at all, bluorion. Well-produced electronic music is such a tactile experience. Just to pull a well-known band out of a hat - it's one of the reasons Daft Punk hit so big: huge hooks and electronic music you literally could feel.

Jakesnak, the audiophile media constantly advises us to listen to the music, not our equipment. So, when I go to a show, I don't want to just listen to the equipment - but of course also listen to the equipment. I want to have FUN listening to the equipment! Not plinks and plonks and more Dire Straits.

Jssmith, you put it far more succinctly than I. I'm PLEADING WITH EVERYONE to heed this advice. It says it all:

"If high-end doesn't want to die off with their current mature audience, and lose the "Buick" reputation they have, they'd better start to appeal to the newly crypto-rich who listen to a whole different breed of music. Analog watches made the transition to a youthful appeal even though everyone has a clock on their phone. So there isn't really an excuse for high-end audio."

Thank you, tjassoc, for the fine words. I try to be constructive and kind and also have some fun. I'm exhausted by the viciousness and cowardly sniping on the Internet. Being nice doesn't have to mean we're insufferable goodie goodies, but if you're going to offend someone, at least do it indirectly! :)