Da Benz?


Greetings,

If anyone would care to recommend a cartridge for the setup below I’d greatly appreciate it! Thinking about a Benz Micro wood (but don’t know if it should be low, medium, or high output version). Also considering a Grado but am open to other suggestions. Looking to be  in the $1k – $2k price range.

Setup:

    Sota STAR TT

    SME IV Arm

    Conrad Johnson EF1 Phono Stage

    Conrad Johnson Premier 16 LS Pre

    Conrad Johnson Premier 12 Mono Blocks

    Vandersteen Wood Quatro Signature Speakers

    Vandenhul Tea Track Bi-wire

    Stealth PGS IC’s

Prefer a warm and relaxed sound but with good articulation.

Music tastes are classical, soft jazz (Diana Krall, Holly Cole, etc.), and classic rock.

Thank you!

Randy


rbschauman

Showing 2 responses by invictus005

I would look into MM/MI cartridges if you want something that sounds more like original tape. From current production, I recommend:

1.) Ortofon 2M Black
2.) Audio Technica VM760SLC, VM750SH, VM740ML
3.) Nagaoka MP-500, MP-300

Not all, but most MC cartridges sound bleached out and unengaging in the midrange and have over exaggerated treble. Making them sound lean and giving a false sense of dynamics and detail.

For example, I recently listened to a Lyra Atlas and it was like listening to a special effects show. It was ridiculous. There was no real music coming out, just a bizarre bastardization.
@stringreen  It was properly set-up on a VPI Titan turntable by people who have been in analog business their entire lives. This was not the first time I heard a Lyra cartridge sound overly bright. 

I listen to live music at least once a month. Small venues, large venues, jazz, blues, classical, rock, etc. I attend Chicago's Symphony Orchestra regularly. As well as the Green Mill for jazz. 

What the Lyra Atlas/VPI combo played was not music. It was something, but it was not music. Live music does not sound like this.

Neither does tape. I've listened to master tapes of local jazz bands recorded on reel to reel and they don't sound like that either.

I hate reading reviews of these expensive MC cartridges where the reviewer claims that these cartridges pull more detail from the record's surface. In reality, they don't pull more of anything. They dramatically over exaggerated what's already there. 

This super show of hyper detailed sound has to stop. It's ridiculous.