I haven’t heard EVERY B&W Nautilus, but I did hear the first Nautilus. Unengaging is how I would put them. Some speakers make me reach for the OFF switch. The Nautilus did not, they also wouldn’t make me reach for my pocket book, even when driven by stacks of Krell amplifiers.
I had always loved the looks and concept of the B&W line, until I heard them. Modern versions seem to do odd things to speech, so much so that movies mixed on them only play back well on B&W. LotR is one example.
The point I am making I guess, is that to me the studio grade attributes are pure hype that should not have made it out of the 20th century. They are certainly not neutral, particularly well time aligned, or smooth measuring, and based on what I've heard of LotR, really not neutral enough to use in a professional setting.
Best,
Erik
I had always loved the looks and concept of the B&W line, until I heard them. Modern versions seem to do odd things to speech, so much so that movies mixed on them only play back well on B&W. LotR is one example.
The point I am making I guess, is that to me the studio grade attributes are pure hype that should not have made it out of the 20th century. They are certainly not neutral, particularly well time aligned, or smooth measuring, and based on what I've heard of LotR, really not neutral enough to use in a professional setting.
Best,
Erik