After reading some other reviews on this forum I decided to elaborate on some of the details within the music that this amp brings out...
Vocalists are definately in their own very focused "space"...
Andy Bey - has a nice velvety deepness
Salena Jones - has a very nice edge to her vocals
Diana Krall - has a nice whipery texture on her quiet tracks
Angela Scapatura (new artist) - you can almost see just how much fun she is having with the boys in the band
Joni Mitchel's Blue album sounds amazing through this amp - very airy and extremely natural
Instruments display exceptional details...
Cello & violin - you can hear the bow actually generating the notes as it's drawn across the string in the lower register
Cymbals are extremely dynamic - on some Spike Heatley CD's I have, you can hear exactly how the cymbal is struck - e.g. with the end of the brush or stick as opposed to the further down - whether the strike is on the edge, mid way or extreme centre of the cymbal
Vibraphone - you can hear the "plunk" of the mallet stiking the note before the tone is generated
Trombone - you can hear the initial "spit" requied to produce the note
Acoustic Guitar - you can detect whether a pick or bare fingers are being used and the harmonics generated by the guitar are true to how a live guitar sounds
On most wind instruments, clarinet, oboe, flute you can hear the keys being pressed and released (I have several recordings providing these details)
On really good orchestral recordings the seperation between instruments is amazing and their placement across the soundstage is very accurate.
One Choral CD I have that is so well engineed, you can almost count the number of vocalists - OK, bit an exageration, but each vocalist seems to be in their very own well defined space.
Of course on some CD's it's a curse because you can hear people walking around or shuffling papers or tapping feet. It sometimes detracts from the music
One BB King "Live" CD I have sounded aweful through my pevious amp, but through the Raysonic it sounds amazing - just like you were there
How do I know how live instruments really sounds? - well, I was brought up in a musical family - piano, Clarinet, harmonica, guitar (6 and 12 string), mandolin, bass guitar, drums and a bugle. I also played in a band, where I was exposed to Saxaphone, keyboards and various brass & wind instruments.
Now, the rest of my audio equipment is s little antiquated, but somehow it produces very nice results, as this amp seems to bring out the very best in details.
The Rest of My System:
- Rega Planar II + RB250 arm (too many other mods to mention)
- Rega Elys cartridge
- Cambridge Audio 540 phono amp
- Rotel RCD 940 CD Player (added gold output sockets)
- Luxman T210 tuner
- Magnat Ribbon 5 Speakers (re-wired and re-foamed)
- DIY MDF Speaker Stands - sand filled to 35lbs
- DIY Van Den Hul D102 mkIII interconnect + Furutech RCA's
- DIY Van Den Hul Speaker Cables + bananas
- DIY Furutech Power cables _ good plugs
- Panamax 4300 power conditioner
- Lovan 4-tier rack with MDF shelves
Vocalists are definately in their own very focused "space"...
Andy Bey - has a nice velvety deepness
Salena Jones - has a very nice edge to her vocals
Diana Krall - has a nice whipery texture on her quiet tracks
Angela Scapatura (new artist) - you can almost see just how much fun she is having with the boys in the band
Joni Mitchel's Blue album sounds amazing through this amp - very airy and extremely natural
Instruments display exceptional details...
Cello & violin - you can hear the bow actually generating the notes as it's drawn across the string in the lower register
Cymbals are extremely dynamic - on some Spike Heatley CD's I have, you can hear exactly how the cymbal is struck - e.g. with the end of the brush or stick as opposed to the further down - whether the strike is on the edge, mid way or extreme centre of the cymbal
Vibraphone - you can hear the "plunk" of the mallet stiking the note before the tone is generated
Trombone - you can hear the initial "spit" requied to produce the note
Acoustic Guitar - you can detect whether a pick or bare fingers are being used and the harmonics generated by the guitar are true to how a live guitar sounds
On most wind instruments, clarinet, oboe, flute you can hear the keys being pressed and released (I have several recordings providing these details)
On really good orchestral recordings the seperation between instruments is amazing and their placement across the soundstage is very accurate.
One Choral CD I have that is so well engineed, you can almost count the number of vocalists - OK, bit an exageration, but each vocalist seems to be in their very own well defined space.
Of course on some CD's it's a curse because you can hear people walking around or shuffling papers or tapping feet. It sometimes detracts from the music
One BB King "Live" CD I have sounded aweful through my pevious amp, but through the Raysonic it sounds amazing - just like you were there
How do I know how live instruments really sounds? - well, I was brought up in a musical family - piano, Clarinet, harmonica, guitar (6 and 12 string), mandolin, bass guitar, drums and a bugle. I also played in a band, where I was exposed to Saxaphone, keyboards and various brass & wind instruments.
Now, the rest of my audio equipment is s little antiquated, but somehow it produces very nice results, as this amp seems to bring out the very best in details.
The Rest of My System:
- Rega Planar II + RB250 arm (too many other mods to mention)
- Rega Elys cartridge
- Cambridge Audio 540 phono amp
- Rotel RCD 940 CD Player (added gold output sockets)
- Luxman T210 tuner
- Magnat Ribbon 5 Speakers (re-wired and re-foamed)
- DIY MDF Speaker Stands - sand filled to 35lbs
- DIY Van Den Hul D102 mkIII interconnect + Furutech RCA's
- DIY Van Den Hul Speaker Cables + bananas
- DIY Furutech Power cables _ good plugs
- Panamax 4300 power conditioner
- Lovan 4-tier rack with MDF shelves