ZYX Optimum phono cartridge - a defining statement


ZYX Optimum phono cartridge


Following is a review of the latest ZYX cartridge the Universe Optimum.

Without further ado I would like to thank Mehran of SORAsound who goes so far above and beyond in realizing this audio quest for his ZYX family.

I have owned all the ZYX Universe models since 2006. All have the characteristic ZYX warm, natural and detailed sound. Each was the low output 0.24mV design. The original Universe was solid is resolving difficult passages especially in chamber and jazz music. Moving forward to the Universe II the cartridge took on a lot of low end energy and prat. Rock music was more dynamic, the transients enhanced and it had that extra body in the lower register.

My system started with the Galibier Gavia turntable, triplanar arm and Doshi Aalap full function preamp. During the time I had my Universe II, I upgraded the tonearm to a Durand Talea, Daedalus Ulysses speakers and a KL Audio LP 200 electrostatic cleaner. All significantly enhanced my system.

Fast forward to stepping up to the Universe Premium. This was a very apparent jump in sonic realism. The sound opened up in a tangible and natural way. The instruments just hung there in space. The tonal qualities resolved further and separation was enhanced. Overtones, details, things like really picking out a buried bass drum or percussive elements.

Moving forward to the present - the Universe Optimum is just as much a quantium leap as the Universe II to the Universe Premium was. Everything snapped into place. Micro and macro dynamics fully rendered. Incredible detail and imaging. The presentation just occupies a space completely natural and open.

Instruments are even more defined, the sound converges around the source. The bass is so taunt that even the most subtle bass line is drawn out distinctly but in no way bloated.

Reggie Workman at times plays very subtle and his upright bass is buried in the mix in active portions of John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme. Not so with the ZYX Optimum - the bass line is crystal clear and lower in volume. Toms, snare and bass drums were felt in a three dimension sense - the tautness, size and velocity and tone on the heads, particularly the bass drum are very apparent and accurately rendered. Cymbals, brushes or resonating piano keys have a distinct pulse and luscious decay when approprate. Stringed instruments have a warm bodied resonance. You are in the room for Bill Evans, Paul Motian and Scott Lafaro during Sunday at the Village Vanguard.

I was overwhelmed hearing my standard go by - Steely Dan’s Aja side 1. This album and all it’s nuances is in my DNA. Everything was rendered with such realism. This fully suspended the thought that I was listening to an audio system.I was floored with glee.

Vocals have such body and emotion whether it be Ella and Louis, James Taylor, David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, Rebecca Pigeon, Norah Jones, Sufjan Stevens, Nina Simone, Sam Cooke, Marvin Gaye, etc.. Vocal harmonies from CSN, The Beatles, Yes, Ray Charles, and Gillian Welch/Dave Rawlings are very well defined and engaging.

Acoustic instruments are rendered organically with warm overtones. Electric guitars and synths cut through strongly when intended.

It’s been a true joy replaying familiar records and introducing new ones. It is interesting that lesser songs seem to grab me more and I appreciate what the artist had intended.

Jaqueline Dupre’s Elgar Cello Concerto has the most delicate then dynamic elements. The detail of the ensemble playing in Yes’ Fragile is magical - doubling of parts standing out like never before. Bob Dylan’s More Blood recording is an "in room" experience. The Living Stereo Charles Munch / Boston Symphony recordings - Ravel Daphne and Chloe and Fritz and the Fritz Reiner Chicago Symphony Bartok Symphonie Fantastic are explosive with quick and composed dynamics and subtle in the quieter nuanced sections. The drone of Chris Wood’s saxophone as it builds up in Traffic’s Low Spark of High Heeled Boys gave me goosebumps.

My whole system has been elevated in a major way.

The ZYX Optimum is one of those mind boggling components that dramatically converges on realism. The Optimum brings out the passion in reproduced music in ways I have never fully experienced before. The "you are there" essence is palpatible and so engaging.



Tom

128x128audiotomb

Showing 6 responses by chakster

I'm curious, if i could afford to buy and to test all the multi-thousand dollar cartridges in the world from those modern designers like Nakatsuka-San and others (there are many), what would be my statement regarding my rare vintage gems designed, made and voiced by legends like Takeda-San, Isamu Ikeda and others ?   

What if the legends like Ikeda-San (RIP) could live forever and making new cartridges every year? 

What is the giants of the industry could still make a fantastic MM or MC cartridges and people who designed them could teach new generation? 

And finally what if the market demand for the phono cartridges could be much higher today (like it was in the 70's) ? 

I can also think about the price for today's best cartridges in 30 years perspective, i will be like 73 y.o. and it would be nice to see a NOS top of the line ZYX from 2019 still sealed in 2049 :) 

But at the moment we have some fantastic cartridges made in the 70's, 80's and even in the early 90's by world best cartridge designers. 

Each time i read a comments or review from the owner of the phono cartridge with a price tag over $5 i wish to ask for his background, especially if the current favorite cart of such person is something over $15k.

Each of us is pretty sure that no single cartridge can't cost that much, no matter what materials used.  

Dealers who can sell "the dream" for that much are genius !

They are along with the cartridge designers are very well informed of the main syndrome of the "audiophilia". 

And Mehran is one of them, i've bought my $3-5k ZYX from him two times, great service. The only problem is that i couldn't get any technical information from him personally when i had some technical questions (even some basic stuff about the gear he is selling, really).

No more ZYX in my life, no more overpriced "esoteric" cartridges, only top quality vintage high-end from the golden age of analog (in pristine condition) from all the best cartridge designers. And you know what ? I like it much better than those ZYX Airy III Silver Coil and copper Premium 4D SB2 i had in my life. 

I was wrong at that time, i should learn the basics first, discover some killer vintage cartridges first and only then thinking about something new, but i was brainwashed by the industry with all their classic tools such as reviews, marketing etc. My mistake. I paid for my experience, but learned some. 

It's funny to watch the sequel, a better cartridge every year for "better" price, always more and more expensive ignoring the fact that even $5k is insane for any cartridge. This is my vision of the modern high-end. Interesting that they can't design even a good box for their cartridges, because in the 70's and in the 80's each cartridge box was so much better and properly designed individually, no to mention a booklet. Now they use cheap digital prints and plain boxes even for $5k cartridges.   

 
@jollytinker

I see your point and personally I would love to sample older MM carts from the so-called "golden age" but I’ve found that my efforts haven’t been too fruitful (haven’t seen the magic yet). The carts that interest me - a Grace Level II for instance - are pretty old at this point. its like a car. air cooled porsches are wonderful and superior in some respects to a more modern car (tank like build quality; seat of the pants thrill). but they’re old and you need to know a thing or two (or spend a bunch of money) to get them fully "sorted." On the other hand you can buy an artisanal car that takes the best of vintage technology and mates it with modern design and materials, like the Singer Porsche. But of course you’ll have to pay a lot for the service. I would love to drive a Singer 911 but it’s out of my range.

All vintage carts in my collection are old, but NEW, some of the even sealed (NOS), you have mentioned the Grace, i have nearly all Grace LEVEL II and F14 top models with all the exotic cantilevers. These are fantastic cartridges. An opened item does not require any service at all, i don’t service an old cartridges. I have no idea what do you mean by servicing an MM cartridge ? All you need is a brand new stylus wich you can change by yourself, and we don’t need a service for this operation. I am buyin spare styli too. I have NOS factory sealed styli that i will open myself when needed. A fear of dried up or softened suspension is a myth for most for the well know top of the line vintage MM/MI and MC, except for some notorious models that must be avoided.

I do not miss my two ZYX at all, because some MC cartridges like Fidelity-Research FR-7fz, Grace ASAKURA ONE, Miyabi MCA ... had a much bigger impact. I even bought Ikeda 9 III and Miyabi Standard ... and even if i will add many more rare vintage MM/MI in this list the total in USD will be lower than retail price for one ZYX cartridge. But the experience with so many cartridges is far more important than a wish to own something very expensive and pretended to be the best ever.

For this reason i’m asking for the background of a person who’s buyin the most expensive cartridges in the world. If this person have a decades of personal experience with many top of the line LOMC or MM made before ZYX brand was registered, and the ZYX is a result of his personal research i can understand it.

But if a person comparing one ZYX to another ZYX and dealing with all these cartridges for years i just don’t understand the hype. I’ve been there with two ZYX models that was extremely expensive for me (personally) and Premium 4D SBII was better than Airy III with silver coil. Dealers always pushing a new models and ready to offer "special prices" or exchange/upgrade. They can do all that tricks and you’re hooked. One day it’s time to say "ok that’s enough, i’m quit" (imo).

There are many cartridges that sounded so much better/different than any ZYX i have tried in my system (and all of them are much more reasonably priced for a "normal" person). The same dealers in the US can offer Miyajima for example.

Anyway, it’s all about personal preferences in sound.



@lewm

Chakster, are you listening? The ZYX models you’ve owned are not in the same league with the UNIverse series.

True, but do you know what is Zyx Premium 4D with Silver Base II ?
That was another premium model at the time, not so long ago actually.
And that model was not damn cheap at all, actually $5K cartridge (must be a great cartridge at that price). But it was enough for me to understand that the price means nothing. They can make $50k cartridge in the next 10 years, but i don’t care anymore, because the improvement does not cost that much and not so big, well, at least to my ears. I just don’t want to play these games anymore. Got enough vintage LOMC (very rare) to say that some of them are absolutely amazing, we have some rave reviews (for those who care) about Miyabi Standard for example.

I have my advocate Nanric who 
I thought the empty box is a signature of grey market import.

You can't receive an empty box from Mehran at SoraSound.
His service is top notch, no doubt.

The only problem is marketing strategy. The gap between $5k and $17k is huge, but it's not necessary to pay the difference to buy a better cartridge. A better cartridge (this is subjective) can be found for les than $5k for sure.   
@don_c55

Why is the ZYX UNIverse line exclusive to SoraSound?

Because he’s the one and only US distributor of ZYX, the rest of the dealers are official re-sellers.

Why are the UNIverse ZYX cartridges never listed on the official ZYX website?

Some models made exclussively for US distributor. There was Omega and Atmos before. Can't remember which one was made only for UK market via SoraSound. 

The original UNIverse looks exactly like a standard ZYX AIRY. Why no explanation on the "secret" differences in design of the various UNIverse’s and their standard ZYX counterparts?

Only first version of the UNIverse looks like Airy, but the UNIverse II looks like Zyx Premium 4D or Ultimate 4D

P.S. Here is my ex Premium 4D SBII and my Airy III
It's interesting, i've been looking for the highest resolution cartridge when i've been using tube (triode) amplification. ZYX was good for my needs. 

Now when i'm using ultra high resolution current source amplification from Nelson Pass, i can enjoy warmer souding cartridges like my Miyabi MCA (finally mounted) with the best midrange ever. 

So everything is system dependant, i believe my system always was extremely dynamic, because of the super high efficient full range drivers.

I have to admit that Miyabi MCA does not sound like many other LOMC cartridges from my arsenal. Vintage cartridge, again.