September
2025

Celebrating
Our Spectacular 30th Anniversary!
Honoring Enjoy the Music.com's
exceptional articles and reviews.
During 2025, Enjoy the Music.com
will feature historic audio gear reviews and articles during our past 30
years. As always, in the end what really matters is that
you... enjoy the music!
High-Performance
Audio & Music Industry News
Essential high-end audio news you need to know.
Stay up-to-date on the latest audiophile and music industry news.

Editorial: Best Of 2025 Blue Note Equipment Awards
Celebrating the best high
fidelity / high-end audiophile gear of 2025!
High-End Audio
Awards By Enjoy the Music.com
Enjoy the Music.com's
Best Of 2025 Blue Note Awards celebrates the many great achievements
by audiophile manufacturers within the high-end audio and Hi-Res Audio industry. Our
2025
Blue Note Awards is a three decade culmination of reviewing luxurious high-end
audio equipment and carefully
choosing what products have earned special recognition for our annual awards. Our Best Of
2025 Blue Note Award celebrates the finest products we have reviewed during the
previous 12 months. Recipients have
been carefully chosen after much debate and consideration by our staff of
reviewers. With each passing
year our industry has experienced great advancements in technology including analog
circuitry, vinyl LP and analog playback, digital-to-analog
converters (DACs), loudspeaker design, personal media
players, and more. While there are many great
pieces of premium high fidelity audio equipment now available within the marketplace, Enjoy
the Music.com's Best Of 2025 Blue Note Awards is compiled
from products we have reviewed within the past 12 months that have earned extra special
attention.
--->
Editorial: Best Of 2025 Blue Note Equipment Awards.

Star Trek And Enjoy the Music.com Are In Another Universe
Roger writes to 360 completely different degrees of immersive high-end audio.
Article
By Roger Skoff
This month, Enjoy the
Music.com celebrates their very
special 30th Anniversary in bring joy to both music lovers and audiophiles. For
decades, we helps our loyal readers realize their sound system's dream and true
potential! The number 360 is Highly Composite: It has 24 divisors, more than any
smaller positive integer. That makes it extremely useful in measurement and in
geometry, where, for example, a circle is described as having an immersive 360
degrees, a convention dating back to Babylonian astronomy, which used base-60 (sexagesimal)
math. Ancient calendars often used 360-day years, with 5 extra days added later
to remain astronomically accurate. The sound we hear reaches us in a full
360-degrees. The number's divisibility was what made it practical for early
astronomy. 360 also has rotational Symmetry: In trigonometry and polar
coordinates, 360° represents a full rotation—returning to the starting point.
--->
Star Trek And Enjoy the Music.com Are In Another Universe.

Enjoying Music As A Happy Escape
The more you listen, the better the experience.
Editorial By Alan Sircom
Of all the reasons I've heard for buying a good audio system, this one seems the most honest. The world, it seems, is falling apart. War, famine, political turmoil, an unpredictable climate, fear of crime... all fuelled by an out-of-control social media and our never-ending desire to doom-scroll through it. Audio is the great escape from that all-pervading sense of
dread. A friend, not in the audio business, has a small but relatively nice little audio system. And he has one rule when playing it; phones off. Really
'off', not 'silent'. That means no Shazaming tracks - if you want to know what it is, you ask. That means no sudden
wiki-expert knowledge of a band. And it means no loss of focus mid-way through the track as you are drawn to
'InstaGoogleTweetFace.' This resonates with the 'no phones' request made in Classic Album Sundays sessions, where you listen to an entire album in one sitting. Phones are banned there for the same
reason. It's strange just how far we've come that the simple demand to turn your phone off is met with looks of sheer horror.
---> Enjoying Music As A Happy
Escape.

Different Perspectives
Music and sound reproduction is not limited to one single perspective.
Editorial By J. Martins
Opinion is the ideas expressed by a person. Perspective is the point of view from which they view a situation.*
The lines between the two don't seem to be well understood. Perspective helps raise awareness of new ideas and
methods. I welcome a writer's specific judgment or belief about an issue, as long as it is based on evidence and analysis. I believe in the value of perspective as a way to shape methods, sometimes the whole foundation of an entire approach. That always helps to inspire valid research efforts—even if to prove
otherwise. In audioXpress December 2017, we published an interesting article about a different approach to provide the best listening environment for dipolar and multi-directional speakers (omnidirectional), and even directed radiation patterns for specific purposes. In
"Educated Reflections," Gary Eickmeier explained why eliminating reflections is not the best approach in a listening room, and how he developed a completely different approach, enhancing the results with
"speakers that are renowned for their spaciousness, depth, and 3D imaging."
The information detailed in the article, illustrated with how to achieve the results described, intrigued a lot of audioXpress readers, and inspired some to try it out for
themselves.
---> Different
Perspectives.
Special Blue Note Awards 2025!
World Premiere Review!
The Amazing Audionet Mach Linestage And Schrödinger
Monoblock Amplifier Review
A more affordable slice of World-Class performance.
Review By Senior Editor Greg Weaver
If you are unfamiliar with the brand Audionet, one of
today's premier audio electronics manufacturers located in Berlin, Germany, it's
time to correct that oversight. Founded in 1994, after nearly a decade of developing sensors and measurement
electronics, all of which produced extraordinarily weak signals, and the
essential need to build highly reliable, high-resolution analog amplifiers for
this entirely new breed of measurement electronics at Ruhr University in Bochum,
western Germany, that same research team, who were also music lovers, created
what would become Audionet. Armed with the invaluable experience gained building these
low-noise, highly resolving amplifiers, they began building some of the most
refined and precise audio electronics available, and now, more than thirty years
later, they have grown to offer a full line of some of the finest linestages,
stereo, mono, and integrated amplifiers.
--->
The Amazing Audionet Mach Linestage And Schrödinger Monoblock Amplifier Review.
World Premiere Review!
Genesis Advanced Technologies Premium Platinum Phono Preamplifier Review
Immersing yourself within the sensational sound of spectacular music.
Review By Senior Editor Tom Lyle
Within the July 2025 issue of Enjoy The
Music.com's Review Magazine, I reviewed
the Genesis Advanced Technologies G7 Samba floorstanding loudspeakers.
Even though my reference speakers were priced considerably higher than the
Sambas, it was relatively easy to overlook this fact due to the Genesis'
outstanding sound quality, not to mention their good looks. After this Genesis
speaker's review was published, I had a chat with Genesis dealer Larry Borden of
Distinctive Stereo when he came over to pick up the speakers. We didn't discuss
the speakers as much as we talked about high-end audio in general, and of
course, music. This led us to the topic of analog reproduction, and it was
then that he mentioned the Genesis Premium Platinum phono preamp. This caught me
off guard. I had always thought that Genesis only designed and manufactured
loudspeakers. When I was speaking with Genesis's Chief Designer and CEO Gary
Koh he shared with me some specifics about the various phono preamplifiers he
owned over the years, but had never been wholly satisfied with.
--->
Genesis Advanced Technologies Premium Platinum Phono Preamplifier Review.
AGD Productions SOLO Limited Edition GaN-Power Monoblock Amplifiers And Andante Mk II Preamplifier / DAC / Phonostage / Music Streamer Review
The apex of musical reproduction in ways no other Class D design has yet achieved.
Review By Dr. Michael Bump
As a classically
trained percussionist / composer whose forte gravitates towards modern chamber
music, I naturally seek out and explore the most current of musical ideas –
Those that delve into sonic territory yet undiscovered. Contemporary percussion
recognizes the fundamental responsibility of the percussionist-as-inventor.
Indeed, we percussionists are creatures donning many hats, an amalgam of
scientists, naturalists, engineers, archeologists, et al, compelled to follow
the sonic siren of our artistic goals, unconventional or otherwise, that
ultimately shapes our art. We are musicians in search of a sound, whose
obsession it is to seek the source and its means of actuation (Yes, in the right
hands, everything is a potential musical instrument!).
--->
AGD Productions SOLO Limited Edition GaN-Power Monoblock Amplifiers And Andante Mk II Preamplifier / DAC / Phonostage / Music Streamer
Review.
Defining Audio Excellence: Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2 Hornspeaker And C18 Subwoofer Review
Experience sonic brilliance — where dreams sometimes do come true.
Review By Paul Schumann
Let's
go back in time a few years ago. It was January 2000, so that's over 25(!) years
ago. The world had survived the
Y2K crisis. Having recently purchased a couple of issues of Sound Practices,
then listening to an amazing DIY system, was starting to catch SET
(Singe-Ended Triode) fever. I was
also following an audio review website that focused quite heavily on SET gear
and high-sensitivity loudspeakers to use with it. That website was, of course, Enjoy the Music.com.
That January back in 2000 our Creative Director, Steven R Rochlin, posted a review of the
then new Avantgarde Acoustic Uno hornspeakers. They had big blue horns and looked unlike any
loudspeaker
I had ever seen. You could tell from Steven's Avantgarde Acoustic Uno review that they were something very
special. After reading it, I had a bad case of audio envy. However, there was
also family with three young children then, so extra funds were diverted to more
noble causes. Realistically, even if I had the funds, the Unos were way too big
for my small living room. But we all have our silly little pipe dreams, don't we?
--->
Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2 Hornspeaker And C18 Subwoofer Review.
Chesky Audio LC1 Bookshelf Monitor Loudspeaker Review
Clean, spacious, and incredible transparent sound.
Review By Ron Nagle
You
know, I heard it through the grapevine. Chesky Audio's LC1 Bookshelf Monitor
loudspeaker was mentioned in show reports I found online. Many critics remarked
how great these inexpensive $996 bookshelf speakers performed. At the same time,
I received a shout-out from my friend and colleague Rick Becker at Enjoy the
Music.com, and he thought the LC1 would be perfect to audition in my
smallish 12' by 19' foot ear cave listening room. Initially, that seemed to make
a lot of sense. The old audio adage tells us, small speakers fit in a small
room. So I cast my lot and submitted my case on the Chesky Audio web space. It
turns out that they were in such demand that there was a serious backlog.
The designer, Lucca Chesky, is pretty much a one-man band who is busy 3D
printing and finishing them by hand. The backstory has him still in high
school when he developed the LC1 bookshelf monitor speakers as reviewed here.
--->
Chesky Audio LC1 Bookshelf Monitor Loudspeaker Review.
Genesis G7 Samba Floorstanding Loudspeaker Review
You're drawn into the music by its amazing, lifelike sound.
Review By Senior Editor Tom Lyle
I first became aware of Genesis speakers
when I was a young man, shortly after they were first introduced in 1991 via the
audiophile press. It was tough to ignore the fact that anyone who discussed this
brand of speakers never failed to mention their chief designer, the late Arnie
Nudell, and his passion for research and development, as well as the use of
premium materials, their impeccable design, and, by all reliable accounts, their
outstanding sound quality. Genesis introduced their more affordable G7 Series in
2005, beginning with the G7c, also known as the Convertible, a bookshelf speaker
designed by Genesis' Arnie Nudell, who sadly passed away in 2017. The G7c speakers were soon followed by other models created by Mr. Nudell's successor, Gary L. Koh, who is now Genesis' Chief Designer and the CEO of Genesis Advanced Technologies. These newer models included the G7p (Petite) and the G7f, a floor-standing model with an active side-firing woofer. Although the G7 Series was discontinued in 2018, it has now been
reintroduced.
--->
Genesis G7 Samba Floorstanding Loudspeaker Review.
iSonic Cleaner 6.2-PRO Ultrasonic
Vinyl LP Cleaner Review
Ultrasonic deep cleaning and spin drying 10 LP
records in 30 minutes.
Review By Bob Grossman
The
iSonic Pro 6.2-PRO is the latest variation and upgraded record cleaner design
from a company that specializes in commercial ultrasonic cleaning machines. They
have styles and sizes for various products with personal and industrial
applications. The iSonic company has dozens of cleaner models for medical
applications, jewelry, and personal items used in the home. Jerry Fan of iSonic
said, "Over the past six years, we have made a lot of progress with cleaners
for audio systems." Jerry modestly told me he "doesn’t know too much about
anything else, but we do know about ultrasonic cleaners!" They started with
processing 5 to 10 records for cleaning only, then added the PRO accessory kit
for spin drying with an in-water filter two years ago. Those developments were
with the model P4875II+MVR10-PRO which was an upgrade to the early model
P4875II+MVR5 or MVR10....
--->
iSonic Cleaner 6.2-PRO Ultrasonic Vinyl LP Cleaner Review.
LessLoss Giant Steps Equipment Feet Review
Enjoying the purity and immediacy of the music.
Review By Rick Becker
When
I caught wind of the new Giant Steps footers from LessLoss audio I contacted
Louis Motek immediately. Having written the first review of both his BlackGround
Power Base and BlackGround for Speakers, I have very high regard for his work
and the review samples of both reside in my system. The Giant Steps footers are
even better, he claimed. I would like nine, I said, to try them on three
successive components in the rig to experience how the effect intensifies and to
try them under the corners of my loudspeakers. There was just one problem. It was the Fall audio show season
and I was committed to covering the Toronto Audiofest
2024 in October and the Capital
Audiofest 2024 in November. Back-to-back. I finished the Toronto report on a
Wednesday and on Thursday I drove down to Rockville, MD. I knew I would not have
time to write a review until the January issue....
--->
LessLoss Giant Steps Equipment Feet Review.

Manley Labs Oasis Vacuum Tube
MM / MC Phono Stage Review
Manley Labs vacuum tube Oasis
phono stage produces excellent sound quality.
Review By Tom Lyle
My
first experience with a Manley component was in the late 1990s. I was working at
a well-known recording studio mastering an album when the chief engineer
insisted we use their vacuum tube-powered Manley Stereo Variable Mu
Limiter-Compressor, which I had no idea at the time was one of Manley's first
products which was introduced in 1994. We had the music signal pass through the
Manley compressor but kept all its settings on default. This happened quite a
long time ago, so I can't recall any specifics about how the Manley affected the
album's sound quality other than passing the signal through this studio
component made the album sound closer to our goal of making it "sound like
a record." Shortly after, I learned that Manley designed and manufactured
high-end home-system audio products.
--->
Manley Labs Oasis Vacuum Tube MM / MC Phono Stage Review.
PureAudioProject Duet 15 Loudspeaker Review
A benchmark performance open baffle loudspeaker.
Review By Dr. Jules Coleman
Featuring the
extraordinary Voxativ Pife full range driver mated to a comparably fast 15"
woofer, the PureAudioProject (PAP) Duet 15 offers the listener an unrivaled,
relaxed, unhurried, yet fully resolved natural and immediate musical experience
that box speakers, for the most part, can only dream of providing, and one that
competitor open baffle designs will struggle, most likely with only limited
success, to equal. These speakers are unassuming, seductive, and enthralling. I
found myself unable to resist falling into the music's awaiting arms for the
better part of the several months I was fortunate enough to have them in my
home. The term 'open baffle' is vague. The standard design consists of a single baffle (think of the 'front baffle' of an enclosed speaker) on which one or more drivers are affixed. All open baffle speakers produced by PureAudioProject are of this sort.
---> PureAudioProject Duet 15 Loudspeaker
Review.
Raidho X2.6 Floorstanding Loudspeaker Review
Unlocking the enchanting potential of sonic art.
Review By Tom Lyle
The subject of this review, the Raidho X2.6
floorstanding loudspeaker, is from their newer "X" Series. In its
literature, Raidho states that the "X" in this series moniker denotes
"eXtreme performance for the price." Yes, their X series features four
models that, on average, are priced lower than most of Raidho's other models.
Even though these four models in Raidho's X series speakers might have been
built to a price point, I couldn't find anything about their X.2 — including
their level of technological precision, fit and finish, not to mention their
sound quality — that would indicate any cost-cutting measures. On their website, Raidho mentions that the goals of the X2.6
are the same as those of all their loudspeakers, which include low noise and
coloration, a "dramatic, energetic" sound with a "vast
soundstage," and a detailed sound that doesn't induce fatigue, among other
traits. $21,000 might be a low price for a pair of Raidho speakers, but still, any audiophile who spends this amount of money should demand a certain level of quality.
--->
Raidho X2.6 Floorstanding Loudspeaker Review.
Rogue Audio Sphinx V3 Magnum Hybrid Stereo Integrated Amplifier
Review
Back to the future.
Review By Ric Mancuso / Bargain Audiophile
The
Rogue Audio Sphinx was first introduced sometime around late 2013. I purchased
the original Sphinx from Rogue Audio upon a recommendation from a friend.
Imagine an integrated hybrid tube and solid-state stereo amplifier with 100
Watts output at 8 Ohms (200W @ 4 Ohms), with vacuum tubes in the front end! I
later came to find that it was the perfect unit to power my classic Martin Logan
SL3 electrostatic hybrid loudspeakers. Turns out that Mark O'Brien of Rogue
Audio told me that Rogue Audio had displayed with Martin Logan at audio shows,
and it was a superb match-up. I still own the original Sphinx which is still
pushing Watts through the SL 3's in our upstairs entertainment system. I reviewed the Rogue Audio Sphinx V2 and V3 subsequent
versions over the years.
--->
Rogue Audio Sphinx V3 Magnum Hybrid Stereo Integrated Amplifier Review.
600 Watts Of Musical Bliss: Rotel Michi X5 Series 2 Integrated Amplifier Review
A modern Swiss Army Knife stereo integrated amplifier for music lovers.
Review By Brett Rudolph
A few months ago, I had the pleasure of attending the Florida International Audio
Expo 2025. It was an incredible show, and the week I got home, I got even better
news. My editor had arranged for me to review the new Rotel Michi X5 Series 2
solid-state stereo integrated amplifier with phono stage and Hi-Res Audio DAC
here at Enjoy the Music.com. Michi is a designation that represents a
flagship series of components within Rotel's family of products. Originally
introduced to the market in 1993, it showcased all the best that Rotel had to
offer. However, the components as we know them today were reintroduced to the
market in 2019. These latest incarcerations continue to showcase the best Rotel
has to offer while keeping audiophile values alive. Of course, all the labels aside, the thought of getting an
integrated amplifier excited me personally.
--->
600 Watts Of Musical Bliss: Rotel Michi X5 Series 2 Integrated Amplifier
Review.
World Premiere Review!
Synergistic Research PowerCell 14 Power Conditioner Review
Raising the performance of audiophile gear you plug into it.
Review By Rick Becker
The naysayers on internet forums will have
a "hey"-day with this review. They complain about reviewers who proclaim that
each new product they review is better than the last one. Well, I'm here to
plead "guilty" as this is the third power conditioner I've reviewed in the past
seven months, along with an incredible 650 photos and 59,000 words in the
reviews of the Toronto Audiofest 2024 and Capital Audiofest 2024. Each power
conditioner was better than the last, as well as significantly more expensive.
Let me give you an overview in case you haven't been following along. My longstanding power conditioner, since July 2017 when the
review was published by Enjoy the Music.com, had been the Synergistic PowerCell 8 UEF SE with an
Atmosphere Level 2 power cord, a unit that sold for about $2000 at the time.
--->
Synergistic Research PowerCell 14 Power Conditioner Review.
FiiO Fantastic CP13 Cassette Player, RR11 Radio, And SA1 Desktop Speakers Review
Three musical treats for the road less
traveled.
Review By Paul Schumann
When
I started grad school, I had to make the trek from Austin, TX, to Knoxville, TN,
in my 1980 Toyota Celica. Since space would be limited, I had to figure out how
to bring some of my music with me so I could retain my sanity during my first
semester of graduate studies. That's when I decided to plunge into portable
audio and bought my first Walkman. I already had most of my albums recorded on
tape, so I wouldn't be missing out on much. Plus, this Walkman included a tuner,
so I could listen to anything new coming out. Sure, the sound wasn't the best, but I had music until I could
haul my system and records later on. The flaw in my plan was that I didn't
anticipate how quickly that little Walkman ate batteries. I was a poor grad
student, so I used the Sears card my parents gave me "for emergencies" and
bought a couple of sets of rechargeables. After that, I was set. That old
Walkman and those tapes are long gone, but I have fond memories of how that
technological marvel provided me with music during those stressful times.
--->
FiiO Fantastic CP13 Cassette Player, RR11 Radio, And SA1 Desktop Speakers Review.
World Premiere Review!
Vintage Warmth Meets Modern Clarity: Pilot Radio Vacuum Tube Stereo Preamplifier Review
Elevating your hi-fi setup with a blast from the past.
Review By Paul Schumann
My dad passed away last August. This has brought back many fond memories of him.
One of my earliest memories was of my dad's sound system in the bedroom beside
mine. I only got a few peeks in there since my presence in that chamber was
normally strictly verboten. Besides the fantastical sounds that I could
hear, I remember the orange glow coming from the Dynaco ST 70 and a mixture of
the mingled aromas of solder and fresh vinyl. My dad only had his special music
room a couple of years before my brother arrived. I moved into my dad's sanctum,
and his audio system, vinyl, and tapes were banished to the basement. Such are
the sacrifices of a parent. Even in the basement, that great stuff was behind a
locked door to keep it away from my grubby mitts. My dad spent quite a bit of time down there when I was young,
but as the years passed, the basement became the domain for my brother and me.
--->
Vintage Warmth Meets Modern Clarity: Pilot Radio Vacuum Tube Stereo Preamplifier Review.


Nordost Cables – Complete Nordost System Approach
Nordost cables leaves me speechless.
Review By Brett Rudolph
Several
years ago, at the beginning of my career as a reviewer, I had the opportunity to
work with audio and video cables almost exclusively. At the time, it felt like
regardless how amazing a cable sounded there was always another to take its
place. Very few of them really stood out within my mind. Even those that stood
out rarely became part of my reference system because there was always another
one with different characteristics. The Nordost cables were different. Back then
I reviewed both the Red Dawn and Blue Heaven ranges of cables. Since my
reviews centered around home theater systems, my evaluation consisted of nearly
all their offerings within these families. Their flat design was unique and
their performance inspired. Though they were never the least expensive, their
design and abilities, remained on of my favorites. In fact, the Red Dawn audio
interconnect are one of the few cables that have remained in my reference system
since those early days.
---> Nordost Cables – Complete Nordost System Approach.

Hegel H160 Solid-State Stereo Integrated
Amplifier With DAC Review
Not another boring Bose burger.
Review By A. Colin Flood
Ever heard a Naim amplifier? Hegel reminds me of amplifiers by
Naim and the Roksan Caspian. But does that mean this charming amplifier with all sorts of modern connections
is nothing more than high-end, boring Bose sound? Is the Hegel H160 stereo
integrated amplifier with DAC merely a
loaded McDonald's burger? The $3500 Hegel H160 amplifier is the typical black box
electronic component. It has elegantly simple black knobs and an oodle of
possible connections on the back. The H160 is a flat black case, with smooth
matte rounded edge on its face. The amplifier came double-boxed, with a plastic
moisture-barrier bag. It also came with the requisite 1.5 to 3 inches of
Styrofoam necessary to survive a UPS bounce. The foam however was strawberry
pink, like Owens Corning fiberglass, or the cartoon Pink Panther! Inexplicably,
the power switch is located on the bottom
of the amplifier. Perhaps this is some form of security measure, as only owners
will know where it is.
---> Hegel H160 Solid-State Stereo Integrated Amplifier With DAC Review.

World Premiere Follow-Up!
LampizatOr Generation 5 Level 4 DAC Review
Computer audio to satisfy an analog lover.
Review By Wayne Donnelly
The first part of this review of
the LampizatOr Level 4 Generation 5 DAC was in December 2014 and I discussed the
unit's performance on CDs played on
a CD transport with an S/PDIF cable connection. This completion reviews the
DAC's performance playing high-resolution PCM and DSD computer files. Computer
audio is really the principal application that designer Lukasz Fikus is
addressing in this DAC. I urge the reader to check out the initial review, which
contains a lot of information, not repeated here, about the company and the
design approach. The performance I reported in the initial review has now been
significantly improved. The ModWright-modified Denon 3910 player I was using at
that time died an honorable death a few months ago. I replaced it with a
Steinmusic-modified Grundig Fine Arts CD player upgraded with a massive power
supply and several additional Steinmusic tweaks. It is a superb standalone
player, and a much better transport, providing greater dynamic range and more
extended frequency response, especially in low frequencies.
--->
LampizatOr Generation 5 Level 4 DAC Review.

My
Brief History And Why D.I.Y?
Editor Steven Rochlin's father chimes
in!
Article By Eli Rochlin
Do It Yourself
(DIY) has never really gone away... it was not even resting! A newer, younger group just moved into town to claim the process as their own. Not so fast, you
guys! It was we older guys who adopted it and nurtured it as our own. The main drivers were lack of money, desire and inquisitiveness, coupled with the love of
music. The world came out of the Great Depression and World War II was over. So many young kids mustered out of the service with new skills in radio technology, which the field greatly expanded with ideas. Television, short wave radio, FM and Ham radios, wire recorders all wanted a piece of the market. Wartime shortages were over, and everything was looking better. Better, that is, if you had a job. Many people had a lot of time on their hands, and DIY became a hit. Stores and Catalog houses had lots of parts and kits. You could select many items "assembled" or in kit form. Radio Shack, Allied Radio, Lafayette Radio, and Heathkit, were all active in the DIY field.
---> My Brief History And Why
D.I.Y?

The
Intro By Art Dudley
When I first heard about the Internet, I thought it
was a load of crap.
Editorial By Art Dudley
When I was five years old, grocery stores began selling a
product called Happy Nut, which I considered ingenious: peanut butter shaped into quarter-pound sticks, like
butter, and filled with a core of grape jelly. With Happy Nut on the butter dish, one
did not have to bother opening two jars (or even one!) before enjoying a healthy,
satisfying meal: It was a simple and time-saving matter of dipping one's knife,
spreading one's spread, and eating. The fact that the Happy Nut logo was a picture of a
monkey was icing on the cake. To my five-year-old consumer consciousness, nothing made more sense: This
was the pinnacle of modern achievement. From the moment I first saw it, I could not
imagine life without Happy Nut. Then things changed. Up to a point my imagination had been the sole province of
Happy Nut's benefits, but when the moment of truth arrived, those benefits proved
fleeting. In fact they fleeted all to hell. As it turned out, in order for the peanut
butter to retain enough of a stick shape to successfully enclose the jelly within, Happy
Nut had to be refrigerated.
---> The Intro By Art Dudley.

Grand Illusion
Article
By Joe Roberts
Way out on the paranoid fringes of contemporary
American thought, miles beyond even the craziest audiophiles, there are some
scared technology worshippers who believe that an international elite bad guy
network of power-hungry conspirators has been conducting massively funded,
wildly successful experiments with holographic imaging technology. The claim is
that gizmos exist for creating 100% real-looking motion pictures in 3-D space,
4-D if you count time as a D. These infernal devices can materialize illusions
that can pass through our senses as reality itself!
Yikes! The above-mentioned whistle blowers are trying to warn us that
fancy hologram projectors will play a central role in the ultimate power grab in
all of human history, planned to go down at the turn of the millennium. Over the
generations, many predictions were made about the year 2001, the dawn of the new
Aquarian age, and in five years we'll be there. The sinister plot intends to
take full advantage of all the symbolic weight we loaded onto the coming of the
21st C as a weapon against the mind.
---> Grand Illusion Article
By Joe Roberts.


Acoustical
QUAD Loudspeakers
The
original QUAD components were introduced around 1954...
Article By Dan Schmalle From VALVE
This month's demo is a very special
one. Through the generosity of Eric and Dave we will audition what is to many
vintage buffs the ne plus ultra of vintage high fidelity systems, an
entire QUAD system. It will be composed of the QUAD FM Tuner, QUAD Multiplex
Decoder, QUAD 22 Control Unit, two Quad II Power Amplifiers and two QUAD ESLs.
All of these components are in very nice shape and will be set up as originally
intended right down to the KT-66 output tubes. Acoustical Manufacturing Company,
makers of the Quality Amplifier for Domestic use, was started by Peter J. Walker
in London in the late 1930's. The original QUAD components were introduced
around 1954. At the time the loudspeakers, while revolutionary in their
construction and accuracy, were rather poorly received in an era of horn
speakers with giant sized bass response. A very interesting
interview of Peter Walker can be found in The Audio Amateur, 3/1978. I won't rehash the entire article
here (we do have it in the library), but a few select plums from the article help to explain the design
philosophy behind Peter Walker's products on differences in amplifiers.
---> Acoustical QUAD
Loudspeakers.

Marantz CD60 CD (Compact Disc) Player Review
The Marantz CD60 CD Player has me very impressed out of the gate but will it seal the deal with pricier amplification and loudspeakers? Stay
tuned.
Review By Ian White
Back
in February, I spent some time with Marantz so I could experience the
new Marantz 40n Network Integrated Amplifier. The $2500 amplifier drove
multiple pairs of Bowers & Wilkins loudspeakers in the hotel space with
relative ease and I left after two hours of listening thinking that Marantz
needed to introduce something less expensive to match it. There were other CD
players on display in the room but they were priced well above what I was
thinking. I was hoping to see the 40n connected to something like the brand new Marantz
CD60 that was just introduced at HIGH END in Munich for $999. There are plenty of people who will shake their head at
something like the Marantz CD60 in 2022 with streaming owning 85% of the market
right now — but I'm not part of that group. Not even remotely. I started buying CDs in 1984 when my father brought home a new
Yamaha CD player from Bay Bloor Radio and after almost 38 years of purchases, my
collection approaches almost 2000 CDs.
--->
Marantz CD60 CD (Compact Disc) Player Review.
JPS Labs Superconductor V Interconnects,
Loudspeaker Cable, And USB Cable Review
Connecting to the Soul of Music.
Review By Paul Schumann
There has been quite a bit of discussion, lately, in this publication and other forums, about the current direction of the music industry. One of the hot topics is how popular music is recorded and produced. Many argue that the use of software, like
ProTools, to snap everything to a grid and correct any
"flaws" is robbing the music of its soul. Many times the result is music that, while initially appealing, quickly loses the interest of the listener. It is soulless
music. The question is, what is this soul and how do we recognize it? I think most of the time, this occurs at a subconscious level. Why do we want to go see an artist in concert when
we've already heard all of their songs multiple times in studio perfection? Because we want to connect to the soul of the music, warts and all. Now,
I'm not saying some audio processing tricks aren't going on at these concerts, but there is only so much that can be done live. In the end,
it's about the artists connecting with the audience.
--->
JPS Labs Superconductor V Interconnects, Loudspeaker Cable, And USB Cable
Review.
Audio Note UK M2 Linestage / Preamplifier And Conqueror Power Amplifier Review
Taking the road less traveled.
Review By Paul Schumann
Hi-fi
audio emerged in the 1950s with the introduction of the LP record. As the
business evolved and stereo became the norm, acoustic suspension speakers gained
popularity due to their smaller footprint in the family room. What followed
after that can be called an arms race between audio manufacturers to build more
powerful amplifiers. This continued as hi-fi became high-end audio. It was not
uncommon to see on the pages of print magazines reviewing amplifiers rated at
400 Watts per channel or more. But not all music lovers were following this path. While the
audio business was trending towards the more powerful tube and solid-state amps,
an underground movement in Japan was extolling the virtues of the old
low-powered Western Electric amps when paired with speakers of the same vintage.
--->
Audio Note UK M2 Linestage / Preamplifier And Conqueror Power Amplifier Review.
FiiO M15S Desktop / Portable Hi-Res Lossless Music Player Review
FiiO's M15S and FH9 have incredible synergy and represent an ideal portable listening
experience.
Review By Gary Alan Barker
Until I received my FiiO R7 Music Server my go-to
player to burn in headphones or to act as a digital source for DAC reviews
(computers tend to be noisy over USB) has been my trusty FiiO M11 DAP (while
the FiiO M11 Plus LTD offers some advantages, it also sucks up a lot
of power), but FiiO is not a company to rest long, always pushing the envelope
and developing new and better players, and in this vein is their new FiiO M15S
Desktop/Portable Hi-Res Lossless Music Player. Slightly larger and with an
almost half-inch larger display, the M15S boasts an eight-channel DAC and over twice
the power output and includes a desktop dock with a built-in cooling fan. Some of the things that set the FiiO M15S Desktop/Portable
Hi-Res Lossless Music Player apart from the pack beyond the FiiO DK3S dock, are
the Dual Power Supply Mode, the Five Gain Levels, Six Operating Modes....
--->
FiiO M15S Desktop / Portable Hi-Res Lossless Music Player Review.
Siltech Launches Master Crown Cables
New flagship from Holland's premiere cable manufacturer.
Launch Event Coverage By Greg Weaver
Siltech
recently launched a new, flagship series of audio cables called Master Crown. As
with everything they do, the launch would be a first-class event. With the help
of US Siltech distributor, Monarch Systems, based in Englewood, CO, a press
event was held Friday, June 20th to introduce and demonstrate the advantages of
this new product to the audio press. Monarch Systems was founded by two audio industry veterans,
Jon Baker and Rich Maez, and with the assistance of their Marketing Manager,
Jaclyn Schnirring, they played host to seven members of the press in a spacious,
beautiful home in the gated community of Las Campanas, to the west of the heart
of old Santa Fe, at a location they call La Casita. We were also honored
to be joined by Siltech's own engaging, conversant, and well-informed Gaby
Rynveld, who led much of the day's ceremonies.
--->
Siltech Launches Master Crown Cables.
TAD Evolution C1000 Preamplifier And M1000 Power Amplifier Review
Two top-notch solid-state components.
Review By Tom Lyle
TAD (Technical Audio Devices) is a high-end
audio manufacturer based in Tokyo. It is a subsidiary of the sizable mass-market
audio manufacturer Pioneer. Although Pioneer produces some fine, mostly
affordable gear, TAD works independently of Pioneer, designing and manufacturing
much more upscale high-end audio products. In 1975, the Tokyo-based Pioneer
Corporation began TAD to develop high-end speakers for professional use. In
2007, TAD became an independent subsidiary of Pioneer and has been designing and
manufacturing all types of high-end audio products primarily focusing on
speakers and amplifiers for home use. Previously, my only experience reviewing TAD products was two
years ago, when I reviewed their $20,000 Evolution Two (TAD-E2) floor-standing
speakers. These 2.5-way speakers impressed me both in their visual appearance
and sound quality.
--->
TAD Evolution C1000 Preamplifier And M1000 Power Amplifier Review.
World Premiere Review!
Merrill Audio Element 110 Monoblock Power Amplifier Review
A significant accomplishment!
Review By Tom Lyle
I would understand if some readers of Enjoy the Music.com assumed that I
was in cahoots with the high-end audio company Merrill Audio. This is my fifth
review of a Merrill Audio component. Within the April 2015 issue I reviewed Merrill
Audio's Thor monoblock power amplifiers and, also that year, Merrill's
Taranis power amps. In 2017, I reviewed Merrill's outstanding Christine
Reference preamplifier. Then, in 2018, I reviewed their mighty 118
monoblock power amplifiers. I have reviewed many of Merrill Audio's products
because their headquarters are about twenty miles from my home. The owner of
Merrill Audio, Merrill Wettasinghe, has hand-delivered each review component
I've reviewed. While he is here, and because Mr. Wettasinghe and I are both
audiophiles and music lovers, we often listen to some music after setting up the
equipment. Afterward, we frequently get something to eat at a local eatery. Does our professional friendship influence my
reviews of Merrill Audio's high-end audio equipment?
--->
Merrill Audio Element 110 Monoblock Power Amplifier Review.
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