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Music Interview: Jake Bugg

Jake Bugg’s new album, A Modern Day Distraction his sixth – sees him going back to his Brit-rock roots after a flirtation with contemporary pop on 2021’s Saturday Night, Sunday Morning, which met with mixed reviews.

This time around, the 31-year-old singer-songwriter from Nottingham, whose self-titled debut went to number one in 2012, when he was only 18, has cranked up the guitars and recaptured the indie swagger of his youth.

First single and album opener, ‘Zombieland’, is a clattering, raw and primal, feedback-drenched social commentary with a twisted Beatles riff – the cost of living crisis and ordinary people’s everyday struggles is a theme that Bugg revisits throughout the record. 

Elsewhere there’s the energetic, Jam-like punk / new wave of ‘All Kinds of People’; a poignant anthem about the loss of someone close to him (‘Never Said Goodbye’); a folky drinking song (‘I Wrote The Book’); the moody, ‘60s pop-tinged ‘Got To Let You Go’, and epic album closer, ‘Still Got Time’, with its strung-out Neil-Young-meets-Oasis guitar solos.

hi-fi+ spoke to Bugg, who had just returned from supporting Liam Gallagher and John Squire on tour last year, to find out why he’s gone back to more familiar territory for his latest record.

SH: After the contemporary pop feel of Saturday Night, Sunday Morning, the new album feels like it’s a return to your roots…

JB: Yeah – I would say so. I think it definitely feels like a natural progression from the first two records. In that time, there’s been experimentation, which is a great thing to do, but I’m really happy with how this record has kind of gone back to the start a little bit.

Was it a deliberate reaction to the previous album, or was it more organic than that?
You’ve experimented with quite a few different styles on each record – you worked with Andrew Watt and Ali Tamposi (Dua Lipa and Miley Cyrus) on Saturday Night, Sunday Morning, Dan Auberbach (The Black Keys) in Nashville for Hearts That Strain, and Rick Rubin in Malibu on Shangri La

This definitely felt more organic. When you’re working with different people from different musical backgrounds things develop into different sounds – some things can be brought out and some things can be lost.

With this record, it felt natural. I wasn’t trying to chase the old sound or anything – it just kind of came out. I worked with the same guys for all the songs and the production, and it just felt like it happened organically.

On this record, you worked with Metrophonic at their studio in London. How did that come about?

When you’re looking to make a new record, A & R and other people have ideas – it was one of the ideas from A & R. 

You never know what you’re really going to get to be honest, and seeing some of the work they [Metrophonic] have done, I was fearful that it was going to be a bit more poppy, but the guys – Paul Barry, Mark Taylor and Patrick [Mascall] – were great, and it just felt like we all had the same tastes and the same idea of what the record should feel like and what it should be. 

Copyright ©Kevin Westenberg ALL Rights Reserved

It was great to work with those guys – on my last record, it was very much a case of trial and error, and I worked with lots of different people – sometimes it worked and sometimes it didn’t. I didn’t have any of that on this record, which was great. 

You’ve said in the press that the last album was one of the most fun records you’ve made. Was recording the new one an enjoyable process too?

Yeah – absolutely. Lyrically, it’s a better place for me to be and I think it contains some of the things that people liked on the first couple of records. 

You co-wrote this album with the guys from Metrophonic you mentioned earlier…

We were all in a room together pretty much every day of the week – we worked really hard on it. I didn’t have many ideas left because I was doing soundtrack stuff during COVID, so it was good to go in with a fresh slate – it all just developed from scratch, which is what made it fun I suppose.

Every detail was considered – if it didn’t feel right, we’d work on it for a few hours because we really cared about it and wanted to make it the best it could be.

‘Zombieland’ was the first single and is the opening track on the album. It doesn’t mess around – it’s a loud, upbeat guitar song with a great, driving rhythm and feedback. I love the riff – it’s like a mutated ‘Paperback Writer.’ It’s very Beatlesy…

It’s a very simple riff, but it has that energy that drives it along. There is a little bit of that in there, which is kind of cool.

Lyrically it talks about people who are dealing with the drudgery of everyday life, and working their fingers to the bone just to pay the bills and stay alive… 

Absolutely – it’s hard to avoid that subject in the current climate. A lot of people are suffering and it’s important to highlight those points – if it’s done in the right way.

That subject comes up throughout the course of the record. The song ‘Breakout’ feels like it’s coming from the same place as ‘Zombieland’ lyrically – it’s about a person who is trapped in a cycle they can’t get out of… 

That is quite a common theme throughout the record – it’s been something that’s been playing on my mind, and I felt needed to be addressed.

I think a lot of people feel stuck and it’s scary to venture out without that sense of security – it’s a shame that people have been made to feel like that. I like to think there are opportunities out there for some people, but sometimes you’ve got to take a leap… 

In the song ‘All Kinds of People, ’ you sing about how we’re trying to find our way every day. You grew up on a council estate in Nottingham and were lucky enough to be discovered and start a music career when you were 18. For a lot of people music has been a way to escape a difficult upbringing or a dead-end job. Do you feel privileged to have been able to do that?

Yeah – absolutely. I’ve been very fortunate to be able to have the life that I’ve had, and I owe it all to music.
I was very much one of the lucky ones. There are a lot of people who aren’t so lucky… 

It’s OK to address those problems [in music] and if it comes from a good place and you’re not being condescending or patronising… For me, it’s more about observing and making a social comment. 

I know how inspired I was by music, and it gave me that drive – if I can inspire anybody else to make that leap, then great. 

‘All Kinds of People’ has a punky or new wave feel – it’s  got a lot of energy and a great bassline…

Yeah – it has, and again, it’s really simple, but very effective. On this album, I used my own band to record in the studio again after a long time – it was great to have Jack [Atherton– drums] and Robbo [Tom Robertson – bass] back and it just felt like us and how we play live. That was an important element of the record.

‘Breakout’ has an unexpected flamenco guitar break, which I love…

(Laughs). It’s funny because during the COVID lockdown and in the last few years I’ve been obsessed with flamenco and classical music. 

When I was writing the song with the guys and I played that bit they said it was great, but I was like, ‘Are you sure it’s not a bit too much?’ But they were like, ‘No – just roll with it…’ 

So, we kept it in, and then it comes back around to a more psychedelic, bluesy line, which takes it back to the song. I thought it might be too much, but people seem to like it.

‘Never Said Goodbye’ stands out because it addresses a different subject matter to some of the other songs – it deals with the death of someone you knew, and has a melancholy quality, but is also anthemic… 

Yeah, but it also ties in with the record – for a lot of people, life is hard enough as it is, and then when they lose someone who meant so much to them, the only way is to try and be positive – that’s the reason for the anthemic chorus. It’s important because it’s the only hope that’s lingering… 

‘I Wrote The Book’ is a stripped-back drinking song that sees you chatting to an old guy in a bar, and, again, it’s about trying to deal with daily struggles…

It’s about realising that you’re not the only one suffering – the guy says, ‘You think you know it all, but I wrote the book…’ 

I’m that guy who always gets talking to the old guy in the corner, but they have the best stories – I love it and I was inspired by that. 

Growing up in our household, there was a lot of Irish folk music – The Fureys and The Dubliners were played, so there was a bit of that influence in there as well. 

One of my favourite songs on the album is ‘Got To Let You Go’ – it starts off moody, dark and sad, but then unexpectedly goes into Beatles or Hollies-like, ‘60s pop in the chorus. Where did that one come from?

I was listening to a lot of Bee Gees at the time – there was one song, ‘And The Sun Will Shine,’ which is great. I was fascinated by how they go from major to minor in the same chords and how it’s possible to make a big chorus out of that. 

It seemed like a good challenge for me, so, in terms of musicality, that’s what inspired me, but, lyrically, it’s about letting go of those older parts of yourself that made up who you were when you were younger. As we get older, we all change, don’t we?

‘All That I Needed Was You’ is one of the slower and more reflective moments on the album. It has a sad, late-night feel and could be a love song or about a breakup… 

It’s reflective but it’s not specifically a love song – ‘all that I needed was you’ could be anything that saved you – for me, it was music. 

I love that song – it feels like some of the older stuff that I used to play growing up, like ‘50s and ‘60s country things. 

The album deals with some social and personal issues, but it ends up a hopeful note with ‘Still Got Time’, which has an epic rock feel, like Oasis or Neil Young, and on which you sing: ‘Don’t stop dreaming – we’ll make it out alive…’

Yeah – it’s one of those songs where the guitar solo keeps going on and on. We were like, ‘We should probably think about cutting this, but, no, why should we?’

These days, people are a bit scared to go on with a guitar solo, but as long as the notes are the right ones and they’re melodic enough, I think it’s OK. 

It has a very simple chorus, but it does end on a positive note and I’m very pleased with it. 

I think this album has all the things the fans like from me as an artist, and I hope it’s a road I can continue on. 

So, finally, what’s your favourite modern day distraction?

The PlayStation and the pub – I’m definitely guilty of a few myself. 

A Modern Day Distraction is out now (RCA Records).

album cover - Jake Bugg

Jake Bugg is currently touring the UK.

www.jakebugg.com

Back to Music

Focal’s New Loudspeaker Pushes the Boundaries of Wireless Hi-Fi

8 July 2025 – Focal elevates the world of high-fidelity once again with DIVA MEZZA UTOPIA, a bold new evolution in the prestigious Diva Utopia line from the French acoustic innovator. Wireless, active and seamlessly connected, it embodies the pinnacle of Focal’s craftsmanship and technological expertise. With its striking design and extraordinary acoustic performance, Diva Mezza Utopia transforms the home listening experience by delivering immersive sound with remarkable depth. More than just a loudspeaker, it represents a significant leap forward in Focal’s pursuit to redefine home Hi-Fi, where uncompromising sound meets intuitive ease of use.

FOCAL & NAIM EXCELLENCE TAKEN TO THE HIGHEST LEVEL

Larger and more powerful than its predecessor, the Diva Mezza Utopia delivers the acoustic authority of a full high-end system within an elegantly integrated all-in-one product. Its four 8-inch ‘W’ cone woofers (at 20.5cm, they are 4cm larger than Diva Utopia) are configured in a push-push layout, generating exceptionally deep, dynamic, and controlled bass. This low-end response lays the foundation to allow the full capabilities of the ‘M’-shaped Beryllium tweeter and ‘W’ cone midrange driver to shine, resulting in a wider, more articulate soundstage. It’s an uncompromising expression of Focal’s acoustic engineering expertise.

As an active loudspeaker, Diva Mezza Utopia integrates a completely re-engineered Naim Audio electronics package. Delivering 500 watts per speaker, the system features a dual-stage power supply for exceptional dynamics and precision power management across the frequency range. At the rear, the sculpted, high-efficiency heat sink ensures optimal thermal stability and long-term reliability. Designed to perform effortlessly in rooms up to 100m², Mezza Utopia exemplifies Focal’s vision of ‘New Hi-Fi’: where cutting edge acoustic design and state-of-the-art electronics converge with a seamless, intelligent user experience.

HIGH RESOLUTION & PERSONALIZED SETTINGS

To meet the demands of high-resolution wireless listening, the Diva Utopia range introduces a suite of technical innovations. First up, Ultra Wideband (UWB) – a unique audio innovation that enables uncompressed, high-resolution signal transmission at 96kHz/24-bit, wirelessly. UWB delivers the clarity and precision of a wired connection, surpassing traditional CD quality without the physical constraints of cabling. For listeners seeking absolute fidelity, a direct wired connection is also available, unlocking studio-grade resolution at 192kHz/24-bit. Complementing this is the Intelligent Dynamics Clocking (IDC), a precision clock-control system that ensures exact synchronization between channels for a coherent, stable soundstage. Data transfer is defined by speed, reliability, and timing accuracy. Additionally, Focal’s patented ADAPT (Adaptive Acoustic Personal Tuning) technology uses a sophisticated algorithm to calibrate the system to both room acoustics and user preferences. Accessible via the Focal & Naim app, ADAPT delivers a finely tuned, personalized listening experience.

LISTEN FREELY. FEEL LIMITLESSLY.

Like Diva Utopia, Diva Mezza Utopia benefits from the Focal & Naim ecosystem through the advanced Pulse Platform. It offers extensive wireless connectivity with support for Bluetooth®, AirPlay 2, Google Cast, and UPnP™, enabling access to streaming services including Spotify Connect, TIDAL, Qobuz Connect, and QQ Music (China). The system supports high-resolution multiroom streaming and is compatible with smart home platforms such as Control4, Crestron, Savant, and RTI. Users can control the system effortlessly via the Focal & Naim app, the included remote control, or voice assistants like Google Assistant and Siri. Whether you’re listening to music, watching films, gaming, or enjoying vinyl, every detail is engineered for a seamless user experience.

SCULPTURAL DESIGN, UNIQUE FINISH

Behind the design of Diva Mezza Utopia lies the same meticulous craftsmanship and passion that define all Focal products. The body is crafted from high-density polymer using a low-pressure molding process, ensuring precise construction, efficient material use, and acoustic optimization. The speaker rests on a double-level, beveled base and features signature floating side panels – a signature of the Diva Utopia range. These panels are made from felt, an eco-friendly yet refined material, presented in a new ivory hue that highlights the speaker’s contours and adds brightness to any environment. The design is further elevated by distinctive touches, including a dual red and black grille on the tweeter and a brushed aluminum band encircling it. Together, they form the iconic ‘signature watch’ detail – an emblem of Focal’s Utopia excellence.

PRICES AND AVAILABILITY

Diva Mezza Utopia will be available from July, exclusively through the Focal Powered by Naim network of authorized retailers for $69,000 USD and $97,249 CAD.

For more information on the Focal Diva Mezza Utopia visit: https://www.focal.com/products/diva-mezza-utopia.

Connected-Fidelity TT Hub

From the first time I saw the TT Hub turntable from Connected-Fidelity, I loved its looks and the quality of its finish. Now I have had one at home, those initial impressions were only confirmed.

Although setting up the TT Hub is not complicated, I was grateful when designer and Connected-Fidelity owner Michael Osborn volunteered to deliver it personally and run me through its finer points.

You may have bumped into him at shows on the Air Audio stand, under which banner he also imports Hana cartridges and Sorane tonearms from Japan. He started Air Audio in 2003 and Connected-Fidelity is its manufacturing arm, producing such products as mains and interconnect cables, mains distribution boxes and balanced supplies, RF filters and isolation accessories. He has 30 years experience in audio design and manufacture.

The TT Hub is Connected-Fidelity’s first turntable. It was supplied fitted with a Sorane SA1.2 tonearm. The TT Hub itself sells for £4,995 and if you buy the package with the Sorane SA1.2, that brings the total to a tad under £6,900. A Connected-Fidelity tonearm cable is also available and was included. 

Three tiers

The turntable is a three-tier design comprising a base plinth, chassis and sub-chassis, all of which are machined from bamboo plywood, which look rather elegant in their dark brown lacquer finish, a natural finish is also available. Bamboo plywood was chosen (Bamboo is actually a grass, but plygrass is not in the dictionary!), Osborn explained, because it is immensely strong and has little potential to store energy and resonances. 

The tonearm and main bearing/spindle/platter are rigidly connected to the subchassis, which bolts to the larger chassis below, but with solid spacers. The subchassis in turn sits on three pointed brass feet, locating on composite carbon/rubber dampers in the bamboo ply base board to further isolate it from any structure-borne vibration.

The 12-pole AC motor is housed in an isolating pod that sits on rubber feet and is free to move. The user manual says that it should be placed with 15mm clearance between it and the cutout in the subchassis using the spacer provided.

Bearing down

The turntable main bearing is a long and large-diameter, self-lubricating sintered bronze design that uses a PEEK (polyetheretherketone – a high-performance engineered polymer) base component on which sits a sapphire thrust bearing, all housed in a thick-wall aluminium housing. 

The aluminium arm mounting plate bolts to the subchassis and can be supplied either blank, or precut for Sorane, Rega or SME arms. Blank units can be cut out to order for any specific arm that the customer requires.

Connected-Fidelity believes that this style of non-suspended turntable design offers “the most lifelike musicality, particularly dynamics, speed and ‘timing’.” I have quite a bouncy floor and can attest that isolation from footfall was excellent.

The power supply for the motor is housed in a separate unit. This quartz regenerator unit is said to offer speed accuracy at 33rpm or 45rpm of 0.003% to compensate for fluctuations in mains frequency, which Connected-Fidelity says can vary by up to 2% moment to moment. 

On the front of the power supply box, the LED light glows red/orange when the factory speed setting is used. The rotary control on the left selects 33rpm, 45rpm or off, while the one on the right offers fine speed control if necessary and for those wishing to do so, they recommend using a quartz-controlled battery-operated strobe such as the KSB SpeedStrobe. If you do decide to tinker with the fine adjustment and get lost, pushing the right-hand knob and holding it in for five seconds will reset the factory default.

The high-gloss black acrylic platter of the TT Hub is 30mm thick and has a ‘foamed’ mat bonded to the top of it. This is intended to absorb any vibrational energy from the LP as it plays and isolate the LP from the acrylic platter material.

Disarmingly simple

The Sorane arm is made by IT Industry in Japan, which was founded by Katsuaki Ishiyama in 1974. Priding themselves on precision machining and hand assembly, they have three ranges – the SA1.2, a more conventional looking TA-1 range and a girder-style 12in called the ZA-1.

Ishiyama believes that low-mass tonearms are a poor match for moving coils, and so his arms provide what he sees as the necessary mass for medium- and low-compliance cartridges. The company also boasts very high-quality bearings as it says this has a major influence on performance.

IT Industry says that the bearings used for horizontal movement are axial-loaded thrust bearings with zero play that are held in contact by gravity and act like a unipivot, but with more than one contact point with tapered seats. The main arm component is machined from one billet of aluminium.

The design is easy to use and, unusually these days, has a detachable headshell, making cartridge fitting a doddle. The counterweight slides back and forth to balance the chosen cartridge and there is a captive, sliding weight on a slider within the main arm section that adjusts the tracking force. Bias is set by a rotary control just behind the lift/lower device handle. All in all, I found it easy to use and smooth in its operation.

Sound quality

Fancy claims are all very well, but what does it sound like? To put the TT Hub/Sorane SA1.2 through its paces I hooked it up to an Avid Accent integrated amplifier and a pair of Russell K Red 120Se floorstanding speakers, connected with QED Supremus Zr speaker cable. The unit was supplied with a Hana Umami Red cartridge, which sounded rather gorgeous. However, to facilitate a comparison with a well-respected rival turntable of similar price as a performance benchmark, I fitted it with a Goldring Eroica low output moving coil.

First on the TT Hub’s platter was George Benson’s 20/20 album and the track ‘No One Emotion’. From the first few bars, I could tell I was going to like this turntable. Its sound was pacey, tight, clean, dynamic and detailed. This track has a synth bass line that really pumps it along and it really flew on the TT Hub, whereas on the other benchmark deck the sound was slower, a little turgid and just didn’t move. Benson’s vocals on the TT Hub were open and articulate, with the various layers of this lush and vibrant arrangement well conveyed. The stunning guitar solo from Michael Sembello also had much more bite on the TT Hub and it really soared without being OTT.

The Carlton switch

Switching to my favourite album from Larry Carlton, I wanted to hear what it could do on a well-recorded acoustic guitar. On ‘A Place for Skipper’, the TT Hub acquitted itself well, conveying the presence and bite of his play and revealing how each note was shaped. Soundstage was also more open and defined than on my comparison deck, while the bass guitar line was tighter and more tuneful, with drums and percussion more detailed and dynamic.

I wondered if a rather less well recorded and quirky track might catch the TT Hub out, so I reached for a recent purchase – Messy from Olivia Dean, and the track ‘Dive’, which I just can’t get out of my head. Here, the TT Hub was far from caught out and proved much more open and focused than the rival deck, while the more subtle layers of instrumentation were easier to pick out and follow. The bass line was rather overblown on the other deck, but on the TT Hub it was well controlled, all of which helped to convey the distinctive rhythmic flow of the track.

For a real rollercoaster ride of virtuosity, I spun up ‘Roller Jubilee’ from guitarist Al di Meola’s Splendido Hotel album. Straight away it was clear that his guitar was open and articulate with great bite and inner detail, while drums and percussion were explosive and dynamic. The complex layers of this arrangement were easier to listen into on the TT Hub, while the celeste had more leading edge note detail and the marimba really rang out. The blisteringly fast tempo of the track was also well handled by the TT Hub. Its competitor by comparison seemed slower and rather unexciting, with the track lacking the bite I associate with it.

Hubba, Hubba!

Beautifully made and superbly finished, the Connected-Fidelity TT Hub turntable and its Sorane SA1.2 arm were a joy to use and to listen to. Its sound was detailed, offering good insights into the various layers of the music and how instruments are played and how the musicians work together to create a cohesive and compelling musical experience. It is dynamic, fast and pacey and had my foot tapping in all the right places.

I have no hesitation in recommending the TT Hub/Sorane and it offers excellent performance and value for the asking price. Make sure it’s on your shortlist if you’re in the market for something at this price.   

Technical specifications

  • Type: Belt-driven turntable with AC synchronous motor, controlled by and remote quartz controlled microprocessor PSU. 
  • PSU speed accuracy: 0.003%
  • Speeds: 33.333rpm and 45rpm, electronically selectable
  • Chassis: Bamboo plywood
  • Platter: Acrylic with integral foamed platter mat.
  • Tonearm: Sorane SA1.2 9in K2 arm with miniature radial bearings
  • Arm lead: Connected-Fidelity DIN/RCA-U-1.00E
  • Dimensions (HxWxD): 85mm x 540mm x 390mm
  • Weight: 14.5kg
  • Price: £4,995; £6,890 with Sorane SA1.2; 
  • Above plus Connected-Fidelity tonearm lead £7,675 

Manufacturer

Connected-Fidelity

www.connected-fidelity.com

UK distributor

Air Audio Services Ltd.

www.airaudio.co.uk

+44(0)1491 629629

More from Connected-Fidelity

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Java Hi-Fi Double Shot

It’s a DAC, it’s a phono stage, it’s a pre-amp, it’s a power amp. And all in one chassis. So far, so normal for the world of integrated amplifiers. What makes the Java Hi-Fi Double Shot different is its striking minimalist visual aesthetic. Additionally, the Auckland-based company pays attention to fit and finish. This is a high-end designer product intended to slot seamlessly into a duplex Manhattan apartment. It aims to share the space with the owners’ collection of iconic American furniture and Jackson Pollock originals.

Eyeball appeal

The amplifier’s quasi-organic form factor is available in a range of natural wood finishes and colours. However, the review sample came in premium carbon fibre, which designer Martin Bell says is 9mm thick. It was chosen for its anti-RFI properties, as well as its visual appeal. It looks piano black from some angles, but it reveals the carbon mat structure from others. Beneath the gloss gel coat, Java Hi-Fi’s logo is printed in pearly silver. Heatsinks for the gain stages inside are mounted on the sides of the chassis. They look somewhat like the gill flaps of a basking shark. Overall, it exudes quality in a subdued, high-class manner.

That vibe continues on the front panel. Rather than the typical disjointed scattering of switches and lights found in the sector, we find just two large, chromed knobs, apart from a 6.3mm headphone socket. One knob is located on the left, and the other is on the right, giving it symmetry.

Pleasing weight

If we place a questioning fingertip on either one, we find that it rotates freely, with a pleasing weight. The left knob allows sources to be selected, while the right one adjusts volume. Segments around the perimeter of each knob light up to show source and volume status. Importantly, both functions are also controllable via the supplied hand-held remote. 

On the back things get rather more industry-standard. There are four sets of XLR line inputs, a pair of RCAs, and a grounding post for phono input. Additionally, it includes XLR pairs for fixed and variable out, a stubby Bluetooth (aptX) antenna, and of course, two pairs of speaker binding posts. The Double Shot is also designed to work with digital audio. However, it limits the inputs to just a single USB-B input. This is understandable, as the rear panel is densely packed with XLR sockets. But more digital options would be nice. 

Light-dependent

Inside is Java Hi-Fi’s design of an active line stage using light-dependent resistors. Bell has combined this with OEM boards from several different suppliers. The power amplifier modules are GaN FET-based Class D units by Elegant Audio Solutions, a well-regarded pioneering specialist in the field. There are two, which are configured for fully balanced operation. They allow the Java Hi-Fi Double Shot to deliver 400 Watts per channel into eight Ohms. The DAC module uses dual Burr-Brown PCM1794As ASICS and supports up to 24-bit 192kHz PCM and DSD. The phono stage is built around an LCR network using Japanese resistors and German capacitors. However, it is Moving Magnet only.

Paired with the household’s PMC MB2se speakers, the Double Shot produced a sound that I consider would have most buyers in Java’s target market segment purring with delight. Readers harbouring any lingering doubt about full-range Class D amplification need to take a listen to the current crop of amplifiers. This includes the Double Shot, to hear how far things have come.

The Jury does not rest

The jury’s still out on whether or not GaN sounds superior to MOSFETs in switching amplifiers, but pioneering engineers like Skip Taylor of Elegant Audio Solutions are working hard to drive it to the point where it becomes the default technology in high-end audio. We should nod towards Bell too for making what some might regard as taking the bold option and choosing to use switching GaN in his aspirational products.

In the Double Shot, he pulls it off, though. Some might suggest that the amplifier offers almost a tube-like level of liquidity and sonic saturation. However, having lived with a review sample for a while, I can report that this would be an overreaction. Perhaps it’s brought on by relief at the discovery that it doesn’t exhibit the dry and somewhat colourless sound once associated with Class D.

As an amplifier of external line sources, the Double Shot achieves a level of transparency up there with some better alternative integrated amplifiers on the market. This is irrespective of their underlying technology. Some of this may result from Bell’s implementation of light-dependent resistor attenuation. It’s attractive as it reduces the number of noise-prone contacts in the signal path. LDR is not more commonly seen because it requires an ultra-quiet power supply. If not, the noise advantage might be thrown away. 

Up to the mark

The quality of the power supply specified by Bell is evidently up to the mark here. In addition to strong transparency, it allows the Java Hi-Fi Double Shot to deliver all four musical pillars to a satisfying and broadly competitive degree of competence. There’s the required grunt and speed to support the GaN modules in driving big transients with a satisfying snap. The combination has underlying power and some pleasing richness. It doesn’t lean out and get flatter dynamically through the midrange like Class D of yore. There’s enough tonal and textural detail at the top end to render cymbals as quite believable wooden stick-on-alloy events.

Selecting the in-built phono stage and then a little later the DAC only firmed up the sense of all-round solid competence and balance. It may contain an assemblage of functional modules from different sources. However, the Double Shot has them all flying in formation just as if they were all from the same designer and manufacturer. 

It struck me that the moving magnet-only phono stage might be seen as a misstep in the primary intended market for the Double Shot. It wins points for being very quiet and linear. But in my mind at least, Mr and Ms Loft Dweller have a tricked-out vintage LP12 hung with a moving coil cartridge. They’ll not be thrilled to learn that they must buy a step-up transformer for it to work with the Double Shot. 

However, in some regions, MM/MC phono stages are viewed as heresy and a step-up transformer is a mandatory part of the deal. So maybe I’m being a bit too Brit-fi here!

Visually arresting

How to sum up this visually arresting integrated amplifier? In the review system, the Java Double Shot did not make a case for being regarded performance-wise as a sonic outlier. It is neither hugely better nor worse than the small number of alternative GaN-based amplifiers already on the market. It compares similarly to most of the larger number of MOSFET Class D amplifiers available. In a way, that’s reassuring, indicative perhaps of the relative maturity of a sector that is, as Skip Taylor and other GaN pioneers intend, getting to the point where the once remarkable is now unremarkable.

With his Double Shot integrated amplifier Java’s Martin Bell is demonstrating both a marketeer’s nose for a relatively under-served market sector and an engineer’s ability to put together a satisfyingly well-rounded sonic performer. The Java Hi-Fi Double Shot can go head-to-head with Class A or B alternatives that have strong established audiophile credentials. And it looks beautiful too. 

Technical specifications

  • Type: Integrated amplifier
  • Analogue inputs: 4 x pairs of XLR line-level inputs, MM phono stage (RCA inputs)
  • Analogue outputs: 2 x pairs of XLR outputs (fixed and variable), headphone socket
  • Digital inputs: USB, Bluetooth aptX
  • DAC Sampling Rates: PCM up to 24 bit, 192kHz, DSD
  • MM Input Impedance: 47K Ohm.
  • MM Input Capacitance: 200pF load.
  • MM Gain: 45dB signal gain (at 1KHz).
  • Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR): 124dB (A-weighted).
  • Residual Noise: 1.6uV (A-weighted).
  • Dynamic Range (DNR): 122dB.
  • Total Harmonic Distortion + Noise (THD+N): -110dB or 0.0003%.
  • Output Voltage: 2.5Vrms (+10.2dBu)
  • Finish options: Seven casework finishes, with black, silver or bronze front panel options
  • Dimensions (WxHxD): 44 x 13 x 41.5cm
  • Weight: 11.6kg
  • Price: £14,995, $12,995, €13,500

Manufacturer

Java Hi-Fi

www.javahifi.com

UK distributor

Audio Emotion

www.audioemotion.co.uk

+44(0)1333 425999

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Focal Diva Utopia

Focal and Naim announced their merger over a decade ago. Back then, many couldn’t visualise an actual engineering liaison between the two companies. Both firms have been highly prolific in the ensuing years. However, the nature of those products is that they have been either ‘Naim’ or ‘Focal’. Only at the terrestrial end of proceedings, with the Mu-so devices (new ground for both firms), has there been any actual collaboration. Until the Focal Diva Utopia, that is.

The Diva Utopia sports a Focal badge. However, that badge lights up, which indicates that there is as much Salisbury as Saint Etienne inside those cabinets. Focal’s Diva Utopia is an active speaker. It’s wholly self-contained, replacing streamer and amps in a conventional system. This category is going great guns at lower prices, but it’s more singular to encounter at £30,000. 

Utopian dream

The Focal contribution to the Diva is entirely in keeping with the Utopia name. Like other range members, it sports a beryllium tweeter for high frequencies. Focal believes that beryllium’s combination of strength and lightness is unmatched by any other material.  Only hydrogen, helium and lithium are lighter than beryllium. Two of those are gases, and the other spectacularly reacts with oxygen and water.  Not good properties for loudspeaker designs.

The Focal Diva Utopia is the first speaker to use the ‘M’ shape profile in a beryllium tweeter. This development first appeared in the automotive division. It increases the relative rigidity of the dome for the same amount of material used. 

This hands over to a 6.5-inch composite midrange driver that shares a baffle with the tweeter. It’s also a Utopia-pattern composite engineered for stiffness. However, as a midrange unit, it is lighter than a dedicated bass driver. To find those, you’ll need to look down the side of the Focal Diva Utopia. Another four 6.5-inch drivers in counter-firing pairs sit on either side of the cabinet. These are aided in their excursions by a port integrated into the cabinet’s bass near the plinth. One of the reasons why the Diva carries that name is that an earlier passive Utopia model of the same name was the first in the range to mount a driver on the side.

Spine of Naim

Naim’s contribution to the Diva is less visually apparent but significant nonetheless. At the back of the cabinet is a ‘spine’ that contains the electronics required to make the Diva Utopia function. Naim’s distinctive circuit architecture, philosophy, and component choices abound. The amplification is derived from the New Classic series of amplifiers. It breaks down into 75 watts each for the tweeter and midrange and 140 watts for each linked pair of bass drivers. Typical of a Naim product, the board’s layout is meticulous, and the power supply is very hefty indeed. 

Notably, much of what makes the Diva work has been developed specially for this application. A combination of SHARC DSP and Burr Brown DACs perform the digital heavy lifting. It’s a pairing that underpins most of Naim’s recent offerings. In the Diva, though, this is operating at 64 bits for the first time, dramatically increasing the amount of processing available. This DSP sends material to DACs specifically assigned to treble, midrange, and bass, meaning that each Diva Utopia has significant decoding horsepower. The two speakers then communicate via a custom implementation of the UWB wireless protocol designed to ensure that the bandwidth available is enough for any task handed to the speaker while offering the pre-requisite stability. 

This digital platform is made available to an enhanced version of the Naim/Focal streaming app. The app incorporates the setup and specific adjustments of the Diva. It also accesses streaming options, including stored content with Tidal, Qobuz, Spotify, internet radio, AirPlay, and Chromecast. HDMI eARC, a single optical, and RCA analogue pair complete the inputs line-up. Sure, a device like Triangle’s Capella active wireless speaker at one-thirteenth the cost of the Focal has more inputs to its name. Still, I suspect the Diva Utopia will do enough for most applications. 

Intriguingly different

All of this technical and engineering work creates a speaker that is at once familiar and intriguingly different. Many aspects of the design of the Diva Utopia could only be Focal; the drivers and prominent top plate, together with the ‘slash’ at the back of the cabinet, have been company calling cards for years. This familiarity blends with elements like the prominent groove down the front and the repositioned (and, of course, illuminated) logo that presumably points to the direction other members of the Utopia family will head in. 

It does work better in the flesh, though. When Focal sent some low-resolution images before going to have a listen, I wasn’t convinced. The proportions looked wrong, and the grey finish was worrying, akin to ferroconcrete. In reality, the Diva is entirely more convincing.

Reducing mass and size

The lines effectively reduce the perception of mass and size, and what looks a little disjointed in two dimensions comes together effortlessly in three. The grey is more likeable, too, but these outer sections are removable, and, in time, more finishes will become available. Owners can easily change these outer sections. 

 

I went down to Naim HQ to listen to the Focal Diva Utopia as their size and other items I have on test precluded installing them at home. The Salisbury massive had run the review pair through their basic EQ process. They had been placed near (but intriguingly not exactly in) the tape marking point for passive Utopias. The business of selecting the first track of the day was the same as if I were using the Mu-so Qb2 that lives in my kitchen, and it led to a slight sense of mental friction regarding what to expect when the music started. Steve Sells, Naim’s Technical Director, showed me a circuit diagram of the Diva’s main board, but its density puts it somewhere close to Minoan Linear A in the intelligibility stakes. Still, the message was clear- this is a formidably complex device.  

Beautifully sultry

What resulted, as the beautifully sultry ‘No Depression’ on My Baby’s Loves Voodoo [Embrace Recordings] filled the room, is a sound that gently but firmly subverts expectations of what that technical complexity ‘should’ sound like. Yes, six drivers are in each cabinet, firing in multiple directions, being coaxed, corralled and contained by that formidable electronics package. You receive Cato Van Dyck’s stunning vocal turn from the listening position. Also, the pared-back instrumentation supports that voice in a way that is utterly free of embellishment. The most important thing that the Diva did in that opening 3:54 of music was to demonstrate that engineering brilliance is a means to an end. It’s a means of creating the story rather than being the story itself. 

Digging deeper and leaning harder on the Focal Diva Utopia with Public Service Broadcasting’s Electra [So Recordings] began to show what it can do. Electra is an urgent, frantic and unavoidably congested recording due to the older samples that run through the music. The Diva takes this in its stride, delivering the thumping low end with cohesion and control while the delicate chorus is maintained perfectly over the top.

IMAX

Public Service Broadcasting has long had a knack for almost cinematic scope in its material. Here, that presentation gets the IMAX treatment.  

This effortless ability to deliver scale is more than a function of those hefty cabinets. The Diva consistently generated a stereo image that I could all but walk around in but one that rises and shrinks to fit the requirements of the material. Fink’s live rendition of ‘Sort of Revolution’ at La Cigale in Paris on Wheels Turn Beneath My Feet [Ninja Tune] has the space of the venue effortlessly stitched into the recording. Change tack entirely and give it Dodie’s Build a Problem [Doddlenoddle], an album that often feels like a boxroom studio recording, and that scale bleeds away entirely and convincingly. In both cases, the vocalist is the centre of your attention as they should be, but they arrive in the broader context of a recording that makes effortless sense. 

Beyond proficient

Crucially, Naim’s influence makes its way into the presentation at a level beyond simple technical proficiency. Give the Diva ‘Strange Times’ by the Chameleons [Geffen], and the simple propulsive energy they lend to the track is type-standard Naim. ‘Timing’ is a thorny and hopelessly subjective construct. It’s also impossible to argue that much of the actual business of how the Diva coordinates its many drivers is a function of software rather than innate mechanical wizardry. For all this, though, as you listen to John Lever’s epic gated drumming, it is abundantly clear that the Diva Utopia times perfectly. 

The application of digital cleverness might be subtle, but its effectiveness is hard to overstate. As you lower the volume, Focal’s Diva Utopia gently enhances the bass frequencies. The Focal can purr effortlessly in the background while the sound remains fuller and larger than expected. For some people reading this, the concept of a DSP-based bass ‘boost’ at low levels is an anathema. It goes against those purist ideals ingrained in the high end.

Traction control for audio

It reminds me of traction control in cars. Traction control has gone from a slow-witted digital nanny that could – on a good day – intervene to prevent you from dying into something that can apply in stages to make the whole vehicle more exploitable. So is the case here; this isn’t DSP from the turn of the century. 

The Focal Diva Utopia is a glimpse of the future. Granted, not the only future but a persuasive template nonetheless. It forms a convincing template for delivering a high-end audio product in a broader ecosystem where the ideals of ‘good, better, best’ are distorted by quite how good the ‘good’ rung is. People are buying affordable powered and active speakers right now for whom the Diva Utopia will look far more like their logical endgame than passive speakers with supporting electronics ever will. 

Suffering-free art

The peculiar notion that genuinely great audio requires you to suffer for your art is, fortunately, beating a retreat. However, even with this change in audio sensibilities, the Diva still feels like a step forward. So long as you can accommodate the cabinets, living with them is easy. The Diva carries out the day-to-day sonic drudgery with aplomb.

When you have the time and inclination, that convenience fades into the background. Instead, the formidable ability to deliver the sonic performance that only a large, well-engineered speaker can generate shines through. In that case, the Diva will be ready and willing to provide it. So long as it has access to two main sockets and an internet connection, of course. The collaboration between Focal and Naim has been a long time in the making. Regardless, the Focal Diva Utopia is both superb and likely to be a portent of things to come. It’s been worth the wait. 

Technical specifications

  • Type: three-way bass-reflex active streaming floorstanding loudspeaker
  • Floorstanding bass: 4 x W 6.5” (16.5cm) push-push configuration
  • Midrange-bass: W 6.5” (16.5cm) with TMD surround and NIC motor
  • Tweeter: IAL2 1 1/16” (27mm) pure beryllium M-shaped inverted dome
  • Bandwidth (+/-3dB): 27Hz – 40kHz
  • Low-frequency cut-off (-6dB): 24Hz
  • Maximum volume (per pair): 116dB SPL (@ 1m)
  • Amplification power per loudspeaker: LF: 250W Class AB / MF: 75W Class AB / HF: 75W Class AB
  • Power supply: 110-120V/220-240V ~50/60Hz
  • Power consumption: 280W
  • Network standby mode: <2W
  • No-network standby mode: <0.5W
  • Inputs on primary speaker: HDMI eARC, CEC / TOSLINK Optical / RCA analogue / Type A USB 2.0 / RJ45 Ethernet / RJ45 Speaker Link
  • Inputs on secondary loudspeaker: RJ45 Speaker Link
  • Internet radio format: Streaming containers: HLS, DASH, OGG. Codecs: MP3, AAC, Vorbis, FLAC. Icecast, Shoutcast, XPeri Extended Metadata support 
  • Audio formats: WAV, FLAC and AIFF – up to 24bits/384kHz, ALAC (Apple Lossless Audio Codec) – up to 24bits/384kHz, MP3 – up to 48kHz/ 320kbits (16bits), AAC – up to 48kHz/320kbits (16bits), OGG and AAC – up to 48kHz (16bits), DSD64 and DSD128
  • Bluetooth codecs: aptX Adaptive, SBC, AAC
  • Multiroom Sync with up to 32 Focal & Naim streaming devices
  • Control: Focal & Naim app, remote control, voice assistants
  • Wireless streaming: AirPlay, Google Cast, UPnP, Bluetooth 5.3, Spotify via Spotify Connect, TIDAL via TIDAL Connect, QQ Music via QPlay
  • Music streaming services via the Focal & Naim app: TIDAL, Qobuz, Internet radio and podcasts
  • Network: Ethernet (1000/100/10Mbps), Wi-Fi (Wi-Fi 6)
  • Wireless connection: UWB 96kHz/24-bit
  • Connection with Hi-Res Link: 192kHz/24-bit
  • Focal & Naim control app: iOS and Android
  • Remote control: Zigbee
  • Dimensions (HxLxD): 121x42x56cm
  • Weight: 64kg
  • Price: £29,999, $39,999, €34,999

Manufacturer

Focal

www.focal.com

More from Focal

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PM Warson: A Little More Time

UK soul, blues and R ‘n’ B singer-songwriter and guitarist, PM Warson, recorded his last album, 2022’s Dig Deep Repeat, in a makeshift studio, located in an industrial storage unit in Stoke Newington, in north-east London, during the pandemic.

For the follow up, A Little More Time, which is his third record, he’s pushed the boat out – quite literally, as it was made at Lightship 95, a floating analogue and digital studio moored on the Thames. 

“The live room has a very distinctive sound and I think you can hear it at the heart of the recording – it’s quite a ‘roomy’ production,” says Warson, talking to hi-fi+ in an exclusive interview.

This time around he’s been joined by his regular rhythm section, Billy Stookes (drums) and Pete Thomas (upright and electric bass), plus guests, including Stephen Large (organ and electric piano), Martin Kaye (piano), Jack McGaughey (organ), Ollie Seymour-Marsh (guitars) and Grant Olding (harmonica), plus backing singers and a horn section.

Warson’s previous album saw some ‘60s pop, soul and girl group influences creep in, alongside the more traditional R ‘n’B and blues – on A Little More Time he’s explored those inspirations, er, a little more. 

“That’s always been there, but on this record, I let the wider influences just come in a little bit,” he says. 

There’s still plenty of blues and R ‘n’B on the album, though, but, as he explains: “It’s a lot more straight up, with some really wild electric guitar playing – those tracks are a lot rawer, alongside some more polished, song writing-led productions.”

The album opens in style with the classy title track – a dramatic, ‘60s-style, Phil Spectoresque pop song, with organ, Bacharach-like horns and female backing vocals. 

It sounds like a long-lost gem that’s been discovered while crate digging in a specialist vintage record shop. 

Says Warson: “It’s a sound I’ve had in my head for a very long time – it was the first track we laid down in the first session, so it set the tone for the record.”

We’re then plunged into raw blues and R ‘n’B territory with the smouldering ballad ‘Over & Over,’ which was influenced by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band and the ‘60s blues scene in West London, as well as southern soul and Irma Thomas.

It’s now time to be whisked to New York to be seduced by the cinematic and neon-lit ‘Another City Night’, which is a wonderfully atmospheric soul tune inspired by The Drifters and Ben E. King – think ‘Under the Boardwalk’ and ‘Spanish Harlem’ – but with a hint of country. 

C J Hillman supplies some pedal steel and Warson provides a great, twangy guitar break that’s a nod to the fuzz-laden playing of Barrie Cadogan from UK rock trio, Little Barrie.

‘Win Or Lose’ lightens the mood with its funky country-soul groove – there are touches of The Meters, FAME Studios, Memphis soul and Clarence Carter, while ‘Closing Time’ explores ‘60s rock and the West Coast sound – it’s slightly psychedelic, with a jangly guitar riff.

“I’m really into Buffalo Springfield, The Byrds pre-the San Francisco hippy thing, and Dylan and The Velvet Underground,” says Warson, who also plays electric piano on the track.

‘I Saw You In A Dream’ is the album’s most dramatic moment – a haunting, ‘50s-sounding ballad in the vein of Roy Orbison, who has influenced Warson since he was a teenager. The track features some throbbing, phase-shifted, ‘60s Wurlitzer piano and a melodic, Duane Eddy-style guitar solo. 

The record closes with the sublime and moody, piano-led ‘In The Heights’ – one of the darker tracks, with its late-night / early-morning-in the-city vibe, a strung-out, bluesy guitar solo and a slightly spooky outro that was put through a plate reverb and an echo chamber. 

“That track, ‘Another City Night’ and ‘I Saw You In A Dream’ tie-in with each other – they have a similar mood and imagery,” says Warson.

This is his strongest and most varied album yet – a melting pot of a record that has its roots in the past, but still manages to sound fresh, inventive and inspired. I’m off to spend a little more time with it.

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Dynaudio Contour Legacy

Nostalgia is a powerful drug, and it has been fuelling a significant part of the audio industry of late. Across a range of different product categories and at various price points, companies have mined their past. The resulting products remind us of a time when things were, at the very least, differently awful. I’ve enjoyed many of these products. However, their emotional pull on me has been somewhat limited. Many of them hark back to a point before I was born. Even the Neat Petite Classic, which I adore, harks back to the point when Fisher-Price made my audio system. However, the Dynaudio Contour Legacy hits a little differently. 

It’s designed to mimic the Contour 1.8 loudspeaker from the 1990s. The Dynaudio Contour Legacy takes me back to a point where my interest in hi-fi was coming together. The Contour 1.8 achieved the unusual feat of being highly regarded across nearly every publication I could access. It carved out an enviable reputation for delivering a massive bang for your buck. Dynaudio has leveraged its reputation for the Heritage program, and the Contour Legacy is the result. 

Ancestral resemblances

It’s hard to overstate the latent nostalgia it unlocks simply sitting in my listening room. The Contour Legacy resembles its ancestor, but Dynaudio didn’t dust off an old production line. Instead, Dynaudio developed a new speaker that happens to look like an older one and it is a different size to any ‘in period’ Contour model. However, the lengths that Dynaudio has gone to here are impressive. The tweeter, for example, looks exactly like the classic T330 unit used at the time, with its distinctive nine-bolt fixing in three groups of three.

It isn’t a T330 tweeter, of course. The Contour Legacy uses a 28mm Esostar tweeter complete with Hexis technology that prevents unwanted information from coming back through the dome. It’s absolutely of the moment, but thanks to some careful aesthetic tweaks, you’d never know. Dynaudio’s mid-bass drivers have been more stylistically consistent over the years. You will only notice that the Legacy uses two 180mm units taken from the Evidence range if you know what you’re looking for. 

Stealth spanning

Stealthily spanning the decades is a theme for the speaker as a whole. The Contour Legacy is still a 2.5-way design that connects via a single set of speaker terminals. However, the crossover is completely revised and features niceties such as Dueland capacitors in the signal path. At the base of each cabinet is a metal plate, but it’s now roughly the thickness of a section of an armoured belt and lends each speaker an all-up mass that will surprise most people who judge them on their sensible dimensions. While the veneer of the original Contours was always a touch on the prosaic side, the Legacy is different. It uses a sustainable American walnut that is genuinely lovely to behold in the same gently understated manner as the Contour Legacy exudes in general.

This ‘if you know’ quality to the Dynaudio has really appealed to me in the time they’ve been here. Taken at face value, it’s a well-proportioned (I have stated before that Dynaudio has a grasp of proportion that results in uncommonly elegant speakers), attractive and fundamentally ‘grown up’ piece of hardware. If you’re more invested in this pastime, you’ll see a loving homage to a highly regarded classic done in such a way as to ensure that every single part of it is as good as it can be. You don’t have to notice the tweeter surround or that it uses a badge with a period-correct logo. You don’t have to know anything about the older Contour 1.8 to know this is a unique loudspeaker. Still, if you do, it rewards you in various ways. 

Modern place

In one key area, the Contour Legacy is a modern Dynaudio. While the ongoing use of aluminium for voice coils means there will always be more efficient rivals, it would be a stretch to call the result hard to drive. It’s also more forgiving regarding placement than the Evoke 30 I tested recently. I wound up with them around 2.5 metres apart, with a gentle toe in and around half a metre out from the wall to let the two rear ports breathe as they should. 

The result was a performance that did what I would expect a Dynaudio to do but with twists that took a little untangling. First up, the Contour Legacy has sensational bass extension. The deep drum that underpins the opening ‘Angel Dance’ on Robert Plant’s Band of Gold [Universal] is a positively seismic event felt both in the chest and through the sofa. The delivery is practically effortless; the port is utterly inaudible, and the control and definition give you the sense that you are barely pushing the Dynaudio. And that’s true even at the point where people unencumbered by neighbours and the rudiments of mechanical sympathy would be winding it down a notch. 

Tangibly real

This bass is wedded to a gloriously and tangibly lifelike midrange without tipping over into any perceived emphasis to any one point on the frequency response. Listening to Stanley Jordan’s unique take on Eleanor Rigby’ on his Magic Touch album [Blue Note], the Contour Legacy make complete sense of the ‘one man, one guitar, two discernible melodies’ that defines Jordan’s technique. Having replayed so clearly does nothing to take away the astonishing experience of it. As the frequencies increase, the Dynaudio remains almost impossible to provoke. Wilful mis-partnering would result in a performance where that refinement slipped, but you’d have to work on it. 

The Contour Legacy deviates from up-to-the-minute Dynaudio designs because there is fractionally more perception of the cabinet being part of the performance. There’s nothing so overt as ‘coloration’ from the Contour Legacy but less sense of the ‘shaping’ that creates soundstages you can all but wander around in. The effect is joyous when confronted with the focused rage of Superabundance by the Young Knives [Transgressive].

Leaning in

The Contour leans into the congested, jangling mess that is ‘Terra Firma.’ It delivers it with all of the fury baked into the recording intact. Is this more authentically ‘hi-fi’ than the modern speakers? Possibly not. Is it an absolute riot to listen to? You bet. 

It’s this absolute joy that the Contour Legacy has delivered so consistently that it marks them as something extraordinary. I’ve sat here on a few evenings, looking at a loudspeaker that takes me back to a very satisfying time of my life. It delivers a fundamentally modern performance but tinged with just enough of something different to be quite exceptionally captivating. At one point, I moved to vinyl and while listening to a ‘97 first pressing of Massive Attack’s Mezzanine [Virgin] (something I regrettably failed to pick up when new and sourced more recently), the sense of time travel was pretty much complete. ‘Dissolved Girl’ rumbles into life with Sarah Jane Hawley’s delicate vocals perfectly presented over the top of it. The nexus of ‘my adolescence but high end’ was complete, and my life was much better because of it. 

Limited catch

Of course, there’s a catch- there generally always is. Products from the Dynaudio Heritage line are always limited editions. However, making just 1,000 pairs of the Contour Legacy feels especially restrictive. Of that 1,000, only 52 will go to the UK. You will need both speed and a touch of good fortune to secure a pair. I understand the desire to create something that is both a talking point and not a distraction from modern Dynaudios. However, double that number would have still passed through very rapidly indeed.

The Dynaudio Contour Legacy is something a bit special. It’s a modern retelling of a profoundly influential speaker, made as well as the company can make it. However, the result is still greater than that of prodigious engineering. It delivers a performance absolutely of the moment. And yet it has just enough knowing winks to the past to make the experience an unforgettable one. In a crowded field of nostalgia products, this ranks as one of the best. It’s undoubtedly the most considered and capable I’ve had the privilege to listen to.

Technical specifications

  • Type: Two-and-a-half way, rear reflex-ported floorstanding loudspeaker
  • Drive units: 28mm Esotar 3 tweeter, 2x 180mm MSP mid-woofers
  • Frequency Response: 42Hz-29kHz (±3dB)
  • Sensitivity: 90dB (2.83V/1m)
  • Impedance: 4Ω
  • Crossover Frequencies: (400)/3400Hz
  • Crossover topology: 1st/2nd Order
  • IEC Power Handling: 200W
  • Finish: American Walnut
  • Dimensions (WxHxD): 20.8×35.2×99.5cm (incl. feet/grille)
  • Weight: 32.5kg per loudspeaker
  • Price: £10,200, $14,000, €12,000 per pair

Manufacturer

Dynaudio A/S

www.dynaudio.com

UK distributor

Dynaudio UK

www.dynaudio.com

+44(0)7852 867661

More from Dynaudio

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AURALiC VEGA G2.2

The AURALiC VEGA G2.2 remains the top DAC in the brand’s range of digital audio components. The upcoming AQUILA X3 is the brand’s new modular platform, and that may challenge the VEGA G2.2 pole position.

However, as a standalone DAC, the AURALiC VEGA G2.2 is the best converter in its current range. It’s a serious piece of not-quite full-width kit, too. The build, fit and finish are exceptionally high. It weighs nearly 10 kilograms, which for a component that measures 34 x 32 cm square, feels dense. One reason for this is that the anodised aluminium casework. It conceals an internal case made from Nickel-plated pure copper. This serves as a shield to keep out radio frequency noise. AURALiC transitioned from a single-piece chassis to the multi-part construction seen in the G2.2 range a few years ago.

Most digital audio specialists RFI issues are well aware of RFI issues. However, few go to such lengths to protect the circuitry in their converters. The only companies that appear to appreciate the benefits of copper casework are in the tube electronics field. AURALiC discovered the material’s qualities through trial and error. Tube amp makers are likely doing the same with those products as well.

Same but different

The VEGA G2.2 is not a typical converter in any respect. For a start, it has a built-in analogue preamplifier with a relay-based volume control albeit only one purely analogue input. It is far better equipped when it comes to accepting digital sources of the wired variety. Unlike other AURALiC streamer/DACs, the VEGA G2.2 does not support wireless sources such as Bluetooth. Nor can it stream without an Ethernet cable plugged in. Did I mention that it’s a streamer? AURALiC calls the VEGA G2.2 a ‘streaming DAC’ and dubs the visually similar ALTAIR G2.2 a ‘digital audio streamer’. This makes them sound like the same thing, and in many ways, they are.

What the VEGA offers is the option to upgrade through its Lightning Link connections with a word clock. However, it doesn’t have the option of onboard storage for a music library that you get with the ALTAIR. That model is a more comprehensive one-stop solution. The VEGA G2.2 is, therefore, the more hardcore audiophile device with upgradability built in. Regardless, it sounds pretty good on its own.

Onboard buffer

One reason for this is the onboard data buffer, known as Direct Data Recording (DDR). DDR records the incoming stream into memory in a binary format and then processes and outputs it to the DAC. It means that the DAC doesn’t have to cope with fluctuations in data rates. These can cause power supplies to have to vary their output. Having separate 60 fs femto clocks for 44.1 kHz and above, and 48 kHz and above, means that the data is fed to the DAC with maximum precision and minimum jitter. AURALiC claims the VEGA G2.2 is immune to input signal distortion and jitter as a result.

AURALiC VEGA G2.2 internals

The DAC itself is a hybrid of a discrete ladder and Delta-Sigma designs. AURALiC uses only the switching network inside a DAC chip and takes over the other roles. These include PLL (phase lock loop), filtering and oversampling, and do these discretely. The AURALiC VEGA G2.2 also offers streaming and preamp functions as mentioned. However, those looking to get maximum thrill power from its conversion section can select the Pure DAC mode. This disables those features and dedicates all its efforts to delivering the cleanest analogue signals. 

Lesser spotted

The preamp is not an afterthought though. It uses an analogue resistor ladder with coil latch relays that are only powered when the level is changed. This helps minimise noise. The streaming system has the benefit of AURALiC’s Lightning HD server software, this buffers all the metadata from attached drives or network servers and means that the Lightning control app displays the contents of your library with a degree of clarity that approaches the best in the business. You need to have it scan your music collection to do this but the process for doing so is straightforward with the app.

The only niggle is that it must scan the whole thing every time you add new music, there is no ‘scan recent additions’ which some apps offer. The way around this is to schedule a daily scan at a time when both VEGA and the server are turned on and let it run in the background.Alternatively, you can stream from the usual services alongside less common options including Amazon Music, Highresaudio and Netease (me neither), with both Spotify and Tidal Connect options plus internet radio. 

Connection-wise, the VEGA G2.2 has pretty much the full gamut of options with AES, coax, Toslink and USB for starters, these are augmented by a LAN port for streaming, a single pair of RCA analogue inputs and a word clock connection. Two of the three HDMI ports are for AURALiC’s Lighting Link which can be used to hook up an Aries streamer and a LEO GX word clock, the third HDMI is an eARC for use with a TV or set-top box. Analogue outputs are as expected with the balanced being AURALiC’s preferred option.

Mmm… woody

Auditioning this AURALiC started with it connected directly to a Bricasti M25 power amp via XLR with a USB input from my Longdog Audio power-supplied Lumin U2 Mini, this revealed that the Bricasti has a lot of gain and the Acoustic Energy Corinium speakers are sensitive. The sound produced by this system was live and direct with strong immediacy and excellent timing. Removing the streamer and hooking the VEGA G2.2 up to the network brought out the gutsiness of the strings played by the Locrian Ensemble (Mendelssohn Octets) which had lots of texture but avoided sounding coarse, they were just woody and fluent. Joni Mitchell was great too (Herbie Hancock, ‘The Man I Love’, Gershwin’s World), with strong three-dimensionality. It worked well without a separate preamp into the Bricasti, coherently presenting lots of detail, dynamics improved when a decent line stage was used but the onboard volume is quite presentable.

The VEGA has a clean, open presentation that solidifies stereo imaging and projects voices well into the room with the right record, Laurie Anderson’s ‘Strange Angels’ was right on this occasion. It is powerful and clean in the bass, often pulling out low notes that elude my usual converter which sounded mid-strong by comparison, and a little bit rose-tinted for that matter. I used the AURALiC’s Smooth filter setting alongside the Clean balance option, the alternative to the latter being Tone Mode which enhances harmonics in a vaguely tubey kind of way but ultimately reduces transparency. If you want a more relaxed ride however it may well appeal.

Carbon connection

The dynamics on offer from the Laurie Anderson track were impressive but the VEGA reveals that the quality of ECM’s recording on Anouar Brahem’s Blue Maqams is vastly superior, the depth of image, the tone and shape of the bass and all-round resolution is superb. As the opportunity presented itself, I tried an ARIES G2.2 with the VEGA to contrast results with different digital connections. AudioQuest kindly leant a box of Carbon cables with different terminations, this revealed that coax sounds fluent and relaxed but not overly detailed or spacious.

Lightning Link has better imaging and finer nuancing of detail while USB sounds a bit drier; instrument and vocal tone not being as rich as AURALiC’s proprietary connection. AES was ultimately the best sounding however, it’s a little brighter than the Lightning Link but times superbly and has a very engaging fluency.This result will probably vary with speaker choice and taste of course but it was an interesting experiment and one that few other products offer so many different options to try.

Back to Lumin

I went back to listening to the AURALiC VEGA G2.2 with the Lumin streamer and my regular Network Acoustics muon2 USB cable which is a lot pricier than the AQ Carbon but does deliver notably superior results. With this combo Ali Farka Touré and Ry Cooder’s ‘Ai Du’ (Talking Timbuktu) just oozes quality, the languid pace of the rhythm section counterpointed by crisp guitars and all the space and time you could want. The VEGA producing an easy but precisely defined version of events that is very engaging indeed. The Liv Andrea Hauge trio album Ville Blomster is not from an audiophile label (Hubro) but the depth of image that this DAC finds on the album is superb, the piano playing is so strong and tactile, the instrument sitting solidly in the room as if it was right there.

VEGA G2.2 Back

I love the way that the AURALiC VEGA G2.2 is fast enough to define the attack and decay of each note without blurring the transients, it has excellent low-level resolution thanks to all the efforts to keep noise at bay, and this brings a degree of focus and clarity to the results that makes you want to play more. JJ Cale’s ‘Call Me the Breeze’ was one of the pieces selected and the groove produced seemed as solid as I have heard it on any digital system, and a few analogue ones at that.

Natural high

I also enjoyed the way the AURALiC VEGA G2.2 can create such wide-open soundstages when the relevant detail is on the record, and it’s there on more of them than you might expect. Openness is generally a good sign. It indicates that the noise floor is very low and that the quietest signals are collaborating with the fundamental ones coherently.Sense of scale is produced by the entire bandwidth, subwoofers tend to enhance scale, but clarity in the higher frequencies is the key to reproducing the ‘air’ from the studio or concert hall.

High frequencies are the areas that digital audio finds most challenging to reproduce accurately. It’s where any inherent grain or grime will get in the way. This will make the system sound digital in a bad sense. This AURALiC is very extended; it doesn’t seek to flatter by rolling off the treble, and very clean thanks to very low noise. And this makes all the better recordings sound more natural and well, analogue. 

I don’t mean that it has the cuddly warmth that you get with a few record players. I mean that it has an excellent sense of timing and none of the harshness of bad digital displays. Ryley Walker’s ‘Summer Dress’ (Primrose Green) has a strong leading-edge definition on digital versions. It sounds quite compressed, which is likely the case, but it remains coherent despite lots being going on. The energy of the song comes through. It inveigles its way into your subconscious almost as well as the vinyl on a good turntable.

Power and dynamics

Labi Siffre’s ‘I Got The…’ (which contains the riff sampled on ‘The Real Slim Shady’) grooves like it should. It has plenty of power and has as much dynamics as the recording allows. Michael Chapman’s Window sounds equally analogue due to its 1970s origin. This means that you can hear a great deal of what went into it, even with a Qobuz stream. Locally stored music files sound better through the VEGA G2.2, but uncompressed streaming services are far from shabby here.

The AURALiC VEGA G2.2 is a very capable DAC, one that responds to source upgrades of any ilk with great enthusiasm. I spent a lot of time trying different reclockers and was always able to appreciate the differences between them. It imposes little character, has a highly even tonal balance and vast bandwidth in terms of tone and dynamics. As a dedicated digital-to-analogue converter, it is challenging to beat the combination of features. AURALiC’s VEGA G2.2  offers build quality and sonic capability that are unparalleled at its price. It seems even AURALiC is having trouble surpassing this thoroughly evolved DAC. 

Technical specifications

  • Type: Solid-state high-resolution PCM, DXD, and DSD-capable digital-to-analogue converter/preamplifier.
  • Digital Inputs: One AES/EBU, Coaxial, one Toslink, and one USB, HDMI eARC, Lightning Link. 
  • Analogue Outputs: One stereo single-ended (via RCA jacks), one balanced (via XLR connectors). Both outputs are configurable for fixed or variable-level operation. One headphone output (via 6.35mm jack).
  • DAC Resolution/Supported Digital Formats: All PCM from 44.1KS/s to 384KS/s with word lengths up to 32-bit, DSD up to DSD512. The following format restrictions apply:
    • 352.8KS/s and 384KS/s are supported through USB only.
    • 32-bit word lengths supported through USB only.
  • Frequency Response: 20Hz – 20kHz, ± 0.1dB
  • Distortion (THD + Noise): <0.00012% (XLR), < 0.00015% (RCA) 20Hz – 20kHz at 0dBFS. 
  • Output Voltage: 6V / 2V user selectable
  • User Interface: Front panel display, Lightning app.
  • Dimensions (HxWxD): 96 x 340 x 320mm
  • Weight: 9.3kg
  • Price: £6,899, €7,799, AURALiC is currently not sold in the US market

Manufacturer

AURALiC Ltd

www.auralic.com  

UK distributor

AURALiC Europe

www.auralic.com 

+44 (0) 7590 106105

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Gryphon PowerZone 3

 Gryphon just entered the power optimisation world. Not ‘entered’ like ‘politely knocked at the door and asked to be let in’. Gryphon hit the power optimisation world with all the force of that meteor that took out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. With the PowerZone 3, Gryphon makes the best – and most expensive – power optimiser in high-end audio. 

More accurately, Gryphon has two models. There’s the PowerZone 3.10, which features one bank of eight high-grade sockets. Then, there’s the PowerZone 3.20, which has two banks of four. The 3.10 has a current capacity of 20A, whereas the 3.20 can handle a full 40A. One might wonder what kind of arc-welding amplifier might need a 40A current capacity. However, Gryphon is also the company that makes the Apex mono power amplifier. Apex is so high current that it could power drive units made of blocks of steel. So maybe having that kind of current handling isn’t so crazy after all.

When two become one

We can dispense with separating them; the two work in a similar manner and perform identically. It’s just whether your system requires the heavy lifting of the 3.20. So, when discussing ‘PowerZone 3’, I am effectively meaning both of them. You pick the scale that suits your system. Nevertheless, the technology that underpins the Gryphon PowerZone 3 is unlike most power conditioners. This is why Gryphon calls it an ‘optimiser’. And that’s the key to its performance.

Let’s take a step back and look at the typical power conditioner. For the sake of discussion, let’s take regenerators out of the mix, as they do a very different thing. We’re focusing on devices that draw power from the wall and provide a gentle massage to the audio electronics along the way. The trouble with many power conditioners is that massage isn’t so gentle after all. Often, they use large transformers and filters. These smooth out the spikes, ripples, and noise that upset the AC apple cart. However, the cure is frequently as bad as the disease.

It’s not too big a leap to think of all audio with a plug as essentially ‘modulating alternating current’. In smoothing out the AC, you introduce a kind of perceptible ‘lag’ that undermines the system’s timing. The best conventional transformer-based conditioners minimise that lag to a great extent, but never eliminate it. It’s why advocates of ‘PRaT’ (Pace, Rhythm and Timing) routinely avoid power conditioners. They avoid them even in environments where the AC is notably poor. The argument is that if you are going to prioritise improving your system, you are likely to make compromises.. It’s better to have those compromises somewhere other than in the way that system ‘times.’ 

Giant transformer?

Gryphon’s PowerZone 3 isn’t a giant transformer in a box. I know I said I was treating the two PowerZone 3 models in the same breath, but if you think what kind of ‘giant transformer in a box’ would be required to tame 40A products, and you’d end up with something that would take up power amplifier floor space, and not the svelte shelf dweller that is the Gryphon PowerZone 3. 

So, what does the Gryphon PowerZone 3 do? It all comes down to more than a dozen years of research by a chemical engineer, Paul Hafner. According to the description published on Gryphon’s website, “In an electrical circuit, current flow is attended by micro-vibrations on a molecular level; basically, all current flow is, by definition, the transmission of energy through micro-vibrations. Following Paul Hafner’s theory and approach, the vibration of electrons in the conductor creates a series of minute resonances generated by the signal passing through it. Paul’s specific approach differentiates a Dynamic (variable) signal from a Static signal.”

Crystalline conductors

The PowerZone 3 features resin-potted crystalline structures known as HafnerTech™ Conductor Modules that focus and optimise the vibrational flow of electrons and thereby minimise the spurious resonances and the distortions they create. The adapted crystalline structures within these modules facilitate this vibrational flow in an undisturbed way with no loss of energy through noise or heat. I mentioned the idea of ‘massaging the AC’ before; the HafnerTech™ modules act as a kind of molecular-level spa treatment for your electrons. It also acts as a curated current flow, which is said to result in fewer artefacts and restrictions to the AC reaching the audio electronics.

This is accomplished without any current limiting, filtering or active signal processing in order to preserve the integrity of the AC signal. Gryphon even claims that room acoustics will have a less deleterious influence on sound quality when the PowerZone 3 is in place, as “rooms tend to disproportionately amplify the negative resonant characteristics of reproduced sound”. 

The PowerZone 3 also benefits from the innovative SmartStack™ compound, a form of shim that combines liquid and calendered rubber for optimum noise damping. This material, developed by fellow Danes MENETA, is used in high-end automotive settings, and this is its first implementation in the audio world.

PowerZone 3 features star grounding, and all three ‘legs’ of the AC signal—positive, negative and earth—are treated equally. Each benefit from conductive environments specifically adapted to their unique needs. All internal wiring features Teflon-insulated 12 AWG silver-plated, OFC copper. 

Gryphon-like build

It’s hard to describe the build of the PowerZone 3, because Gryphon is one of those ‘without parallel’ brands in the audio industry that take construction seriously. From the thick black anodised chassis to the elegantly restrained graphics, right through to the sheer overall solidity of the build, this is made ‘right.’ It gets the highest praise… it’s built like a Gryphon Audio product! Funny that. 

While what goes on inside the Gryphon PowerZone 3 is very different from almost every other conditioner on the market, there’s no denying it does a lot for your system. It’s not a subtle change, but neither is it so radical that it changes what you liked about your system in the first place. Instead, it’s like bringing out what was good about your system that made you buy it. Sounds are better illuminated; not spot-lit or too brightly or brashly brought into focus. It’s as if someone just raised the light levels a few notches. It’s even and well-balanced and… better.

Bass in particular snapped into focus with a clarity and precision that is extremely alluring and did so with all the transient energy and ‘snap’ required. The acid test of any power conditioning system here is ‘Chameleon’ by Trentemøller [The Last Resort, Poker Flat]. Those deep transients that can show up a port’s ability to choke up also highlight any softening or restrictions in power delivery, and there are none here. The sound of those almost square-wave deep bass sounds was more precise, with a better leading-edge attack and less trailing-edge decay, as it should. This applied universally, whether it was just the one component getting the Gryphon treatment or the entire system. 

Fine detail

Fine detail is also brought to the fore, with Joyce Di Donato’s voice both powerful and incredibly articulate [Stella Di Napoli, Erato]. On ‘Tu sola, o mua Giuletta… Deh! tu, bell’anima’, it resolves down to her voice and a French Horn player. This allows the two to have their separate physical ‘spaces’ in the mix, but never gets in the way of the beautiful music that underpins the track. And that’s the joy of the PowerZone 3 in a nutshell; it brings out both the bits that audiophiles crave and what music lovers want from their sound. All the while, not changing the intrinsic performance of the system the listener originally selected.

It behoves a reviewer to find a flaw in a device, but in this one, that’s hard. It’s self-sealing; the performance is less noticeable in equipment that isn’t that resolving, but you aren’t going to use a power conditioner that costs three times as much as your system, are you? Additionally, if you have some genuinely severe issues with your electrical supply, this isn’t the solution. The PowerZone 3 is more about refining a good supply than transforming a bad one into a good one.

The big theory

The minor criticism the PowerZone 3 faces is unrelated to its performance. It’s that the claims for why it does what it does will rankle with the Audio Science Club. They don’t need to listen to the Gryphon PowerZone 3 to form an opinion about it!

For the rest of us, the Gryphon PowerZone 3 is a game-changer. It helps bring out what your system is capable of without sacrificing one aspect of its overall performance. Sure, it’s expensive, and that puts it in the context of some very lofty audio electronics. However, if you want those electronics to have a glow-up, go for Gryphon! 

Technical specifications

  • Type: Power optimiser
  • PowerZone 3:10, 1 bank of 8 Furutech outlets, 20A capacity, 1x HafnerTech™ module
  • PowerZone 3:20, 2 banks of 4 Furutech outlets, 40A capacity, 2x HafnerTech™ module
  • Dimensions (WxHxD): 48.6×12.5×28.5cm
  • Weight: (PowerZone 3.10) 10.9kg, (PowerZone 3.20) 11.9kg
  • Price: PowerZone 3.10: £14,500, $14,000, €15,500
  • PowerZone 3.20: £17,950, $17,500, €18,950

Manufacturer

Gryphon Audio

www.gryphon-audio.dk

UK distributor

Harmony Hi-Fi

www.harmonyhifi.co.uk

+44(0)1701 629345

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Avantgarde Acoustics Colibri C2

The Colibri C2 is not a direction change for Avantgarde Acoustic. It’s an ‘adding more strings to the bow’ loudspeaker concept. It’s a recognition that the audio world is undergoing a fundamental change. The company’s more regular output of very large, distinctive horn loudspeakers remains in effect. However, the Colibri C2 is aimed at a wholly new audience. An audience more used to a more connected world. An audience who might not even know of Avantgarde Acoustic.

Avantgarde is perhaps the most prominent member of the German horn loudspeaker gang (please, no jokes about oompah bands). These companies rose to notoriety in the latter decades of the 20th century. The company operates from the darkest depths of the Odenwald (about three-quarters of an hour drive away from Frankfurt Airport). This is one reason why Avantgarde Acoustic has always danced to a different tune than the majority of ultra-high-end manufacturers. Avantgarde’s classic series of semi-active (and latterly fully active, too) horn systems typifies this approach. Consisting of variations on the Uno, Duo and Trio themes, this tech has been honed to near-perfection.

Beginning with flawed-genius origins, over three decades of development, Avantgarde was never about the usual audiophile bean-counting. And it was never about A-B-X comparing. There was no ‘can you hear the coughing on the third row, seven seats from the left.’ Or any of the pastimes favoured by an ever smaller niche of, let’s face it, predominantly older white males. They’re simply about recreating the thrill and emotional impact of music events.

Life-like dynamics

According to Avantgarde’s founder and CEO, Holger Fromme, the key to realising this is offering life-like dynamics. “Take your average hi-fi loudspeaker,” says Fromme. “That can go to maybe 100dB in a room with a lot of amplifier power behind it. At 90dB, it will already display noticeable dynamic compression,” he continues. “Much of the impact will be gone, especially with many modern, often electronic music styles.”

Therefore, Avantgarde’s speakers feature minimal crossovers, with sensitivity ratings that extend well into the three-figure range. These meet powerful drivers acting on tiny moving masses. The ambient air couples as efficiently as possible through those vast, colourful, injection moulded ABS spherical wave horns. Finally, this is supported in the low-frequency department by potent, DSP-controlled amps and large drivers. The entire system is front-loaded with horn-like waveguides or even genuine horns in the most extensive and expensive models. ‘Spendy’ speakers are great if you’ve got a high five-figure sum (or more) to spend on a hi-fi. Not everyone has that luxury. 

Enter Colibri. We have seen ‘entry-level’ speakers from Avantgarde before. Although they were admirable efforts, none quite captured the magic of the core line. Also, the current ‘entry-level’  Zero/Zero One still costs in the five-figure range, anyway. Avantgarde Acoustic demonstrated a ‘concept car’ version of the Colibri C2 at the Munich High End 2023.

Different audience

Colibri targets a distinctly different audience. An audience who scoff at buying a £400 cable because that’s the cost of a pair of stunning headphones. For music in the home, they might spend between €2,000 and €3,000 on loudspeakers. So, the Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2 remains a very expensive loudspeaker for many people. Therefore, what we offer them should be extremely compelling, and we believe it is. Now, everyone has the means to play music with full bandwidth and uninhibited dynamic range at their fingertips.

Any smartphone today has sufficient computing power to render data reduction formats like MP3 obsolete. Meanwhile, streaming platforms have been transitioning to high-resolution files. The music source is no longer the bottleneck; it’s the transducer. I’ve just bought a pair of headphones for €150, and the sound quality is outstanding for that price. The problem is that a loudspeaker system has to pressurise an air volume thousands of times larger. So, to overcome this, we had to distil and concentrate the technology of our state-of-the-art horn loudspeakers in a much more compact and easier-to-produce package. It also means that where twenty years or so before, one would normally spend 50 per cent of their overall hifi budget on speakers, there is a strong case to be made that one might spend 90 per cent on loudspeakers and 10 per cent on source and amplifier.”

Light is right

Unusually for the brand, the Avantgarde Colibri C2 is a passive speaker. At some point, there might be a fully active, DSP, wireless version. However, we have become increasingly aware of the importance of sustainability as a general concept. So, it’s wise not to incorporate digital technology into a loudspeaker that will likely be obsolete within two years. Coupled with a rugged build quality from materials like cast aluminium for top and bottom panels, the Colibri should be as usable and relevant in twenty years as it is now. 

The driver complement, too, is innovative and a departure for Avantgarde as a single driver covers the entire frequency band upwards of circa 700Hz. Right in the middle what looks like a baby (Duo) Mezzo by way of the enclosure’s horn flares, a 35 cm (about 14-inch) horn is energised by a 1.5-inch compression driver with an extremely light 2.2 grams membrane, flanked by a pair of 6.5-inch cone drivers that also couple very strong motor systems (according to Avantgarde the voice coil air gap is as small as 0.95 mm) to super light moving assemblies – hence the name Colibri.

Quasi-d’Appolito

This quasi-d’Appolito arrangement also means the Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2 is as near-as-dammit a point source acoustically. This is unusual for a horn loudspeaker. The flip side is that this is not a full-range speaker. The horn driver tops out at 19kHz (which is a small price to pay for the temporal consistency that costs with using a single driver for much of the audible frequency range) as a one-inch driver wouldn’t reach down nearly as low while still offering the sort dynamic headroom that Avantgarde sees as mandatory for its products.

A more practical consequence is the lack of bass extension, reaching -3dB at around 65Hz, making a subwoofer a compulsory addition for a stereo system built around a pair of Colibris. “Had we set the -3 dB point at 35Hz or so, efficiency would be down to about 89dB from the current 98dB, and that was a choice we would never make given the object of this exercise… The crossover point is low enough to allow a seamless transition to a big subwoofer offering the sort of cone surface desired for depth, impact and freedom of distortion, anyway.”

Although Avantgarde will offer their own 18-inch active-DSP controlled subwoofer (which also can be doubled up with the Colibris placed above them horizontally in a cradle or ‘nest’ specifically designed for this purpose), it will cost about €4,500. The manufacturer suggests the Colibri can be successfully used with any number of mass-produced, much lower-priced units to arrive at a significantly lower system cost. Also, the Colibri can act as a centre speaker in a multichannel setup, wall or ceiling mounted for use in home theatres, clubs and bars or anywhere else where high-quality music reproduction forms an integral part of the concept, et cetera.

Ninety-to-ten

For the test, we used a Klipsch SPL-150 subwoofer. This is a slightly prosaic but undeniably practical device that can be picked up for well down into three figures, to fill in the bottom two octaves or so for the Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2s. On-message with Fromme’s 90/10 budget suggestion, we started our listening with an SMSL DA-9 Bluetooth 5.0 amplifier, a tiny device built around a 40 Watts Class D amp sporting a single stereo pair of RCA inputs and another balanced (!) one using XLR in addition to its Bluetooth input; binding posts for a single pair of speakers plus an RCA subwoofer out (mono) on the output side. The going price of all this is around €250.

The first thing one notices about the Colibris is that the music grabs your attention even when playing at low volume from reduced data formats like internet radio. Instead of serving a more or less homogeneously textured sonic wallpaper, even under these circumstances, it separates the elements – vocals, bass lines, percussion – with a sense of space around them, making, for instance, lyrics, guitar riffs, melody lines more intelligible and impactful than normally would be the case under these circumstances – making ‘hey, this is a cool song – what is it?’ when something not previously heard comes along on the radio, a more regular occurrence. 

Not an illusion

This is not a case of being fed the illusion of a fast, clear, dynamic sound by way of tonal leanness as per some of the smaller or budget speakers known for their sense of immediacy and connection in the past – all leading edges and little substance after that. Rather than this, the Colibris, when supported adequately in the lowest registers, sound like a much bigger speaker system – their brand of immediacy is more like a big, torquey engine pulling a very lightweight sports car along than that of a hot hatch with a smallish engine. Small as they seem, those horn flares loading the pair of 6.5-inch midbass drivers add a useful 2-3 dB towards the lower edge of their working range.

Adding a CD player (Rotel RCD-1570) to the setup, the intro of ‘World in My Eyes’ on Depeche Mode’s Violator sounds arresting, with the synth bassline having plenty of weight and texture to make one sit up and notice. Again, the Colibris don’t just lay the arrangements and individual sounds wide open with a clarity on vocals that’s exceptional by any standard; they involve the listener emotionally more than I’ve heard anywhere near their price range.

No further explanation

Being Avantgarde, it needs no further explanation that dynamics are as effortless as they are thrilling and that you don’t need to bring out some special audiophile recording to demonstrate it – the intro of Rammstein’s ‘Mein Herz Brennt’, more specifically the point where the kick drums and ‘wall of sound’ guitar riff comes in and all hell breaks loose, will have you jump out of your seat and reach for the volume control if you were foolish enough to set high enough volume in the first place – and that’s just regular, overall somewhat compressed, mainstream production fodder.

Similarly, Massive Attack’s seminal Mezzanine album plumbed the depths of one’s hearing with deep, rumbling bass underlining er, massive soundscapes, the opening track ‘Angel’ working itself up to a devastating climax. Even with this modestly priced subwoofer, the Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2 will shake the walls and your furniture before showing any signs of strain. Remember, this is still with a couple-of-hundred-quid Chinese Bluetooth amp the size of a cigar box. 

Bring out the tubes

Hooking up the custom Pink Faun preamp (which offers separate outputs for bass, mid and highs on the main system, with the former two output pairs unfiltered bar a 30 Hz subsonic filter on the mids) and Audio Note 300B monoblock amps from my ‘big’ set-up, with source components of a similar calibre, brought a very significantly lowered noise (or rather: sound) floor, microdynamics, richer tonal colours and an even more expressive midrange.

Is it as refined as the big Avantgardes backed by an appropriate supporting cast? No. Of course not. Is it as compelling an experience? Yes, albeit in slightly different ways. I can imagine the happy few running Duos and Trios in separate listening rooms full of CDs, vinyl albums and acoustic treatment, buying Colibris with some streaming amplifier for the living room where music might be heard more casually and more as a social event.

No plonking

Although the Colibris are not quite plonk-them-anywhere speakers, they are much less demanding in terms of placement than the larger systems (which, in turn, by way of their horns’ directionality and DSP-controlled low-frequency section, are somewhat less sensitive to their acoustic environment than more conventional high-end speakers – but they do require a relatively higher level of care in setting them up to get them performing anywhere near their potential). They manage to connect, involve and thrill in a very similar fashion.

COLIBRI_Enclosure White_Horn Glossy White_Grille Fabric Bright_Flare Silver

Also, they’re compact enough not to overwhelm smaller rooms visually. That said, they will fill larger rooms with ease and look like the design statements they are. Although the first batch comes in black and white/silver grey, more adventurous combinations of enclosure, grille, and horn colours will be available on demand.

The brand is concentrating on the assets that set it apart. The Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2 provides an intense, dynamic and thrilling music experience. Better yet, it distils that experience into a compact, lifestyle-friendly and semi-affordable product. Avantgarde Acoustics might have found its Lotus Elise moment. Avantgarde has a product that will likely sell well (though still far from becoming ‘mainstream’ numbers). The Avantgarde Acoustic Colibri C2 is a future classic in waiting, as relevant and compelling tomorrow as it is today. Only time will tell. 

 

Technical specifications

  • Type: Three-driver, two-way, stand mount, horn-loaded satellite speaker 
  • Driver Complement: 1.5” compression driver, copper-electroplated, titanium membrane, 2.2 g moving mass and 20,000 Gauss magnet, coupled to 35 cm diameter spherical horn; 2x 6.5” midbass, carbon cone membrane and acrylonitrile-butadiene surround, 12.5 g moving mass and 23,500 Gauss magnet
  • Frequency Response: 65 – 19,000 Hz (+/-3 dB)
  • Sensitivity: 98 dB/W/m
  • Maximum SPL: 117 dB @ 1 m
  • Dimensions (H x D x W):  66 x 30 x 33 cm
  • Price: €7,000 euro/pair, SUB C18 (active, DSP-controlled subwoofer, from October/November 2024) €4.500 – UK and US prices on both products to be confirmed 

Manufacturer

Avantgarde Acoustic GmbH

www.avantgarde-acoustic.de

UK distributor

Cambridge Acoustic Sciences

www.cas.audio

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Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds: Wild God

The multi-faceted Nick Cave cut his musical teeth with his band, so Wild God, the 18th studio album with the Bad Seeds, has been long awaited.

I am a huge fan. Nick Cave is among the top three indie rock/alternative artists of all time. He can create wildly varied music, from his early ‘punkish’ days, through the delicate and phenomenal The Boatman Calls, to the electronic music on Skeleton Key.

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds are at their best when they create more melodic and intimate/acoustic music. His noisier music is also fantastic, but I prefer his quieter, more ‘acoustic’ side. 

For example, ‘O Children’ from Abbatoir Blues is one of my favourite tracks. It has loads of energy but with a very melodic and fantastic piano sound.

The Wild God album is like a half-spoken, half-song rock hymn, rock gospel, filled with religious images, choirs and evocative background music – forming a spiritual sonic soundscape, filled with hope despite the despair of a fallen world. Keyboards form the evocative sonic landscape, backed by frequent choirs. Cave’s piano is surprisingly in the background, compared to previous albums, not leading or guiding the music, more acting as an accent to the melodies—frequent images on the album, water, beautiful women, old gods and redemption or transformation. I thought the references to the ‘beautiful woman’ were to his wife when I first heard the album, but they seem to also refer to women in general, as a redeeming force in this fallen world.

Cave has developed a trend since the Push The Sky Away album to use spoken vocals instead of singing, and I must admit I much prefer when Nick sings his beautiful lyrics. Wild God has a lot more spoken word than singing. 

However, there are a couple of tracks that don’t seem to fit in. For example, his sincere and intimate hymn – ‘O Wow, O Wow (How Wonderful She Is)’ to Anita Lane. The spoken recording seems misplaced and does not fit the music, but as a hymn to her, it works just fine. 

The first single from the album, ‘Wild God’, gets us back into a Bad Seeds crescendo that starts 1:40 into the track, and keeps growing.

‘Final Rescue Attempt’ is my favourite track on the album, Ellis plays repeating simple keyboard notes, accented wonderfully by Cave’s carefully placed piano strokes. 

‘Conversion’ is probably the best Rock Hymn on the track. I can imagine how well that would work at their concert as a communal gospel rock hymn.

‘Long Dark Night’ is another favourite from the album, with an excellent piano and Cave’s best singing on the album, his vocals are wonderfully delicate and fragile. It brings back memories of an old favourite at his live concerts – ‘God Is In The House’—the most acoustic-sounding track on the album. 

Despite my admiration for his work in general, I did not like the album when I first heard it, but it has grown on me. So, if you dismissed it after a first listen, give it a few more listens. This music is not suited as background music. You need to sit down and listen to enjoy this album. For fans, it is a must-have. For fans of evocative music, indie rock and alternative rock, it is also a must-have. The great thing about Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds is that you never know which cave (no pun intended) you will enter when you follow Nick into a new album. Some of the caves will be warm, intimate and cosy, some cavernous, a bit scary and loud, and some simply beautiful and wondrous. Because they are all different, there will be some you like better than others. 

But you will always be happy that you followed to explore whatever new cave Nick Cave has carved out for you, and as always, you will want to linger, listen and reflect. This album is filled with evocative tracks that feel like soundscapes rather than traditional melodies. Four decades in, this is yet another evolution in a continuing and awe-inspiring amount of artistic exploration.

Finally, having seen Nick Cave both solo and with the Bad Seeds many times, I encourage anyone interested in his music to experience Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds at least once live. They are fantastic live.  

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Origin Live Strata

A turntable mat that works on any turntable with any platter material – too good to be true? That was the bold claim from designer Mark Baker about the Origin Live Strata. I spoke to him at the 2023 North-West Audio Show.

Before this review, no mat has improved on playing vinyl directly on the Lexan (a robust and inert plastic) platter of my Audio Note TT3 turntable. Baker searched for 20 years for a mat to work on his turntables’ acrylic platters. He finally found the right material, which he used in his entry-level Upgrade mat.

Eight years later

Eight years and thousands of prototypes later, the Strata is an evolution of that. Baker found no one material was effective at damping the resonances across the entire audio frequency band. Hence, the triple-layer construction of the Origin Live Strata. However, he preferred not to reveal details of the materials used.

Elaborating on the role a turntable mat plays, Baker explains that it helps to decouple the record from resonances in the platter. These are caused by the stylus vibrating in the groove, friction in the turntable bearing, motor noise, and airborne vibration from the loudspeakers.

I decided to try the mat on various turntables with different platter materials. Primarily, I used the Strata on my Audio Note TT3 turntable, which features a Lexan platter.

I also visited my local retailer, Home Media in Maidstone, where they let me try the mat on a Gold Note T5 with its glass platter, a Planar 10 with a ceramic platter, and a Clearaudio Performance DC with its POM platter. Thanks to the guys at Soundcraft in Ashford, I tried it on a Linn Sondek LP12 with its metal platter.

No disappointments

I started with the Origin Live Strata on my Audio Note TT3 at home, which did not disappoint. On vocals as diverse as Stephen Fearing, Linda Ronstadt and John Mellencamp, the Strata improved vocal intelligibility. It smoothed out any sibilance or rough edges. Overall, there was a coherent and layered musical soundstage with great rhythmic push and integrity. Funky bass lines had the growl and movement they should. Additionally, the sax had bite and subtlety, and the guitar had excellent inner note detail and shape.

I tried it with equal success on the Gold Note’s glass platter, the Rega’s ceramic platter, and the Clearaudio’s POM platter. In all cases, the vocals were smoother, and the layers in the instrumentation were better separated and defined. Also, bass lines were punchier, and drums were more dynamic and sharply focused.

As a final check, I tried the Strata on the Linn Sondek LP12 and got similar results. The Strata achieved the same improvements over the LP12’s felt mat it had achieved on the other turntables.

The Origin Live Strata turntable mat performed with remarkable consistency across a wide variety of turntables with different platter materials. This held true for both budget and much more expensive models.

If you consider the Origin Live Strata as ‘just a mat’, £295 sounds expensive. But viewed as a significant platter upgrade, £295 (with a manufacturer’s money-back guarantee) is a realistic proposition. It is well worth a try. 

Price and Contact Details

  • Origin Live Strata: £295, €359, US price pending

Manufacturer

Origin Live

www.originlive.com

+44(0)2380 578877

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