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10-12-2023 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 21
Post ID: 27279
Reply to: 27261
The Left Hand of Josef Hofmann
Some years back I posted on the Musical Discussions board about a remarkable Everest recording (X-923) of Josef Hofmann, and I mentioned then that I thought this recording was pretty amazing, based on the Music I was easily able to extract from it. Here is a link to that post:


  http://www.romythecat.com/Forums/ShowPost.aspx?PageIndex=1&postID=7008#7008


At the time of that post I was listening via my BassZilla speakers driven by Lamm ML2s. Later, I used the BassZillas with Marantz MA 9S2 amps. Today, I listened to the same recording via The Loudspeakers driven by Marantz MA-9S2s. People like to throw around the term “realistic” in connection with home audio, and this is actually funny  when the music under consideration was played by Josef Hofmann, winding up on a closely mic’d Hamburg Steinway B. Talk about power… I suspect that few people would actually want the live performance in their listening room.  The first thing that fairly jumped out at me today was Hofmann’s left hand work, and how much richer and more powerfully the work presents with both the greater frequency range and more effortless dynamics than I have heard before. If these speakers tilt up at all, it is certainly not much, and, likewise, the low frequencies only come up with increased volume. Then,the long, wrapped strings really stick to their original pitches while in no way shorting the rest of the “frequency range”. Great, natural balance. I mentioned I was weeping after Bruckner 7 via The Loudspeakers. Today, after the Chopin, I was laughing. I have really been enjoying myself.


Paul S
11-23-2023 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 22
Post ID: 27298
Reply to: 27279
Break In

At some point recently I became particularly aware of the fact that the sound from the Loudspeakers has transformed significantly over the five months that I’ve used them, not in the sense that the character of The Loudspeakers has changed, rather Musical substance has somehow been “added” even as the speakers’ agility and adroitness have increased, which, in a way, “counters” the sense one typically gets with “added material”, especially in cases where it can become “too much”. One way to sum it might be, more information with less fuss and bother. This seems to build on the quality of “Refinement”, which The Loudspeakers share with the MA-9S2s. While I do not generally recommend “doubling down” on one “characteristic” of sound, in my case, where the Refinement is concerned, I’ve actually tripled down, since both my analog and digital front ends sport this quality, as well. I am not just defending myself when I say that I do not think the Refinement has become problematic in my case, because I have turned away components that were “voiced” for someone’s idea of “refinement”, that either seemed relentlessly soft, or syrupy, or velvety, or satin-y, on and on, and I am not a sucker for just any particular version of “refinement”. I don’t like or advocate ever-present or “own sound” for my system. Yet, here I am…  Anyway, in the case of The Loudspeakers this seems to be a result of a long “break-in” period, perhaps the fancy, expensive X/O parts, or the 12 AWG wire, and certainly the “stiff” “pro” drivers. I just tried the “scratch and tap test” on the (paper) direct drivers, and I was surprised to hear how much they’ve changed since I last performed the test, months ago.  Both drivers remain a good deal “deader” than I would have imagined is good for Sound; but the proof is Listening, and they sound very nice, indeed over the frequencies they are allotted when they are actually in use, playing Music as parts of The Loudspeakers. So, what do I know? I have heard plenty of drivers that had the life engineered right out of them; but, lucky for me, Troels could obviously hear, appreciate and design for Life from the drivers in The Loudspeakers in a way that I am able to develop with the MA-9S2s, at any rate. The Big Woofer has been especially transformed, becoming more articulate and generally more helpful at the X/O point. The cone is still quite dead compared to the many 15” drivers I have “on hand”. But, again, I can’t argue with the results I’m getting, as the Music is anything but dead. Live and Learn, I guess. No surprise to hornies, I suppose, but the horns have also gotten better and better the more I’ve used them. I liken the 18Sound CD/horn to my old Pole Star, the JBL 375. Of course, the 18Sound does not go that low, but it shares the Refinement quality with the storied JBL classic unit. And I am just tickled with the Visaton TL16H super tweeter! I never dreamed it would integrate so well for me with The Loudspeakers! Incredibly, it seems to have “color” that ribbons I’ve used lacked. Perhaps this comes from greater output down the spectrum; I don’t know, but I like it!>>


Happy Thanksging (apropos),

Paul S

12-11-2023 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 23
Post ID: 27312
Reply to: 27298
Suitable for Transplants?
It’s been a while since I visited face to face with my World-traveling friend, Mark. He came by yesterday, and we talked and also listened to Music via my MA-9S2s and The Loudspeakers. It was all LP playback. Mark has had his own giant hi-fi system in storage while he travels, and he said he misses frequent Music sessions via his hi-fi, even though he regularly attends live events in world class theaters and venues, in the course of his travels. I had turned on my system about ½ hour before Mark got to my house, and it took another ½ hour playing Music for the system to come into top (designed/acceptable) form. Although Mark and I do not have exactly the same Musical and playback preferences, we share a lot, and we both very much like the notably “refined” quality my system exudes, with very “natural” and “lifelike’ pitch, timbre, dynamics, timing, etc., unforced, with all instruments and voices accounted for and in their places, pretty much full range, at volumes that bring the Music across. Mark has used giant tube amps with giant electrostatic speakers (Sound Lab A-1s) in a large room, for years. He has said before he would be happy with the MA-9S2s, and yesterday he asked if I would build a pair of The Loudspeakers for him when he settles down again. By saying this I mean to convey to those who are curious about The Loudspeakers that I am not the only one who “gets” what the MAS-9S2/Loudspeaker pairing can do, at least for “serious” Music. We included yesterday some fairly simple jazz (John Coltrane, “Ballads”), and it was downright touching, just gorgeous, which I mention to reinforce the “realistic” “scaling” The Loudspeakers do, for those wishing to keep it down to one system.
  
Paul S
12-15-2023 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 24
Post ID: 27314
Reply to: 27312
Gould Brahms Intermezzi

Just listened to Gould’s unusual Brahms Intermezzi (See Music Board) via the Loudspeakers for the first time. The speakers were powered by the MA-9S2s. Of course I’ve noticed before how Gould deconstructs these pieces. Today I took advantage of the refined, natural sound and I really relaxed and let the Sound and the Music come to me. Naturally, the structure is unusual, and The Loudspeakers certainly reveal that. I could also hear how Gould re-built these pieces temporally, with some surprisingly long and meandering expositions, and how he managed to re-time the notes without losing the emotional melodic threads that join them. The Loudspeakers have no trouble making Music from the sometimes jumbled or "isolated" notes, and they clearly re-create the tumultuous sections, where Gould holds the sustain pedal as he pours forth the notes, which ring and continue ringing as more notes are added, growing into bell-like sonorities, which are sometimes downright thunderous. Folks, this is the sort of thing one might hear from a good seat at a live Gould concert in a nice venue. It’s a great LP/recording, with more attention paid to Gould’s playing than his humming, and The Loudspeakers put the icing on the Musical Cake. Got an "unknown error" code when I tried to upload a photo of the album sleeve,  but I think I listed it on the Music board "review".>>


Paul S

01-14-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 25
Post ID: 27322
Reply to: 27314
The Red-headed Step-Driver

Am I the only one who’s (just) noticed that I have not yet specifically mentioned The Loudspeaker’s midrange driver? This seems odd, in view of the fact that this driver is pretty much the beating heart of The Loudspeaker, playing the range from 200 to 1,300 Hz, handling most of the Musical Energy I’m hearing from The Loudspeakers. Did this driver somehow escape my notice? If yes, is this a bad thing? The driver in question is an 18 Sound 10NMBA520 (10”), with a fancy magnet and a shallow, 28g paper cone, and some sort of a built-in feedback loop that is said to keep the impedance nice. As I mentioned, I have been moving the speakers around since I plugged them in, trying to find a permanent spot for them, including moving them up and down on stands of varying heights. I rather dread the vertical exercise, as my version of the Loudspeakers weigh close to 230 lbs. apiece. So far, stands have ranged from3 ½” to 5 1/2”. A while back I found that I liked the sound and the sound effects (“soundstage”) when I stand between the speakers, putting my ears well above all the drivers. Yesterday I discovered that I get similar-but-more-direct sound if I sit on the carpet, putting my ears at about the center of the midrange driver. The electricity was OK, and the electronics were warmed up when I did this, and I was struck by how much Musical Information I was getting from this driver, and how easily and downright comfortably the driver delivered this information! And I immediately determined that I should at least try a taller (10”) stand, to put that driver at ear level when I sit in my beloved bentwood, Poang chair. I’m casting around in my head, trying to come up with a simple stand that will bear the weight and allow sliding around on the carpet. I’ll get back about this if/when I cross that Rubicon.>>


Paul S

02-02-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 26
Post ID: 27325
Reply to: 27322
Bruckner 8, The Power and the Glory
Today I listened again to a couple of Bruckner 8 performances on CDs, namely von Karajan/VPO, 1988, also Schuricht/Stuttgart, 1954.  The Music is amazing on both CDs, but the 1988 performance (which may well have been digitally recorded to begin with) comes across quite a bit better via my playback, in terms of range, scale, space and clarity. The sonic differences between these CDs refresh my thoughts about the part Sound plays in rendering Bruckner, meaning what the sound system renders for appreciation. At this early stage in my Bruckner experience I am very grateful to have a sound system (hi-fi) that brings this Music across to me, mostly by “opening up” and making clear enough to me the sounds, timing and structures Bruckner is using to convey his Music. Is all this power and clarity really “necessary”? Well, I am speaking for myself, of course, and YMMV where Bruckner appreciation is concerned. For me, The Loudspeakers are the first speakers I’ve used that “do” Bruckner, and they do it BIG in my listening room, once the system is warmed up. I regard “soundstage” as a bonus, and it’s a BIG bonus with the von Karajan CDs. Naturally, for me to hear it, The Loudspeakers also have to “do” soundstage. Indeed, they do!

Paul S
02-14-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 27
Post ID: 27334
Reply to: 27325
Koussevitzky Revisited
I want to revisit a CD recital that Romy first shared at GSC, The Spirit of Koussevitzky, Gary Karr, bass, with Harmon Lewis on the piano. Apparently, there is no substitute for bass when listening to bass. Who knew? The Loudspeakers have presented a much richer iteration of this very fine recital and the remarkable instrument that Karr has graciously re-gifted for use by other accomplished, serious bassists.  Forget “fast bass”; this is Musical bass, including the lowest to nearly the highest sounds, loaded with harmonics, texture and dynamics, all driven by Karr’s skill, sensitivity, and special ability to communicate the Music with this amazing instrument. Remarkable, now that it’s laid out for me in such a pristine manner via The Loudspeakers. Nice ambiance, too.

Paul S
02-14-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 28
Post ID: 27335
Reply to: 27334
Lubeck!
Now I understand why people gush about Wand’s Bruckner 8 in the Lubeck cathedral! I’ve heard B8 rendered with more “detail” but never a better overall balance of sounds and Sound for this symphony, not to mention the very special performance. The “ambiance” presented here is pervasive, very “lifelike”; I am bathed in it. This is exactly what I hoped for from The Loudspeakers! The Loudspeakers are not “challenged” by the recording, they really do it justice. It’s like a portal to another time in another world! I will post more about the performance on the Music board.

Paul S
02-16-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
N-set
Gdansk, Poland
Posts 609
Joined on 01-07-2006

Post #: 29
Post ID: 27336
Reply to: 27335
Original?
Paul, you have the 1988 original CD or the new Japanese reissue?



Cheers,
Jarek
STACORE
02-16-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 30
Post ID: 27337
Reply to: 27336
My Version
Jarek, my CDs (2 in the box) did not come from Japan, and no Japanese characters on the box, just the RCA "wax seal" in the upper left front corner and the bottom right rear corner of the case, also the BMG logo on the back. The sound is "different" than I am used to, and I am verry happy to find that the presentation really serves the composition and the performance well. It goes astoundingly deep. 1988.

Best regards,
Paul S
02-17-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 31
Post ID: 27338
Reply to: 27337
A Link to More Information
It looks like there are several iterations of this particular performance floating around, and I do not know about the "others". Since this site won't load my photos, here is a link to the version I am telling about (I believe this 8th was performed/recorded in 1987...):

https://classicalmjourney.blogspot.com/2016/03/anton-bruckner-symphony-no-8-gunter-wand.html

Best regards,
Paul S
02-20-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,052
Joined on 05-27-2004

Post #: 32
Post ID: 27340
Reply to: 27338
Tha is all fine but...
 Paul S wrote:
Happily, Arkivmusic.com has made it available once again through its on-demand service. For Bruckner lovers, it's a must
...but buy it not made by ArkivMusic, even though it is hard to distract it nowadays. The Arkivmusic is a horrible organization and I have boycotted it for years


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
02-20-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 33
Post ID: 27341
Reply to: 27340
Since It Seems to be Important To You
Romy, I did not patronize ArkivMusic but I just pasted in the first blip I found with the right picture of the CDs I bought. I got mine from Rarewaves, USA via Amazon. I suppose only God knows if they had it "drop-shipped" from Arkiv, but nothing on the CD box or info pack that indicates this.

Paul S
03-15-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 34
Post ID: 27350
Reply to: 27335
Speakers For The Masses?

“Reviewers” speak confidently about the various parts of cited musical compositions, and in many cases I believe they hear what they say they do. I think it is not only listening experience that bears this fruit, but it might also be a gift, a special capacity for hearing that the reviewer possesses. Whether it is possible to “hear what’s not there”, I am not sure; perhaps “some sound is implicit”. For example, it seems like musicians may “hear differently” from the rest of us. In the case of Bruckner’s Symphonies I am glad to be able to hear so much more than Before The Loudspeakers (BTL), and I am passing on here that much of what I have heard recently is voices, etc. that have been homogenized BTL, and some of those voices were somewhat homogenized even After The Loudspeakers (ATL) until I really cranked up the volume, at which time The Loudspeakers did not compress the Sound but voices came up that had been faint and “part of the chorus” previously. Some of these voices MIGHT have been more available at lower volumes with a doctored frequency response, but keep in mind that Bruckner uses the entire orchestra extensively, top to bottom, so I would not endorse trying to “voice speakers for Bruckner”, apart from using very wide range, very efficient speakers that can take the power to “give voice to Bruckner”. If anyone wonders, yes, the louder one plays back, the more critical the recording and the capabilities of the gear providing the signals and the drive to The Loudspeakers. Like I said up the thread, the more you ask from your system, the more it requires from you. I do “recommend” The Loudspeakers… with a whole thread full of relevant qualifications that I hope provide a map for someone else to implement these speakers, if that’s what they want to do, of course. Yes, they will play softly, too; but that is not how I have approached and implemented my version. I have insisted that music other than Bruckner not suffer from The Loudspeakers, and indeed other Music has also benefitted from these speakers, even at “normal” playback levels. I would still be happy with these speakers if I could no longer listen to loud Bruckner; but I probably would not have gone through this drill were it not for the desire to immerse in Big, symphonic Music.>>



Paul S

03-16-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 35
Post ID: 27351
Reply to: 27322
Stand and Deliver

Up the thread I shared that sitting on the floor with my ears at the same elevation as the center of the 10” drivers sounded good, and that I planned to put The Loudspeakers on 10” stands so I could sit in my listening chair with my ears at the same position relative to the height of the 10” driver. I also happened to mention this plan directly to Troels Gravesen and I was surprised when he answered that he supposed the sound shift I had described did not relate to where my ears were relative to the 10” driver, rather it had to do with where my ears were in the room. Hmmm… I never thought of that… Still, I found a couple of old milk crates, and I made a sturdy ramp, and I singlehandedly got each of The Loudspeakers up on a crate, and I did some listening. And Troels was right, I had not reproduced the sound I got (and still get) while sitting on the floor. I did like a significant power boost I noticed with 10” stands, but it was accompanied by a loss of “sound effects”, like imaging and “space”, that I realized I prefer to the added outright power. I would say that the 10” stands in my case make The Loudspeakers themselves “too present”, whatever the “real reason” for this effect. Troels also mentioned that he designed The Loudspeakers with microphones and ears at the level of the horn center, and he offered that this would be the best way to listen to The Loudspeakers. I spent about a week and a half with the 10” stands, and last week I went to inch and one-half blocks under the speakers, with my ears at the horn center when I am seated in my chair. Folks, there are not many horns I want pointed at my ears, but these 18 Sound drivers are very refined, and I do not toe the speakers in that far, in any case; I am still a ways off the central axis. My imaging and space are back and better than ever, with no problems except the ongoing reality that The Loudspeakers reproduce pretty much everything they are fed, for better or for worse. They create a Huge Universe of Differences that includes everything you’d want to know about the recording and the rest of your system, along with the current state of the electricity. I guess it’s each person’s place to choose what they listen to and how they listen to it; but I have to say I am both mystified and amused by the lengths to which people go to listen to crap. On the other hand, I believe that Bruckner is not really popular, either, although it is my current yardstick and delight, as well.>>


Paul S

03-17-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 36
Post ID: 27352
Reply to: 27351
Following Troels' Bread Crumbs

Today I experimented some more with positioning while keeping Troels’ ideas in mind. I believe I mentioned that I liked the sound I get when standing up between the speakers, as well as when I sit on the floor, and when I measured the distance from the ceiling to my ear holes when standing, I found (surprise…) it’s close to the distance from the floor to my ears when I sit on the floor. Hmmm, again… From this I mentally stretched and pushed my chair back away from the speakers until my ears were about 3’ off the back wall when I was seated, and I toed the speakers in until they pointed at my shoulders when I am seated in my chair in the new position. As things are now, my ears are about 10’ from the speakers when I am seated. You can say what you want about my methods, it “worked”! I got astounding “space” and “imaging” along with greater articulation and clarity at all frequencies, particularly higher frequencies, where I had thought my electronics were a little confused, or maybe it was mediocre electricity. Now I think this slight HF confusion was caused by driver combing, or lobing, or something like that, because it went away when I adopted the new listening positions.  I was amazed and super excited and touched Musically by more articulate LF, as well, whole new melodic lines in the Matacic Bruckner 7. Simply amazing. I’m glad I listened to Troels. I have read several builder response posts where people have changed Troels' design, including all sorts of additions, subtractions, and modifications, and then they seemed underwhelmed or had “issues” with The Loudspeakers’ performance as they used them. Of course everyone is entitled to build and use their own speakers however they want; but remember it doesn’t take much to change the sound, and changes might or might not be for the better. Troels has said as much himself, many times and many ways. As for myself, I guess I have been spurred on and pretty excited lately by great results!>>


Paul S

03-28-2024 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,577
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 37
Post ID: 27353
Reply to: 27352
Location, Location, Location!

It’s been such fun, and so gratifying, to keep getting “more” from The Loudspeakers, which have so far been a veritable Sonic Cornucopia, exceeding my expectations and delighting me again and again since I first listened to Music with them, as chronicled at the beginning of this thread. I should say that my primary relationship with The Loudspeakers has been Listening to Music rather than hi-fi, per se. However, as I keep hearing more in terms of Music, it makes me want to explore certain “aspects of the Sound” that these speakers deliver, namely, “imaging” and “space”. So far, I have stuck to my guns (and Troels’ instructions) and NOT messed with crossovers in order to shape the sound, as some other TL builders have discussed doing on other forums. So far, I have simply moved The (bog standard) Loudspeakers and my ears around in the same listening room I have used for almost 17 years in order to hear better and better understand the Music I want to hear, along with the “sounds of space” and other things currently of interest to me. Before The Loudspeakers (BTL) I chose Sound “density” and dynamics over imaging and space every time, since it seemed at the time to be an either/or situation. And I was never that smitten by the sort of “air-y ambience” that some small speakers do so well, even as they dilute the density and the “un-forced Force” of live music events. At this point it appears that I have discovered with The Loudspeakers a very saturated and detailed FR sonic balance that includes width, height and depth that scales well with both intimate and very large Music venues, apropos, given the recording includes this “information” in the first place. It’s a solid fact that my place in the room, The Loudspeakers’ places in the room, and my position relative to The loudspeakers are all important in terms of the Sound of the Music I get. I will try to explain better as I am able, and I will continue reporting all this as I find the words to describe it better. Meanwhile, Wow!>>



Paul S

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