lovethatsound
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your so RIGHT☺I always used to think CD only sounds ok and vinyl was king but once you get a well mastered CD and a very, very good DAC digital is superior imo.
your so RIGHT☺I always used to think CD only sounds ok and vinyl was king but once you get a well mastered CD and a very, very good DAC digital is superior imo.
The Jake visit was definitely one of the highlights of the show. And because the idea was to compare the sound of the ukulele recorded a couple of weeks ago against the sound of the system, we dropped a Dave into the system. Stereophile were going around the show, and trying to see which system sounded closest to the original which is a cool idea; but the flaw is that the microphone and ADC is also part of the chain.
I have some personal interest, as my son had just started to play the ukulele, so I know the sound of his instrument quite well.
Because I am interested in how it was miked, (hopefully having to do my own test recordings soon) I asked about the mic - it was a classic Neumann valve (tube) mic; I think the U47. I asked about placement, and it was 3 inches from the strings - so I was expecting a very bright incisive sound.
Firstly Jake played - and frankly his playing was exquisite; I have never ever heard a ukulele played with such expression - or with such speed and finesse - if you like the sound of the ukulele, check out Jake Shimabukuro, he has his own website - the album is the Nashville sessions. Next came the recorded version. For all those that have postulated that Dave's cavernous sound-stage is something I have added, I can confirm that the sound was completely and utterly flat, hovering immediately above the Dave in centre line from the speakers - exactly as one would expect from a close miked sound with no added reverb. But the live was clearly brighter with more transient impact - recorded being a bit softer and warmer - I guess the U47 is playing its part here, as it is chosen because it sounds warm.
So it proved very interesting, and gave me a tiny glimpse into the fun I should be having later this year in recording my own son's ukulele.
Rob
thanks for your reply, can you recommand a mirco usb to bnc cable suitable for my dave connection to steamer.Yes it will accept DoP DSD64 and DSD128 but no more as the SPDIF is limited to 384 kHz.
Rob
A few days ago I recieved the latest issue from Stereophile and found out that they just reviewed Yggdrasil. The reviewer was listening to it for over a year. So he took his time doing the review. I reckon the same thing is going on with Dave. They probably have it in Queue and or are working on the review right now.
It will be interesting to see if Blu2 is even acknowledged by the leading Hifi reviewers, given that the industry seems to have moved wholesale to streaming. It would be an irony now CD has finally fulfillid its promise that the industry was looking the other way and following a new, as yet unfulfilled, dream.
Is it all about the money? You bet
Agreed, a strange omission in the coverage On the other hand, the magazine tends to focus on the cheaper end of the market, and with only ten awards, having given one to the Hugo 2 it would be difficult to give another award to a Chord product. In the past, the magazine has always been enthusiastic about Chord's gear.
Each to their own, i find having a CD collection extremely satisfying, same with LPs. I also like framing artwork.
The excitement of getting a new record in the mail, the physicality, reading the through the book as you listen. All of that gone when its a digital download. How mundane it must feel to be music lover that only "owns" digital downloads or uses online streaming.
Agree with both comments. Let's hope the serious Hifi writers acknowledge Blu2 for its true achievement
Quite possibly, though it won't appear in the next issue. I find it difficult to understand why it might take over twelve months to evaluate, measure and write a review of the DAVE, a major product using innovative technology produced by a well-established manufacturer. Generally, that's not how the hi-fi press works. And in TAS, Robert Hartley writes about Berkeley and Meridian products as soon as he can, keeping readers up to date with new technology and advances. Given how he's waxed lyrical over both those products, I'd be interested to read what he has to say about the DAVE.
Just to be clear, I wasn't accusing Sterophile of bias, only that I found the omission odd. Nothing more. The explanation might lie in what you say - though it would be strange for Chord not to have let them have a review item for such a long period when so many other magazines have been able to obtain one - but I've really no idea.