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Originally Posted by wower /img/forum/go_quote.gif
I was just wondering if people would like to share their experiences of using Stax gear with classical music?
I have searched the forums and, besides getting the huge Stax thread, can't find anything useful. I have been looking at Stax to compliment my ATH-2000s, which I love to bits, but the string section might as well be synth keyboards in regard to classical music. Maybe we can amass some wisdom in this thread?
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No loudspeaker is uncoloured. Some are less coloured than others. Electrostats are less coloured than most. The same applies to earphones.
It is the transparency of electrostatic earphones that make them so good for classical music. That applies especially to chamber music, voices of any scale. Presently I'm playing my way through all the Handel oratorio, on Quad ESL while my family is awake, on Stax 202 while I work into the night after they go to bed. It's a seamless experience
Some say that the downside is that electrostats, floorstanders and earphones both, lack bass slam; that they do, but that doesn't mean they lack bass; it is the bass "slam" that lesser speakers (and amplified music, which of course doesn't apply to classical music) have accustomed people to which is artificial, in fact dirty, nothing but harmonic distortion. Electrostats have enough nice clean bass so that you are tempted to turn the volume up to enjoy more of it. (Don't -- you will damage your ears. In fact, those who lack self-control with the volume knob should stay away from electrostats. Clean decibels will harm your hearing quite as quickly as dirty decibels; it's the number of decibels that matter, not the culture of each decibel!)
Electrostats do superbly with acoustic music, probably because they move too short a distance for materials to distort badly, probably also because the push-pull dipole membrane is a more "natural" sonic construct that cone speakers. As corollary evidence, I offer the wonderful clean bass you can get from a properly constructed horn with a Lowther driver, which moves about 1mm max.
The Stax earphones do not seem to me to differ all that much but they can be sensitive to the driving amp. However, we can make too much of an obsessive muchness of small differences. The Stax amps in the factory-matched packs seem pretty good amps and pretty good value too (I've heard the ones at the extremes of the current range, the 252 and the 007t).
The key consideration for me, as a constant concert-goer (I reviewed live and recorded music for over forty years), is that an electrostat reproduces something nearer the sound one hears in the concert hall than any other earphone. So I think that, unless you are one of those audiophiles forever looking for a reason to "upgrade" your gear, any of the Stax earspeakers and the matching amp will give a superior rendition of classical music to that available from the non-electrostatics.
The modern Stax is also the most comfortable earphone I know to wear for several hours at a time, which matters if you want to play an example of one of the more extended classical genres through at a sitting.
HTH.
Andre Jute
Visit Jute on Amps at
http://members.lycos.co.uk/fiultra/
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