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Issue 207

Table of Contents – Issue 207

Table of Contents – Issue 207

Frank Doris

“A composer is a guy who goes around forcing his will on unsuspecting air molecules, often with the assistance of unsuspecting musicians.” – Frank Zappa

In this issue: What if you had to choose just one best Bob Dylan song? Wayne Robins picks his favorite. Paul McGowan ponders an audio chicken-versus-egg question. Octave Records releases Audiophile Masters, Volume X, an album of classic cover songs. We wrap up our AXPONA 2024 show coverage. Jeff Weiner continues his series on all-time great folk singers. Rudy Radelic remembers saxophone legend David Sanborn. Larry Jaffee wonders why he can’t stop collecting 45 RPM singles. B. Jan Montana appreciates vintage automobiles at the La Jolla Concours d’Elegance.

Ray Chelstowski talks with L.A. studio legends The Immediate Family, and veteran rocker Chris Berardo getting Wilder all the Time. Rich Isaacs keeps spinning his series on test records and demo discs. Harris Fogel says better late than never in his CES 2024 show report. Howard Kneller admires the Axxess Forté 1 streamer/integrated amp From The Listening Chair. Ken Kessler revisits his reel-to-reel roots and Beatles affection. We have guest articles from PMA Magazine on the merits of Class D amplification, and from AAA about the career of piano giant Sviatoslav Richter. PS Audio garners accolades for its Aspen FR10 loudspeakers and StellarGold DAC. We round out the issue with birdsong, getting to the point-to-point, and natural lighting. 

 

Contributors to This Issue:
Ray Chelstowski, Frank Doris, Harris Fogel, Rich Isaacs, Larry Jaffee, Anne E. Johnson, Ken Kessler, Howard Kneller, Paul McGowan, Ernst Müller, B. Jan Montana, Rudy Radelic, Wayne Robins, Jeff Weiner, Peter Xeni

Staff Photographer/Contributing Editor:
Harris Fogel

Logo Design:
Susan Schwartz-Christian, from a concept by Bob D’Amico

Editor:
Frank Doris

Publisher:
Paul McGowan

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 – FD


Chickens, Eggs, Sources, and Outputs

Chickens, Eggs, Sources, and Outputs

Chickens, Eggs, Sources, and Outputs

Paul McGowan

In our world of high-end audio, there's a perennial debate that rivals the age-old question of the chicken and the egg: what's more important, the source or the loudspeaker? This argument is as divisive among audiophiles as pineapple on pizza, and it's not without good reason. Both sides have valid points, and both are crucial to achieving an optimal listening experience.

That said, the question of where to place your precious time, energy, and funds remains.

Let's start with the source. The argument here is straightforward: if you don't capture the information correctly at the beginning of the chain – whether it’s from vinyl, CD, or streaming – nothing else matters. This is a compelling point. The source is responsible for translating the recorded material into an electrical signal. Any loss or distortion here means that no matter how good the rest of the system is, you're not getting all the music. Think of it as trying to bake a cake with spoiled milk; no amount of frosting can fix the fundamental flaw in your ingredients.

Vinyl enthusiasts might tell you that the quality of the turntable, cartridge, and phono preamp can make or break the listening experience (and who would argue with them?). Digital devotees will point to the importance of a high-quality DAC, transport, and cables, and they are correct. These components are indeed critical, and their precision is often measured in tenths or hundredths of a decibel. This level of accuracy is impressive, and it underscores the importance of starting with a clean, unblemished source signal.

However, the loudspeaker is where the rubber meets the road. Even the most perfect signal can easily be undone by a speaker that can't accurately reproduce it. Loudspeakers are tasked with converting electrical signals back into sound waves, and this process is fraught with challenges. Unlike source components, loudspeakers have to move air, and this physical act is inherently imperfect.

The best loudspeakers in the world can typically boast an amplitude flatness of 2 to 3 decibels. While this might sound impressive, it's a far cry from the precision of source components. Furthermore, loudspeakers struggle with phase accuracy and dispersion. Phase accuracy is crucial for maintaining the timing and coherence of the sound, while dispersion affects how the sound is spread throughout the listening space. Even small errors in these areas can lead to less-than-amazing performance, diminishing the listening experience.

To put it in perspective, think of the source as a high-quality blueprint and the loudspeaker as the contractor building a house. You can have the most detailed, precise blueprint in the world, but if the contractor can't execute it properly, the end result will be disappointing. A slight smudge or tear in the blueprint (minor imperfections in the source) might go unnoticed in the final build, but major construction flaws (inaccuracies in the loudspeaker) will be glaringly obvious. 

The evolution of audio technology has also played a role in this debate. Early audio systems were plagued by limitations at both the source and speaker ends, making it difficult to isolate which was more crucial. However, as technology has advanced, sources have become remarkably precise (even a $29 off-the-shelf CD/DVD player is accurate as hell). High-resolution digital formats, advanced DACs, and improved analog components have pushed the limits of source accuracy. This progress has shifted the burden of performance increasingly onto the loudspeakers.

Moreover, the listening environment and personal preferences play significant roles in the perceived importance of sources versus loudspeakers. An audiophile with a meticulously treated listening room might be more attuned to the subtleties of different source components, while someone in a more typical living space might find that speaker performance has a more noticeable impact.

In my experience, achieving a world-class high-end audio system requires two things: a balanced approach to equipment choices, with an emphasis on the loudspeaker.

To bring it back to the chicken and egg analogy, it's not so much about which came first, but about how they evolved together. In audio, the source and the loudspeaker have both developed over time, each pushing the other to new heights. The chicken evolved into an egg-laying animal, and audio sources have evolved to feed ever-more-sophisticated loudspeakers.

So, next time you're pondering an upgrade, remember this: start with a solid foundation at the source, but don't neglect the end of the chain where the magic happens. After all, in the pursuit of audio perfection, every detail matters, from the first note to the final sound wave that reaches your ears.

 

 

Courtesy of Pexels.com/Andrea Piacquadio.

 

Header image courtesy of Pexels.com/Alison Burrell, cropped to fit format.


AXPONA 2024, Part Two: Audio in Abundance

AXPONA 2024, Part Two: Audio in Abundance

AXPONA 2024, Part Two: Audio in Abundance

Frank Doris

As I noted in Part One of my show report (Issue 206), AXPONA 2024 has grown to be a comprehensive, well-attended, sprawling audio gear fest featuring a who’s who of manufacturers. I counted more than 310 brands in the AXPONA 2024 show directory, from 432evo to Zesto Audio. This has become a must-attend US show for the industry, and if you want to get a deep immersion in the specialty audio world, you’ll certainly get it here.

The usual caveats: I don’t make definitive judgments about sound at shows, but that said, if I think a room has standout sound, I’ll be impressed and mention it. It’s become physically impossible for any single journalist, or maybe even team, to cover the show, so please don’t look at this write-up as a “best in show” but rather a bunch of stuff I found interesting (and I missed a lot of new product debuts that I really wish I’d seen and heard). Forgive me if some of the following descriptions sound a little rushed. Although I realized even before the show began that it would be impossible to cover everything, there were times, especially on Sunday afternoon, when I was rushing around.

I didn’t ask the prices of gear until after I had listened, in a perhaps-feeble attempt to not pre-judge components based on price.

And while I’m an inveterate gearhead, more and more, these shows are about meeting friends in the industry than drooling over the latest driver or DAC. For most of us in the industry, we only get to see each other at shows, and even then, the chaos factor means that you always miss someone you really wanted to see, so when I do encounter my audio pals at these shows, it’s a really special thing.

On with the show…

Last year I was highly impressed by the sound of the Linkwitz LX521 loudspeakers, their reference model. This 4-way six-driver system features an open-baffle design for the midrange and tweeter drivers, and a woofer that operates into a uniquely-designed enclosure. This year I was perhaps even more impressed, thanks to a seminar and demonstration in the Linkwitz room that was given by Jamie Howarth, head of Plangent Processes. The Plangent Processes system corrects for the wow and flutter present in the master tape of a recording, to provide speed stabilization. The result is not subtle. As Joni Mitchell said, you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone.

Jamie started his demo by playing the intro to Phil Collins’s “In the Air Tonight,” a song most of us have heard countless times. The distorted electric guitar wash that starts the song sounded a little “phasey” and the sound changed as the long intro note was held. When he played the Plangent-treated track, the guitar sound became solid and unchanging. So, that kind of gave us a taste of what would happen when Phil Collins came in with That Famous Drum Break – except the effect was far more dramatic than anticipated. Unprocessed, the drums had that bombastic gated thud that defined the sound of 1980s drum production – but with the Plangent applied, the already-big-sounding drum set became utterly immense, and the drums now sounded like they had a physical roundness to them in a vast sonic space. As the Linkwitz LX521 speakers have astonishing dynamic capability, this was quite the demo. Amazing.

The Plangent effect was equally effective and impressive, perhaps even more so, on Frank Sinatra’s voice on “Moonlight In Vermont” from the Come Fly With Me album. As Jamie pointed out, it’s not simply a matter of fixing speed variations that you might not notice – the entire rhythm and swing of the music became tighter and more propulsive, and the nuances of Sinatra’s phrasing and timing revealed the emotion of his singing. The Plangent effect was also striking on cymbals, which were transformed from sizzly washes to almost-tangible-metal instruments with distinct tonalities.

I plan on interviewing Jamie Howarth in a future issue but for now suffice it to say that the Plangent Processes system works – to a remarkable degree. I wish you could have been at that demo.

I can get more excited by hearing about affordable tweaks and products than I do about encountering state-of-the-art products. So when the esteemed cable designer Galen Gareis of Iconoclast Cable by Belden told me I should try the AudioQuest Jitterbug FMJ, I bought a couple soon after returning from the show. The device is a USB data and noise filter that goes between the USB output of a computer and the input of a DAC. You can also plug more than one JitterBug FMJ into multiple USB ports for further noise reduction. In my main system, using a Mac laptop playing Qobuz, the effect was immediate and obvious – vocals and instruments sounded purer, with more body and clarity, and the soundspace expanded. I know it sounds like a cliché, but the sound was more “musical” and less “hi-fi,” and what could be a better improvement than that? For me, it’s a completely unambiguous no-brainer, especially at a retail price of $69.95 with return privileges.

I thought the Aries Cerat Aurora loudspeakers sounded as stunning as they looked, and they’re among the most distinctively striking designs I’ve ever seen. The front of the speakers has a swirl shape, said to eliminate diffraction problems. The Aurora ($150,000/pair) features a custom midrange compression driver that covers 280 to 3,000 Hz, a purpose-designed dipole horn-loaded ribbon tweeter, and a unique bass loading design that takes a four-driver open baffle and folds it back on itself. The crossover can be tailored in the analog domain using an app.

 

 

The Aries Cerat speakers have an unmistakably distinctive design.

 

Disclaimer: I occasionally do some PR for Audience. That said, their compact 1+1 speakers (8 by 9.75 by 9) more than filled the Glenn Poor’s Audio Video room; in fact, more than one person wondered if a subwoofer was connected (it wasn’t). I hadn’t had the opportunity to hear these outside of a desktop environment, so it reminded me of yet another truism: sometimes small speakers can sound surprisingly big, especially if you don’t need to listen at Voice of the Theatre levels, or demand room-rattling bass.

The lesson was also brought home by the Falcon Acoustics 2024 limited edition BBC LS3/5A ($4,530 - $5,268/pair depending on finish; optional stands are available at $655/pair). I have always loved the sound of the classic LS3/5A, in whatever iteration I’ve heard – they simply sound like music – and this particular UK-made version also has the old-school look, with English Burr Elm wood veneer (other finishes are available) and circa 1975 vintage Tygan grille cloth! The internals feature pair-matched drivers that are exclusively made by Falcon, and top-quality internal parts. They’re strictly limited production – as Falcon’s Jerry Bloomfield told me, once they’re gone, they’re gone. The company also showed models from their new M Series, which range from $3,565 to $32,885 per pair.

 

 

Classic design elegance: the Falcon Acoustics 2024 limited edition BBC LS3/5A, next to the larger M Series M30.

 

VTL, Stenheim and Nordost have partnered at AXPONA to create all-out systems, showcased in large ballrooms. Last year I thought their room sounded impressive. This year, it sounded exceptional. I went up to VTL’s Luke Manley and said, “what did you change?” It sounds noticeably better than last year. He informed me that they were using amps with EL84 power tubes – two pairs of MB-185 Series III Signature monoblocks ($27,000/pair), and that the Stenheim Alumine Reference Ultime Two SX speakers had been upgraded with the new Reference Platform stands, which made a significant difference. (Pricing for the speakers and Reference Platform is $186,500.)

The rest of the system consisted of the VTL TP-6.5 Series II Signature Phono Preamplifier ($15,000, TL-7.5 Series III Reference Line Preamplifier ($35,000), dCS digital electronics ($32,800 for the Rossini Apex DAC and $10,850 for the Rossini Master Clock), a VPI Titan Direct turntable ($60,000) and Lyra Etna cartridge ($8,995), plus about $169,000 worth of Nordost cables, power products, and accessories.

Well then, Pink Floyd’s Atom Heart Mother sounded absolutely epic, delivering a vast, panoramic sound that filled the big exhibit room effortlessly. In contrast, “The Girl from Ipanema” from the Getz/Gilberto album was warm and inviting. If first-time showgoers might have been wondering what all the fuss about high-end audio was about (or had no idea that some of the gear could be so costly), this room gave them an education.

Another no-holds-barred exhibit was the Bending Wave room, featuring an absolute mega-system with the Göbel Divin Noblesse speakers ($250,000/pair, complemented by $48,150 worth of cables and accessories), the Riviera Audio Laboratories APL01SE special edition preamp ($46,995) and AFM100SE Class A mono amps ($82,800/pair), a complete suite of Wadax Atlantis Reference digital playback gear ($333,220), Nordost Q base power distribution and a QCore 1 grounding box ($21,000 total), and thousands worth of Massif Audio Design Dogma racks and Carbide isolation footers.

I confess, I had a good time in the room last year, but was a little underwhelmed. This year, I was bowled over. Bending Wave proprietor Elliot Goldman told me it was because of three reasons: one, that because of logistical headaches and pre-show exhaustion last year, they hadn’t had enough time to tweak the setup before the 2023 show started; two that they were using the Riviera electronics, and three, the system was tuned by Wadax’s Brandon Lauer. The proof was in the pudding – the Divin Noblesse sounded the best I’d ever heard them, by far – clear, detailed, tonally inviting, and either massive or intimate in scale depending on the recording. A live recording of Japanese pianist Ai Kuwabara called SAW, featuring Steve Gadd on drums and Will Lee on bass was utterly mind-blowing. I mean, fantastic, the kind of listening experience that reminds those of us in high-end audio why we’re doing this. Another audio lesson learned: the system costs something around $800,000, but you can’t just knee-jerk dismiss such expensive systems as decadent excess, in a kind of reverse prejudice – not when they sound this good.

 

 

Brandon Lauer of Wadax shows off the fruits of his labors in the Bending Wave suite.

 

But as experienced audiophiles know, good sound doesn’t have to come with a Lamborghini price tag (and some people don’t have the room for or don’t want a mega system). Case in point: the American Audio and Video room, which featured a compact, elegant-looking system with Mission 770 2-way stand-mount speakers (an update of the, as Mission is not shy to call it, “iconic” 770 of yore), and Audiolab 9000 Series electronics including their new 9000N streamer at $3,499. The other Audiolab components in the system included the 9000A integrated amp ($2,999), 9000CDT CD transport ($1,499), DC Block mains filter ($499), and a Dual CD 529 fully automatic turntable ($1,199). Big news for Mission aficionados – the 770 is now being built in the UK again under the direction of veteran speaker designer Peter Comeau, at a price of $5,000/pair including stands. Sara Bareilles’s version of “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” sounded simply gorgeous.

One of the most revered names in speaker design is Lowther, a British company that has been around since 1932 and introduced their first speaker, the Domestic Corner Horn. At AXPONA, among other models they featured the Edilia, a dual-driver hybrid quarter-wave Voigt horn design featuring the company’s 8-inch PM7A alnico full-range driver, paired with an 8-inch “modified DX2 tapped bass driver” in a crossover-less configuration. Sorry, I didn’t note the electronics and other speaker model numbers, as it was at the end of the day when I visited the Fidelity Imports room and was a little rushed – until the speakers started playing. I forgot about the fact that I was supposed to be a journalist and simply basked in the pure, coherent, inviting sound of the Edilia, a warm and wonderful way to end a hectic day.

 

 

Close-up of the Lowther Edilia midrange driver.

 

Lowther has some distinct design philosophies that don’t travel the same path as other manufacturers, from their unique ridged paper cone material where the ridges act as a crossover, to their angled-up driver in their vintage Dual-Position Acousta speaker, which could be positioned with the driver facing either forward or backward, which looks like it shouldn’t work, but does. I noted to Martin Thornton, managing director of Lowther, that the company has its devoted fans…as well as its skeptics who debate Lowther’s design philosophies. His reply was, “stop arguing about it and just listen!”

ESD Acoustic never fails to get attention at shows, and it’s not hard to literally see why – their system, shown in conjunction with electronics company Auralic, was without question the most over-the-top, outrageous assemblage of components and loudspeakers at the show, by a galactically large margin, with a four-million-dollar price tag, and that is not a typo. It drew a lot of attention, and one showgoer asked me, “what is that? I don’t even know what I’m looking at!” The system contained dozens of boxes of electronics sprawled out over a huge footprint, immense multi-way field-coil loudspeakers, and a CD player that looks like an ancient artifact. The sound? When I was there, they were blasting it at rock-concert-PA volume, so I really couldn’t judge, although it reproduced a symphony orchestra track with lifelike scale, because, although I’m exaggerating a little, the system seemed almost as wide across as an actual symphony orchestra.

 

 

The no-holds-barred ESD/Auralic system.

 

I’ve never heard anything but good sound from a Gershman Acoustics room, and AXPONA 2024 was no exception. The company was exhibiting their Grand Avant Garde loudspeaker ($18,000/pair), which now must be considered a modern classic, considering it’s celebrating its 30th anniversary. The 3-1/2-way floorstanding tower features a 1-inch soft-dome tweeter, 5.25-inch carbon fiber midrange driver, and 8-inch dual-coil aluminum woofer, and its slotted removeable grille provides a distinctive design touch.

The associated equipment included a Pass Labs INT-250 integrated amplifier ($12,600) and XP-17 phono stage ($4,500), VPI Prime Signature turntable ($8,000 and sorry, I didn’t note the cartridge), and was wired with Cardas Clear Beyond cable. A live version of Bob James’s “Feel Like Making Love” sounded remarkably close to being there as it was performed. I noted that the exhibit didn’t have a lot of room treatment or tweaks, and Ofra Gershman responded that if the setup is good, you don’t need room treatment. The two-way floorstanding Gershman Studio XdB loudspeaker was also in the house ($12,000/pair), but I didn’t get to hear it.

I popped into the AGD Productions room and got another chance to hear their unique electronics, which use gallium-arsenide transistors instead of other types, or vacuum tubes, though the transistors are housed in very tube-like-looking glass. As president Alberto Guerra once told me, part of the reason he did that was to attract attention, but the whole thing would just be a novelty if the gear didn’t sound good, which it most assuredly does. The sound was warm, rich, full of body, and, my notes say “pretty,” which is a good thing for the solo piano track I heard, which was presented with plenty of texture and character. The AGD room featured more than a dozen components, including the Solo limited-edition and Gran Vivace MK III monoblock amplifiers ($23,500/pair and $19,000/pair respectively), ALTO line and phono preamp ($5,000), the Andante PRE-DAC streamer with phono stage, the compact Audion MKIII mono power amp ($7,850/pair) and many others.

Lumin presented a full line of network music players, an amplifier, a combination music server and network switch, and other products, which were featured in a number of rooms. Heard through DeVore Fidelity O/baby speakers in one room, guitarist Grant Green’s “Green With Envy” sounded warm and full of presence, as his big-body acoustic/electric guitar should.

 

 

The Lumin room offered a wide range of digital playback components and electronics, heard through DeVore O/baby speakers.

 

The DeVore Fidelity room that featured the new O’bronze full-range floorstanding loudspeaker ($30,000/pair) sounded excellent, one of the number of exhibits at the show that sounded more like music than “hi-fi.” The superb associated equipment undoubtedly had a lot to do with that, including a Komuro Amplifier Company K300S direct-coupled single-ended 300B-based amplifier ($20,000), Mola Mola Makua preamp ($23,700 with DAC and phono modules), EMT 928 II turntable with 909 tonearm and Pure Black cartridge ($17,995), AudioQuest cable, and other gear.

Another disclaimer: I used to do PR for Kanto. That said, they really do have a knack for making really good-sounding affordable compact powered speakers, and the new REN system is no exception. It features a 1-inch silk-dome tweeter, 5-25-inch aluminum concave-cone woofer, and 100 watts RMS of built-in amplification. The REN will be available for $599 in July in a choice of five colors including very cool matte cream and matte orange.

 

 

Orange is the new black, especially if it's the Kanto REN. You can get it in black also.

 

Distributor Musical Surroundings displayed the new Clearaudio Master Jubilee turntable and Unity tonearm ($60,000). This limited-edition model celebrates the company’s 45th anniversary, and includes the Professional Power linear power supply, Statement record clamp, and Outer Limit peripheral ring clamp. In addition to a number of other turntables and products, Musical Surroundings showcased the new DS Audio E3 optical cartridge system ($2,750), which includes the E3 optical cartridge and matching equalizer. I didn’t get to hear this, but another (more expensive) DS Audio system absolutely wowed me in the Wolf Audio Systems room, as per Part One of my show report. I am extremely intrigued by these optical phono playback systems.

 

 

The Clearaudio Master Jubilee turntable, number 33 of 45!

 

The Acora Acoustics/Valve Amplification Company (VAC) room was dazzling – literally, as the former was displaying their GEM-SRB loudspeaker and companion Bedrock subwoofer with unbelievably gorgeous-looking internal LED illumination ($85,000 for the paired set; standard finishes are available for less). The effect was striking. The speakers and subs were mated with the VAC Master Line Stage ($30,000), a pair of Essence 80 iQ monoblocks ($9,990/each), and Master iQ Musicbloc amp ($42,000), with a Linn Klimax streamer/DAC as the source ($45,000).

 

 

Shine on brightly: the Acora Acoustics GEM-SRB loudspeaker and Bedrock subwoofer in special illuminated finishes.

 

It all sounded exceptionally clear and detailed…and that was their smaller system. The big, and I mean big rig featured Acora’s VRC-1 speakers in an equally gorgeous, if not glowing Sunset Fire wood finish (base price, $218,000/pair), with amplification by VAC including Master 300 iQ Musicbloc amplifiers ($42,000/each) and a Statement line stage and phono stage ($82,000 each), plus an SAT XD1 record player system with CF1-09Ti arm ($307,500), Lyra Atlas phono cartridge (13,195), an Aurender N30SA digital source ($25,000), and a LampizatOr Poseidon DAC (€23,000), along with around $30,000 worth of Cardas Clear Beyond cabling and Acora equipment racks. The system sounded big but I’ll demur from making any definitive comments as I listened during one of Greg Weaver’s extremely informative and fun listening sessions in a packed house which made it impossible for me to get a prime listening seat, and it was after a couple of beers and an exhausting day. (Alcohol rolls off your ability to hear highs, and exhaustion your ability to think coherently.) I will say that Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s first album sounded massive.

British loudspeaker company ATC celebrated their 50th anniversary in the Lone Mountain Audio room with their limited edition SCM20ASL active loudspeakers, in a special blue lacquer finish with a complementing royal blue Napa leather front baffle, and the matching C4 SUB MK2 subwoofer. The 2-way SCM20ASL incorporates ATC’s proprietary 6-inch Super Linear woofer/midrange and 1-inch dual-suspension tweeter, with 250 watts total of bi-amped internal power, and an active crossover. Pricing is $13,999/pair for the SCM20ASL and $9,999 for the C1 SUB MK2, with production limited to 150 pairs and 20 each, respectively.

A second ATC system featured the SCM50ASL active floorstanding loudspeakers ($21,999/pair) and CDA2MK2 CD/preamp/DAC ($4,999). All models including the CDA2MK2 are built in the UK. The sound I heard from both systems was impressive, with excellent tonal balance, presence, and detail, and a sense of effortlessness and ease even at louder volumes.

 

 

Leland Leard, the author, and the ATC crew cutting it up at the Lone Mountain Audio exhibit.

 

Luxman debuted their first-ever network transport, the NT-07 ($7,495). It plays back stored and streamed music via Ethernet, USB or HDMI, and connects to a DAC for playback. It supports a dizzying array of digital formats including DSD and MQA, and like other Luxman components, has an elegant, minimalist look. The company also previewed its upcoming E-07 phono preamp (price and availability to be determined).

Rhythm Distribution offered an interesting display of up-to-the-second and retro-flavored components. Goldmund showed its new Telos 690 integrated amplifier ($36,000), powering the new Tannoy Stirling III LZ Special Edition floorstanding loudspeakers ($12,500) and add-on Tannoy SuperTweeter GR ($2,195/pair). Vinyl was playing courtesy of the new Garrard 301 Advanced turntable, said to be the highest-performance Garrard ever built. It’s $54,900 with an SME Series V tonearm installed, and was mated with a $9,999 Ortofon Diamond cartridge. Unfortunately, I got to the room at the end of the show and didn’t get to hear this setup, which also included a Lumin X1 network player ($13,990).

I was able to hear the new Goldmund Asteria active/wireless speakers, which at $95,000 a pair, during an all-too-brief listen sounded impressive. The Asteria incorporates Goldmund's proprietary Proteus LS technology and 24-bit/96 kHz DSP, and whatever it is, it sure isn't your everyday wireless. The other components in the display were hidden, giving listeners an idea of what an unobtrusive high-end audio system could look like.

 

 

Wireless wizardry: The new Goldmund Asteria loudspeaker system.

 

AXPONA 2024 also featured more than 25 seminars, and I attended two that I intend to write about in depth in a future issue: the one given by Jamie Howarth of Plangent Processes I mentioned earlier, and another panel called “Second Time Around: The World of Reissuing and Remastering” featuring Michael Fremer (Tracking Angle.com, The Absolute Sound), Shane Buettner (Intervention Records), Abey Fonn (Impex Records, Elusive Disc), Chad Kassem (Acoustic Sounds), and Julia Miller (Delmark Records). It revealed a wealth of information. Stay tuned, as they say.

 

 

In the cage: tube protection doesn't necessarily have to look like industrial grating, as this Master Sound Evo 300B amp attests, seen at the MoFi Distribution booth.

 

 

These Duet 15 open-baffle speakers from Pure Audio project sounded superb. The company's speakers have a modular approach, allowing customers to tailor the drivers and cabinetry to their preferences.

 

 

I can't ever walk past this Western Electric 91E integrated amp ($15,000) without stopping to admire its retro-modern design.

 

 

RTM (which stands for Recording the Masters) offered high-quality blank tape and all kinds of accessories for reel-to-reel and cassette aficionados.

  

Header image: Dali exhibited their Epikore 11 loudspeakers near the lobby of the Renaissance Schaumburg hotel where AXPONA 2024 was held, a smart placement that enabled hundreds of people to hear the system.


One Bob Dylan Song: He's 83; Can You Choose Just One?

One Bob Dylan Song: He's 83; Can You Choose Just One?

One Bob Dylan Song: He's 83; Can You Choose Just One?

Wayne Robins

It's Bob Dylan's 83rd birthday [as of May 24]. I'm sure someone on social media is posting 83 favorite Bob Dylan songs in honor of the occasion. It's not hard for a devotee to do, if you're inclined towards lists (I'm not) and you can trust that No. 83 would not be too shabby an example of his work.

Dylan's 83rd best would still be a sterling sample of songwriting and performance from the undisputed master, a song about which many very good songwriters would say: wow, if I wrote that, it would be my best by miles!

But to choose one Bob Dylan song and performance? It's too reductive, so radioactive that it would melt cities. You'd have to be a fool to find that hill, much less make a stand on it. But as the Main Ingredient sang back in 1972: Everybody plays the fool, sometime. So I am going to tell you that my favorite Bob Dylan song among a thousand possibilities is "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues."

Why not "Like A Rolling Stone"?  After all, "Like a Rolling Stone" opens Highway 61 Revisited, the 1965 album that many, including myself, would consider his best. It's his sixth studio album for Columbia Records, so clearly no "sixth album curse" for Dylan. "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" is the eighth of the nine songs, side two of the album.

It is sandwiched between the title song, a ditty with an opening verse about the Old Testament Biblical sacrifice of Isaac by his father Abraham; and "Desolation Row," a rather longer song about the casual terror of the universe and the banality of banality, or of ordinariness: sort of the same thing. In fact, "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" is an excellent lead-in to "Desolation Row," except "Tom Thumb" offers the solace of going home. Nobody goes home from "Desolation Row."

The lyrics to the six verses of "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" are clear enough. There have been many times in my life that I have misheard Dylan lyrics that had no effect on the meaning. In "Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?" Dylan refers to "a bloodhound that kneels," which I often heard as the name of a dog being the same as the nickname of one of my cousins: "a bloodhound, Fat Neil."

In "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues," I don't mishear words as much as I misplace them. Literally, geographically, the words Dylan sings for some reason I filter into a story that unspools like a movie that has me in different streets in different cities that even this song, surreal but with a consistent internal logic, likely did not intend.

For that reason, every time I listen to "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" I hear something different, I wander streets, I experience new sensations, and it can be disorienting if Dylan had not been so clear how the movie, or the song ends. After nearly 60 years, it's still a new song every time I hear it, though I know that "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" ends with a definitive statement, a surrender to unclear and unpleasant circumstances that tells the listener that you can indeed go back home again. The final line is, "I'm going back to New York City, I do believe I've had enough."

Of all of the Dylan lyric memes we marched by in the 1960s, this is the most moving and reassuring, especially for those of us from New York and its suburbs. Until then comes the pain and joy of getting lost, as so many of us did, at various times and places of our youth. The unstable drugs and the tawdry lovers, and the unfathomable friends whom you knew you shouldn't trust, the intoxication of seeking new experiences far from home, only to realize, at times, that the Emerald City or that search for enlightenment was the City of Disaster, and we did not know where we were or how we would get out until it struck us that we'd had enough.

You're hooked just by the rolling musical intro, a seductive cluster of piano, then bass, then guitar and drum. The Highway 61 Revisited session players may have been the greatest studio band every assembled: Mike Bloomfield, guitar; Al (on the LP he's still called "Alan") Kooper on organ and piano, as opposed to Paul Griffin, who plays piano and organ. Bobby Gregg, bass; Nashville session star Charley McCoy on drums; and a fellow named here at Harvey Goldstein, better known soon-after as Harvey Brooks, on bass. Frank Owens (piano) and Russ Savakus (bass) are also listed on the LP cover. Dylan plays guitar, piano, harmonica, piano, and police car, the latter presumably the siren/whistle that is heard on the title song. They weren't just electric, they were electrifying, and if you listen to this album now, turn it up, you'll hear the World's Greatest Rock-Blues Band.

 

The singing begins, and you don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows. The time, location, weather, and calendar is precise: "When you're lost in the rain in Juarez and it's Easter time too." It's so detailed, so specific, that I always immediately lose direction. In my mind, these "facts" are just misdirection.

"Juarez" is a highly singable word, it flows off the tongue, has a lovely mouth feel. But in my mind movie, it's not Ciudad Juarez, once a lively city that shares a border with El Paso, Texas. I'm not hearing, or seeing, that part of Mexico at all: I'm visualizing Tijuana, across the border from San Diego.

Why? I guess I've heard more stories, seen more movies (Welles' Touch of Evil, amigos?) where one could, if staying out of trouble, and in the right drugstore, with the doctor, and the right señorita, hole up, take drugs, have a romantic entanglement with a kind-hearted prostitute: the Yankee dollar goes a long way towards melting hard hearts, as long as one is discreet.

And this woman is very discreet, but she has no heart of gold: "Sweet Melinda, the peasants call her the goddess of gloom/She speaks good English..." Despite the narrator's politeness, caring – he's "kind and careful" – the result is a singer's nightmare: "She takes your voice and leaves you howling at the moon."

I've already drifted from Juarez to Tijuana, and I've skipped over the third line of the first verse. "Don't put on any airs when you're down on Rue Morgue Avenue..."

"Murders in the Rue Morgue" was a short story by Edgar Allan Poe, published in 1841, set in Paris. The first modern detective story, it has been said. But "Rue Morgue Avenue," a wonderful invention, transports me immediately to New Orleans. In my mind, it's at the far north fringe of the French Quarter, where the tourists disappear and Treme begins. The fourth verse begins with a reference to "Housing Project Hill," which could be located in one of the poorer Wards of New Orleans.

This vision of New Orleans as the site of "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" is further enhanced in the canyons of my mind with the final verse. "I started out on Burgundy, but soon hit the harder stuff." For about 50 years I've thought of it not as Almaden Red Burgundy, the hippie wine of choice in the 1960s, cheap and plentiful, and red, went down well with a few tokes of Panama red or Acapulco gold.

To me, it was the New Orleans street, Burgundy (pronounced "burr-gundy").

Who was Tom Thumb? There were two known to me. One was a quintessential Dylan character yet a real person: a midget, or person of short stature if we're going Randy Newman-"Short People" about it." Tom Thumb, about 3'6", was promoted by P.T. Barnum. He appeared in 19th-century circuses where one, no doubt, would go watch the geek, referred to on the same album in "Ballad of a Thin Man." The real carnival geeks, as portrayed in the metaphysical noir films Nightmare Alley. Tyrone Power starred in the 1947 original; Bradley Cooper leads in the 2022 remake. Despite great displays of mental power, these men become debilitated by the descent into drugs and booze, and end up as geeks: locked in a cage, biting the heads of chickens for your entertainment.

The other Tom Thumb was a fairytale character from a 1958 Disney movie featuring bumbling bad guys Peter Sellers and Terry-Thomas, who trick tiny Tom Thumb into stealing some gold for his poor family. The direction is by George Pal, Hollywood master of special effects, which is how Disney star Russ Tamblyn (later in West Side Story) gets to look so small and everything else so gigantic.

There are times you think this song would be so impossible to cover. It's like a whispered secret to the person in the next hammock in an opium den. Fortunately, at least one person understood the delirium the protagonist of "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" was experiencing. Nina Simone is the only person who would or could get it right. She'd already been there, done that.

 

The drug is wearing off, though: "My best friend my doctor won't tell me what it is I've got." Almost all doctors named in pop songs are peddling one drug or another: The Beatles' "Doctor Robert" wrote pill prescriptions; Steely Dan's "Doctor Wu" was, I am certain, a smack dealer specializing in very pure Vietnamese black tar heroin. Motley Crue's "Dr. Feelgood" was undoubtedly just some jerk with dope and a nickname. Only Aretha Franklin's "Dr. Feelgood" offered something more rewarding than drugs: "Don't send me no doctor/fillin'me up with all those pills. Got a man named Dr. Feelgood and ..." It's pretty clear from the moans and shouts that follow, that "Dr. Feelgood" supplied Aretha with orgasms.

It's possible that the teenage Bob Dylan saw "Tom Thumb" playing at a Hibbing, Minn., movie theater and that...I'm sorry, I'm not a Dylanologist, it would be futile to really take a stab at why "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" is the name of this particular song, since Tom Thumb is never mentioned. All I know is that I have drawn faith from the final line, and followed its instructions: having decided to do so has never let me down.

"I'm going back to New York City, I do believe I've had enough." We’re back where we started. Might as well play it again, see where we go.

 

© All lyrics Special Rider Music, Universal Tunes

This article originally appeared in Wayne Robins’ Substack and is used here by permission. Wayne’s Words columnist Wayne Robins teaches at St. John’s University in Queens, and writes the Critical Conditions Substack, https://waynerobins.substack.com/.

Header image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/Alberto Cabello from Victoria Gasteiz.


David Sanborn: Remembering a Unique Voice on the Alto Saxophone

David Sanborn: Remembering a Unique Voice on the Alto Saxophone

David Sanborn: Remembering a Unique Voice on the Alto Saxophone

Rudy Radelic

There are a handful of musicians in the music industry you’d swear have played on everything. Saxophonist David Sanborn was one of those musicians. His distinctive tone and style on the alto sax graced hundreds if not thousands of recordings throughout his career. On May 12, 2024, we lost David Sanborn to complications from prostate cancer, something he had been treated for since 2018. His loss leaves an empty space that is difficult if not impossible for other saxophonists to fill.

David William Sanborn was born on July 30, 1945 in Tampa Bay, Florida, where his father was stationed in the US Air Force. He grew up in a suburb of St. Louis, Missouri not far from the influence of the Chicago blues artists who would shape his music. At the age of three, he contracted polio, which affected his right leg, his left arm, and his lungs, for which he had to spend a year in an iron lung. As part of his treatment to build his respiratory strength, a doctor recommended that he take up the saxophone at 11. He was enamored with the sound of Hank Crawford, who was Ray Charles’ arranger and saxophonist, which inspired him to learn the instrument.

By the age of 14, he was already performing with blues musicians like Little Milton and Albert King. His musical studies took him to Northwestern University and the University of Iowa. He joined the Paul Butterfield Blues Band in 1967, remaining with the band for four years and appearing with the band at Woodstock. He can be heard on the title track to the album In My Own Dream taking a solo on the soprano sax.

 

Following that, Sanborn began making the rounds of popular and rock music albums, appearing on Stevie Wonder’s Talking Book (and touring in support of the album), James Taylor’s Gorilla, and his alto solo on David Bowie’s “Young Americans” is an iconic sound of the mid-1970s.

 

In addition to playing on hit records of the day, Sanborn was also playing on soul jazz recordings, and featured prominently in many of the records produced by Creed Taylor for the CTI Records spinoff label Kudu Records. In fact, his prominent role on guitarist Joe Beck’s album Beck would later be renamed Beck & Sanborn in a later reissue. Here is the album’s opening track, “Starfire.”

 

With this background, it was a natural progression for Sanborn to release albums under his own name. Beginning in 1975, he released his first album, Taking Off, which featured many of his musical pals such as Randy and Michael Brecker, Will Lee, Buzz Feiten, Don Grolnick, Ralph MacDonald, and many others. Joe Beck makes an appearance, as does arranger David Matthews, who took over arranging duties at CTI and Kudu once Don Sebesky and Bob James left the stable. “The Whisperer” is a mid-tempo feature from this album.

 

Sanborn’s stock in trade was a mix of instrumental pop, jazz, funk, and soul, and many of his records followed this formula. One of his signature songs (and certainly the crowd-pleaser at his concerts) is “Chicago Song,” from the album A Change of Heart. This album was one of many produced by bassist Marcus Miller.

 

After several albums of synthesizer-driven instrumental jazz/pop/funk, Sanborn made an abrupt left turn and swore off the type of radio-oriented music he had been churning out for over a decade and a half. Fans of those records were not prepared for Another Hand, which was a thoughtful, quiet, and introspective album that pooled the talents of various musicians such as Charlie Haden, Jack DeJohnette, Bill Frisell, Marc Ribot, Mulgrew Miller, and other well-known names scattered throughout the tracks. The wild card here is Terry Adams of NRBQ; Sanborn pulls off a terrific cover of that band’s “Hobbies,” and Adams appears on that track as well as “Cee” and “Come to Me, Nina,” both of which he also composed. While there are songs here by Charlie Haden, Bill Frisell and others, his cover of the Lou Reed song “Jesus” will send shivers up and down the listener’s spine.

 

One of my favorite albums of Sanborn’s is Upfront, which immediately followed Another Hand. While it’s more boisterous like his earlier albums, the big change here is that except for a few minor parts, the songs all feature “real” instruments. The feeling here is bluesy, driven by the Hammond B3 organ of Ricky Peterson. “Full House” features a cameo by Eric Clapton, and lest anyone feel Sanborn had put aside his avant-garde leanings, the album ends with an Ornette Coleman song, “Ramblin’.” The following track, “Soul Serenade,” was composed by Luther Dixon and King Curtis.

 

Upfront was not the only album that would reach into his blues influences. His 2008 album Here and Gone touches on the blues and soul, serving as a tribute to Ray Charles. He covers “I’m Gonna Move to the Outskirts of Town” from Charles’ Genius + Soul = Jazz, with a guest vocal by Eric Clapton.

 

In 2014, vibraphone legend Bobby Hutcherson featured organist Joey DeFrancesco, drummer Billy Hart, and Sanborn on the Blue Note album Enjoy the View. Leaning more into soul-jazz and hard bop, this album puts Sanborn in a different context. Here is a cover of Hutcherson’s “Montara,” originally recorded in 1975 for Blue Note.

 

The 2015 album Time and the River, which marked his 40th anniversary as a leader, was his 25th and final studio album. Here’s a cover of the Whitfield/Strong “Can’t Get Next to You,” featuring Larry Braggs on vocals.

 

All told, David Sanborn’s recordings netted him six GRAMMY Awards, eight Gold albums, and one Platinum album. His activities were not limited to recording and touring, however. Aside from appearances on late-night television programs such as Late Night with David Letterman and the Saturday Night Live Band, he co-hosted a late-night television show with Jools Holland called Night Music, which featured Sanborn with a large cross-section of musicians. He hosted a syndicated radio program called The Jazz Show with David Sanborn in the 1980s and 1990s. His last video venture was Sanborn Sessions, a series recorded from his home in New York featuring music and interviews; these videos featured such artists as Sting, Marcus Miller, Michael McDonald, Bob James, and others. In recent years he also started a podcast, As We Speak, named after his 1981 album.

While Sanborn was endorsed for a short time in the early 1980s by Yamaha and played their instruments on a pair of his records, his preference was for Selmer Mark VI alto saxophones, within a serial number range produced in 1967. (The Mark VI is a holy grail for many saxophonists, produced from 1954 to 1975. Saxophone fanatics can read more about this legendary model in this archived article from The New Yorker.) He used mouthpieces made by Bobby Dukoff and Aaron Drake.

His style could be described as edgy, bright, and very “in your face” as compared to other saxophonists. As we can see from his recordings and many appearances, his musical style took a knotty path in and around the blues, jazz, rock, soul, R&B, and many other styles. Some labeled his music as “smooth jazz” which, as with other musicians, rankled him a bit. Given his many influences and passions, he was not fond of labels. “I’m not so interested in what is or isn’t jazz. The guardians of the gate can be quite combative, but what are they protecting? Jazz has always absorbed and transformed what’s around it.” He later added, “Real musicians don’t have any time to spend thinking about limited categories.” (Interview in DownBeat magazine, 2017.)

His “surfing” of styles is what made David Sanborn’s legacy of having appeared on seemingly “everyone’s” records. His sound was immediately identifiable. And with his passing, a unique voice in the world of music is silenced, but we have a lifetime of recordings and guest appearances to enjoy forever.

 

Header image courtesy of Alice Soyer Sanborn.


Octave Records Has Great Music and Sound Covered With Its <em>Audiophile Masters, Volume X</em> Covers Collection

Octave Records Has Great Music and Sound Covered With Its <em>Audiophile Masters, Volume X</em> Covers Collection

Octave Records Has Great Music and Sound Covered With Its Audiophile Masters, Volume X Covers Collection

Frank Doris

Octave Records has released Audiophile Masters, Volume X, the latest in its series of reference-quality demonstration recordings. This time the collection features cover versions of songs written by John Lennon, John Prine, Paul Simon, Bob Dylan and other legendary songwriters, as well as standards from the Great American Songbook, all captured in extraordinary Pure DSD 256 sound.

“One of the top requests that Octave Records gets from our listeners is that we record an album of cover songs, so we did just that,” noted Jessica Carson, the album’s executive producer. “We asked our artists to pick some of their favorites, and they illuminate these songs with fresh, personal takes on some of the greatest songs ever written.”

On Audiophile Masters, Volume X, the emphasis is on acoustic-based performances featuring duos, trios, and small groups. The sound is up-close and personal, with a clarity and immediacy that perfectly complements the intimacy of the performances. Audiophile Masters, Volume X was recorded using Octave’s Pyramix-based Pure DSD 256 system. It was recorded, mixed and produced by Paul McGowan, with Terri McGowan and Jessica Carson assisting in the recording, mixing and production duties, and mastered by Gus Skinas.

The album opens with Lynyrd Skynyrd’s classic “Simple Man,” given an elegant rendition by Kyle Donovan on acoustic guitar and vocals, accompanied by Pamela Machala on piano. The duo continues with their spare, open sound on John Lennon’s “Imagine,” delivering every lyrical nuance with stark emotional power. The mood becomes more upbeat, if yearningly wistful, when Kyle is joined by Kate Farmer on the Elvis Presley classic “Can’t Help Falling in Love,” and when Kyle, Pamela and Kate perform Van Morrison’s “Crazy Love.”

 

 

Kyle Donovan. Courtesy of Bill Hook.

 

The album continues with Tim Ostdiek’s pensive cover of Bob Dylan’s “Make You Feel My Love,” featuring Tim on acoustic guitar and vocals, Jenny Balagna on vocals and Octave’s own Tom Amend on piano. Like all the songs on Volume X, the sound has near-tangible depth and presence. The group is joined by Christopher Wright (percussion) and Conner Hollingsworth (upright bass) on a truly stunning version of the John Prine classic, “Angel From Montgomery,” with gorgeous harmonies soaring over a sympathetic instrumental accompaniment. 

Next up, Tim and company offer joyous renditions of Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s “Up Above My Head,” and Paul Simon’s “Cecelia,” played with an energetic bluegrass feel. Audiophile Masters, Volume X concludes with two songs featuring Alicia Straka on vocals: “Let’s Fall in Love,” and “Beyond the Sea,” both given jazz-combo arrangements courtesy of Tom Amend on piano, Braxton Kahn playing drums and Seth Lewis on upright bass. The sound is startlingly intimate, from the weight and presence of the grand piano to the depth and harmonic richness of the bass, the subtle but dynamic shadings of Braxton’s drumming, and Alicia’s warm, supple, inviting vocals.

 

 

Tim Ostdiek. Courtesy of Jordan Bass.

 

Audiophile Masters, Volume X features Octave’s premium gold disc formulation, and the disc is playable on any SACD, CD, DVD, or Blu-ray player. It also has a high-resolution DSD layer that is accessible by using any SACD player or a PS Audio SACD transport. In addition, the master DSD and PCM files are available for purchase and download, including DSD 256, DSD 128, DSD 64, and DSDDirect Mastered 352.8 kHz/24-bit, 176.2 kHz/24-bit, 88.2 kHz/24-bit, and 44.1 kHz/24-bit PCM. (SRP: $19 – $39, depending on format.)


Sviatoslav Richter: Legendary Classical Pianist

Sviatoslav Richter: Legendary Classical Pianist

Sviatoslav Richter: Legendary Classical Pianist

Ernst Müller

Copper has an exchange program with AAA (Analogue Audio Association) magazine of Switzerland (and other publications), where we share articles, including this one.

The Swiss author Ernst Müller is a profound connoisseur of the classical music scene, with a large analog record collection. In issue 203 Copper presented his review of the Sibelius symphonies on LP. This article also discusses vinyl recordings. These can be found on the second-hand market, and they are also available as CDs. Ernst Müller points out important live recordings toward the end of the article.

It is hard to imagine an artist in classical music who has released more recordings on the market than Sviatoslav Richter (1915 – 1997). The majority of these are live recordings – some of them have been released as bootlegs. But official labels such as DGG, EMI and Philips have also released many concert recordings.

Richter felt less comfortable in the studio than in front of an audience. The life of this pianist was always shrouded in legend – and such legends tend to obscure the view of an artist's personality, rather than making it possible. For example, the title of Bruno Monsaingeon's excellent film about him is Richter: the Enigma. The German title, Der Unbeugsame, can be translated as “The Unbending One.” The French title, L'Insoumis (roughly translated as “The Undefeated” or “The Unvanquished”) goes in the same direction, although there is still something rebellious in this designation.

This article aims to provide record collectors with essential information on Richter's personality and playing, and to make a few recommendations on his boundless discography, with the emphasis on releases on vinyl.

 

An Apolitical Man – the First 45 Years of His Life in the Soviet Union

When Richter gave his first recital in 1934, one day before his 19th birthday, he had not yet received any training as a pianist. This remained the case until 1937, when he joined the famous Heinrich Neuhaus at the Moscow Conservatory. He had previously also worked as a répétiteur at the opera in Odessa. Neuhaus described Richter as a genius from the very beginning. A genius, however, who was twice expelled from the conservatory because Richter refused to attend the obligatory political courses. This was not out of political conviction, but because, as an apolitical person, he did not see the point. Neuhaus ensured that Richter was readmitted both times.

Years later, at the first Tchaikovsky Competition in 1958, Richter did not give his vote as a jury member to a Soviet pianist as prescribed, but instead awarded the young American Van Cliburn the highest possible number of points, which also marked the end of his work as a jury member in the Soviet Union. In an interview in 1986, Richter said of his teacher Neuhaus that he had freed his hands and relieved him of his harsh sound. Neuhaus was primarily concerned with the formation of sound, which he felt had to become more relaxed in the young pianist.

Richter remained on friendly terms with Neuhaus until his death. It was also Neuhaus who introduced Richter to Prokofiev as early as 1937. It was Richter who premiered Prokofiev’s Piano Sonatas Nos. 6, 7 and 9.

 

 

A picture from 1945: the back of the record sleeve of Japanese Victor VIC-3055.

 

Sviatoslav Richter was born in March 1915 in Schitomir (Ukraine). His father had previously lived in Vienna for 20 years, and was a trained pianist and from 1916 an organist in Odessa, where his son spent his youth and found his first recognition as a pianist. From the late 1930s, the young Richter enjoyed success throughout the Soviet Union. Even after the outbreak of war, he was far away from his parental home.

And then came a tragic event that Richter was never to overcome: Richter's father became in danger in Odessa because of his German name and his years in Vienna. There were plans to leave the city, but Richter's mother had entered into a relationship with another man and refused to leave her home. Richter's father was arrested in 1941, before the German invasion, as an alleged spy and shot. His son knew nothing about it for a long time. His mother later left for Germany with her friend, and the pianist didn’t see his mother again until 1960. In addition, the mother married the man, who took the name Richter and pretended to be the brother of the husband who had been shot. The pianist detested his stepfather, whom he described as a notorious gossip.

Sviatoslav Richter the man always shied away from the camera. Moreover, analysis (of musical texts, for example) was not his thing. He said of himself that he detested two things: analysis and power. He could refuse telephone calls, hated airplanes, and loved to walk enormous distances. When he was more than 70 years old, he spent six months traveling by car from Moscow to Japan and back. Along the way, he gave concerts in countless small Siberian towns. It is said that he would have preferred to make the whole journey on foot.

 

 

Volume 2 of the Carnegie Hall concerts in an American pressing.

 

Carnegie Hall: Richter Creates a Sensation in the West

Richter remained almost unknown in the West until 1960. When Soviet pianist Emil Gilels toured the US before then and received good reviews, he remarked that people should wait until Richter would come. But it was only when record label Deutsche Grammophon released two records in the West, which had been recorded in Warsaw in 1958, that the Richter legend began to form. And when the Soviet bureaucracy gave permission for a tour of the US in the fall of 1960, Richter's international reputation began. Richter would never emigrate in his lifetime. In the last 35 years of his life, however, he was no longer restricted from giving concerts in the West.

Five concerts in Carnegie Hall in October 1960 contributed greatly to the creation of his reputation. He was celebrated as a virtuoso without equal, as one of the world's greatest pianists. Richter himself saw it differently: he felt bad about it and had preferred not to give these concerts at all. He demanded that the microphones be hidden (which explains the poor sound of the recordings). Columbia Records had paid $60,000 for the rights to release the recordings, to the Soviet authorities – Richter himself saw nothing of this money.

The concerts were a phenomenal success with audiences and critics, but Richter considered this to be undeserved, as he believed he had played badly. Richter demanded that the recordings not be released. However, at this time two double albums of the Carnegie recitals had already been released. And a third album was released shortly after. However, there were no reissues until 2006. This is why the American, English and German pressings of the concerts were for a long time sought-after records.

Richter made a few studio recordings in the following decades of his life, but these pale compared to the huge number of unauthorized releases of his concert recordings. Richter was rarely satisfied with his playing. Towards the end of his life, he was plagued by illness and avoided performing. Even before then, he preferred to avoid festival venues and metropolitan cities and play in smaller towns. Just north of the French city of Tours, he had already found his own venue for an annual concert in 1963 in a barn, the "Grange de Meslay." As he grew older, Richter withdrew from the limelight. He only played with a score in a dark room. The piano was lit only by a reading lamp.

Richter was not a complacent pianist, as can be seen in by Bruno Monsaingeon’s excellent film Richter: The Enigma. At the very end – the last words of the film – Richter says succinctly in Russian: "I don't like myself. That's it."

Richter continued to give concerts until the spring of 1995. He died in Moscow on August 1, 1997.

Richter's Playing

Although Richter was a pianist whose playing primarily made an impression through his physical abilities, he was capable of an enormous wealth of color in his sound. He made full use of the dynamic spectrum between the most delicate pianissimo and the most fiery, impetuous fortissimo. His enormous manual dexterity allowed him a powerful grip, especially in the 1950s and 1960s, which was, however, so controlled that a volume increase was possible even in fortissimo in important passages, which made his playing seem particularly intense. Richter's playing has been accused, not entirely without justification, of being aggressive. He was a musician who was guided more by his instinct than by analysis. His playing could be loud and powerful, but also sparklingly elegant. His physicality allowed him to take big risks at concerts, which could lead to astonishing interpretations that made the occasional wrong note seem irrelevant.

Richter's Schubert interpretations, however, drew criticism. His Schubert could be very slow, and his tone seemed to some to be too "frozen" and static. His Schubert playing was probably more spiritual than technical. In any case, the pianist avoided any beauty of sound in Schubert.

Arthur Rubinstein said of his Russian colleague: "Richter is an outstanding musician of great intelligence. He plays the piano and the piano answers. He sings with his piano."

The recordings of his last 10 to 15 years show a changed Richter. His playing was less physical. Richter's wife, the singer Nina Dorliak, to whom he had been married since 1945, said of this before and after of his playing: "He had a fiery temperament and tended to play forte. Later he began to pay attention to the sound." She said that he had found a kind of "bel canto." Richter played most of his concerts on Yamaha grand pianos.

 

Three Phases are Captured on Recordings

In a June 29, 2012 article about Richter's recordings in The Berkshire Review titled "Angelic Demon," Huntley Dent divides them into three phases:

– The Soviet years before 1960: the recordings of this period show a pianist of the highest nervous tension. He possessed a phenomenal technique and fearless self-confidence and created a hypnotic playing style. In terms of sound, these recordings are somewhere between poor and outright bad.

– Richter in the West (from 1960 to around 1980): during this phase, Richter developed his international concert activity mainly in the US, England, Italy, France, Japan and Russia (Moscow). His abilities appear to be completely intact. EMI, DGG, Philips and Decca were in competition when it came to releasing studio recordings – there are also well-recorded live recordings among them – which sold well. I would still describe the playing from this period as powerful, but it now sounds more beautiful and somewhat more rounded. In terms of sound, the recordings from this period are different, but much better than those from the first phase. Richter's collaboration with Benjamin Britten, which is available in recordings from the Aldeburgh Festival, also dates from this period.

– Dent calls the third phase, which begins in 1980, "twilight," a word that has the connotation of time coming to an end. Recordings from these 15 years are available on CD, primarily from a Richter box set with 51 CDs: Sviatoslav Richter – Complete Decca, Philips and DG Recordings. Unfortunately, there are not so many convincing studio recordings from Richter's last years. For the most part, the concert recordings have a very good sound. They show a different Richter, whose playing has little to do with the phenomenal power of his first two phases. His musical statements seem more internalized. Some of the tempi seem to be in slow motion. You could also put it another way: Richter's playing is no longer unique. There are some fine recordings from this period, but since they are only available on CD, I will not include them in this article.

 

The Repertoire

In his 1998 book Richter: Ecrits, conversations, Bruno Monsaingeon recorded very interesting conversations with Richter and published his diary notes from 1970 to 1995. The book also contains detailed statistics on all the composers and works that Richter played, and how many concerts he gave in which years in their respective continents, countries and cities. The statistics are so meticulous that they are not easy to keep track of. Viewed from a distance, they are impressive:

– Between 1937 and 1995, Richter performed around 900 different works.

– The composers he played most frequently were, in order of frequency: Chopin, Rachmaninov, Debussy, Beethoven, Prokofiev, Schumann, Bach, Brahms, Liszt, and Schubert.

– He most often played works from the Romantic repertoire, followed by works from the 20th century, then from the Classical and Baroque periods.

– Richter gave a total of 3,589 concerts in his lifetime, a good 2,000 of them in the Soviet Union and around 1,000 in Western Europe.

What did Richter not play? He was not a fan of "completeness. He "only" played 22 of Beethoven's 32 piano sonatas and, strangely enough, only Nos. 1 and 3 of his five piano concertos. Unlike his fellow pianists, he did not play complete cycles of works: of Chopin's Etudes op. 10 and 20, he played only a handful of selected ones each. The same applies to the first book of Debussy's Préludes and Prokofiev's Visions fugitives. He performed only excerpts of Shostakovich's Preludes and Fugues. There are, however, two complete recordings of Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier.

In his later years, Richter played some of Mozart's sonatas. There are quite good recordings of these on Philips (on CD). However, the pianist confessed about his Mozart playing – self-critical as he almost always was – that he had "not yet found the key to the whole." Instead, he loved Haydn, to whom other pianists of his generation seemed to be indifferent.

 

The Recordings

As already mentioned, the Richter discography is seemingly boundless, and confusing. Well over 4,000 different recordings of works have been released. For decades I have collected all of Richter's recordings that I could find, and today I probably have about 95 percent of all of Richter’s sonic documents. Fortunately, there is a website that lists Richter's recordings with great accuracy and provides clarity: 

https://pianistdiscography.com/discography/pianist.php?PIANIST=1

On this website you can click on 52 composer names and find Richter’s recorded works with references to LP and CD editions with all catalog numbers! This is important because identical recordings can appear on a wide variety of labels without any indication of the place and date of the recording (e.g., on Melodiya, Eurodisc, Decca, EMI, Monitor, Musicart, Odyssey, Parlophone, Philips, Shinsekai, and Saga). This phenomenon is even more extreme in the case of live recordings, as bootleg pressings of Richter concerts were commonplace. And although there are often several live recordings of the same work on the market, the same recording might be available in more than one pressing on your own record shelf without you even realizing it. These pressings can sound different because the source material was often not the same.

Unfortunately, I can't give any guidelines here as to which labels have issued better recordings. It's a matter of chance, and sometimes the later editions on CD sound better, sometimes worse.

In the case of bootleg pressings, the information found on them can sometimes be wrong. An extreme example: when I bought the Discocorp IGI 309 record a good 40 years ago (the cover and label say "Schumann: Carnaval, op. 9") and put it on, I heard Schumann’s Faschingsschwank aus Wien, op. 26!

It should be critically noted that record and CD companies have indiscriminately thrown all the available Richter recordings onto the market that were recorded at some point and somewhere. Richter was not always at his best on some of these. As a result, numerous concert recordings have been released which clearly do not represent anything worthwhile.

In the following, we would like to critically point out a few recommendable recordings, with the emphasis on releases by "official" labels.

 

 

Melodiya/Eurodisc 74 807 KK, mono recordings from the 50s.

 

Early Recordings (All Mono)

For the recordings from the 1950s, I would like to mention three records (in later pressings) that were first released on Melodiya: Melodiya/Eurodisc 74807 brings together a recording of Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 1 in F sharp minor op. 1 from February 1955 (with Kurt Sanderling and the USSR Great Radio Symphony Orchestra) and Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 1 in D flat major op. 10 with conductor Kirill Kondrashin leading the Moscow Youth Symphony Orchestra in 1952. In both concerts, the 40-year-old pianist can be heard with irresistibly gripping, even breathtaking, and crystal-clear playing.

 

 

Odyssey A 35204.

 

If you want to hear Richter's grandiose solo works from this period, get yourself a recording of Tchaikovsky's Piano Sonata in G major op. 37. Apart from the 1957 period sound, this is a reference recording. It is available in many record-label releases (Melodiya, Eurodisc, etc.) Melodiya/Odyssey Y 35204 has the advantage in that it also contains a breathtaking and clear interpretation of Schumann's Humoreske op. 20; however, the long sonata is crammed onto the first side of the record. The pianist's earliest recordings (Moscow 1948 and 1950) with short works by Schubert and Chopin can be found on Melodiya/Eurodisc 87 474 XAK. This record, however, shows a typical discographic negligence: the last work (Chopin's 2nd Ballade) was recorded in Bucharest in 1960, without this being noted.

One should not expect good sound from any of the three records mentioned!

The recording of Richter's concert from February 24, 1958 in Sofia (released several times on Philips) is legendary. In addition to short piano pieces by Schubert, Liszt and Chopin, Modest Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition was the centerpiece of the concert. Today, this is still one of the most frequently cited reference recordings. However, the listening pleasure is marred by a record-breaking amount of coughing in the audience! The sound is not enjoyable either.

 

 

Here is a release of a recording of Pictures at an Exhibition from 1958 in Sofia on Columbia (ML 5600).

 

1958: DGG Makes Inspiring Studio Recordings in Warsaw

If you want to hear good-sounding recordings of Richter from the 1950s, you should listen to one of the three DGG records recorded in Warsaw in 1958:

Rachmaninov's Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor op.18 is a superb moment. Richter has a magnificent breadth, is powerful in his grip, and achieves an intensity like hardly any other pianist in this work. The interpretation has heroic traits but leaves the necessary space for lyrical passages. Stanislaw Wislocki conducts the brilliantly arranged Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. The disc also contains six preludes for solo piano from op. 23 and 32 by Rachmaninov. (DGG SLPM 138 076).

 

 

DGG SLPM 138 076.

 

 

DGG SLPM 138 075.

 

Richter's recording of Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 5 in G major op. 55 with Witold Rowicki and the Warsaw Philharmonic (DGG SLPM 138 075) is equally inspiring. Richter had already impressed the composer with his interpretation of this work in 1940. His playing here explores the entire range between lyrical passages and even black humor. Rowicki's accompaniment is convincing. The same disc also contains Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, K. 466, accompanied by Stanislaw Wislocki with the same orchestra. Richter approaches Mozart with moderate tempi. This is not a virtuoso Mozart in which the dynamic possibilities of a modern concert grand piano are demonstrated. However, his Mozart certainly points in the direction of Beethoven, and Richter plays Beethoven’s cadenzas here.

Richter's recording of Robert Schumann's Piano Concerto in A minor op. 54 also dates from 1958 and the playing is fascinating in its pianistic beauty. However, it is also an unsettling, feverish Schumann that can be heard here (again accompanied by Wislocki with the Warsaw Orchestra). The disc also contains Schumann's Introduction and Allegro appassionato in G major op. 82, a concert piece in which the performance reveals the status of an important work. The last piece on the record, Schumann's Toccata in C major op. 7 for solo piano, is also truly inspiring.

 

 

Here is an English pressing containing one half of the program from October 23, 1960 with works by Prokofiev (CBS BRG 72125).

 

October 1960: Carnegie Hall

Richter's first studio recording in the US was also made at the time of the Carnegie Hall concerts: RCA recorded Johannes Brahms' 2nd Piano Concerto with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (LSC-2466). As the principal conductor Fritz Reiner was ill, Erich Leinsdorf stepped in at short notice. We hear a thoroughly energetic orchestral interpretation with electrifying piano playing. In terms of sound, this is not the best RCA recording of the time, but it is preferable to the one made nine years later for EMI with the Orchestre de Paris under Lorin Maazel, where even in the first movement, Maazel fails to create the necessary tension between soloist and orchestra.

 

 

Autograph from the collection of Roland Kupper (Basel).

 

In November 1960, Richter recorded Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 1 in C major op. 15 with the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Charles Munch (RCA LSC-2544). The pianist loved this piano concerto and said that whenever he heard an orchestra play the work, he was overwhelmed by the feeling that something radiantly beautiful was happening. Richter also held Munch in high esteem. After a rehearsal, he is said to have kissed his hands in gratitude. These are certainly enough prerequisites for a great recording. In fact, this recording has often been praised. Richter's sound is brilliantly displayed, has enormous physical presence, and is rhythmically pointed. However, this also means that the performance lacks youthfulness and melodic character; it has something breathless about it.

 

 

DGG SLPM 138 848.

 

A similar criticism could be made of the September 1962 recording of Beethoven's 3rd Piano Concerto with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra under Kurt Sanderling (DGG SLPM 138 848). However, this recording, which may not be everyone's cup of tea, is more convincing; despite or perhaps because of the perfection of Richter's crystal-clear metallic tone, which, with a well-accompanied Sanderling, goes through the score with power and angularity. Richter's playing is probably more appropriate to the Third concerto than the First.

Richter's recording of Franz Liszt's two piano concertos from July 1961 with the London Symphony Orchestra under Kirill Kondrashin is still a reference recording today. Richter's pianissimo is ravishing, the rapid passages are crystal-clear, and he reproduces the stormy elements in both concertos with impressive power. Everything comes across with great expression. The balance between soloist and orchestra is perfect, Kondrashin and the London Symphony Orchestra accompany full of character and tension. (Released several times on Philips; the 180-gram reissue has catalog number Philips 900-000.) The fact that these recordings sound excellent is also due to the recording team of C. Robert Fine, Wilma Cozart, Harold Lawrence, and Robert Eberenz.

 

 

DGG SLPM 138 822.

 

Richter's recording of Peter Tchaikovsky's 1st Piano Concerto in B flat minor op. 23 with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra under Herbert von Karajan from September 1962 (DGG SLPM 138 822) is also famous. But I hesitate to make a recommendation here. Is this [driven by] the playing of Sviatoslav Richter? Or is this not rather von Karajan's Tchaikovsky? Indeed, the conductor seems to determine the tempo changes and interpretation with his powerful, sound-oriented concept. Richter's playing seems tamed and not very free. Ultimately, the cover picture already seems to suggest this to me: Karajan shows where to go with his right arm raised, and Richter is allowed to look into the score from the side. Richter's recording with the Leningrad Philharmonic under Yevgeny Mravinsky from July 1958 seems much more rewarding to me personally, despite the monophonic sound (this was released on different labels). Conductor and pianist speak the same language here.

A side note: the recording of Beethoven's Triple Concerto for EMI with von Karajan and the "star soloists" Richter, Oistrakh and Rostropovich also seems to me to be far from being a first choice. Richter himself says in Monsaingeon's film that he is dissatisfied with this recording, and that Karajan and Oistrakh had formed an alliance against him and Rostropovich. The recording is famous but fails to inspire.

 

 

London 1961: DGG 618 766 (mono pressing for the French market); German catalog number: 18 766.

 

Richter in Works for Solo Piano…

In an unusual arrangement between DGG and EMI, the two companies alternately made recordings in 1961 and 1962 on the occasion of the pianist's tours, and these are to be recommended. Two recital discs on DGG should be mentioned first: In the summer of 1961, a program with works from three centuries was recorded while Richter's first tour of England: Haydn's Sonata in G minor, a Ballade by Chopin, three Préludes by Debussy and the 8th Sonata by Prokofiev show a pianist who possesses a differentiated touch and a brilliant technique. Richter is a completely convincing interpreter of four different composers and eras (DGG SLPM 138 766).

In the fall of 1962, sound engineer Heinz Wildhagen recorded concerts from Richter's tour of Italy for DGG (DGG SLPM 138 950). The A-side of the record is dedicated to 5 preludes and fugues from Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier. Richter plays Bach here without embellishments, straightforward but thoroughly intimate. The second side of the disc is admirably perfect in its design: Schumann's Abegg Variations, his Opus 1, sounds polished and clear. The same applies to the (somewhat cool sounding) C minor Allegretto and a Ländler by Schubert, a Prelude by Rachmaninov and three of Prokofiev's 20 Visions fugitives.

 

 

Concert recordings from the 1962 tour of Italy, live recordings from Florence, Rome and Venice (DGG SLPM 138 950).

 

...as an Exemplary Interpreter of Schumann...

Richter's sporadic collaboration with the EMI label began on the occasion of his 1961 tour of England and lasted until 1980. Recordings from the first two years document Richter as an outstanding interpreter of Robert Schumann: the C major Fantasy op. 17, the Faschingsschwank aus Wien op. 26 and especially the Second Piano Sonata show Richter at the height of his career with colorful and virtuoso playing. Richter takes Schumann literally when he uses the indication "as fast as possible" in the finale of the sonata; and he is also able to perfectly shape the increase in "faster" in the coda without playing over notes. The EMI recordings of the two years have been released on two individual disks (the first with the already mentioned Fantasie and Beethoven's Tempest Sonata, the second with the other two works by Schumann).

 

 

Double album by German EMI with the aforementioned works by Schumann (EMI 1C 187-50 340/41).

 

Incidentally, the pianist had already proved himself to be a leading interpreter of Schumann with the recordings of the Waldszenen op. 82 and the Fantasiestücke op. 12 made in Prague in 1956 (released on Supraphon and subsequently on DGG, as well as on Heliodor).

 

...and What About his Schubert?

Schubert was one of Richter's specialties; he played him frequently. As a listener, I often succumb to the idea that the romantic world of Schumann is closer to Richter than that of Schubert. In fact, his Schubert playing has often been criticized – it doesn't seem to be everyone's cup of tea. Richter often played Schubert very slowly. Live recordings in particular prove that he was able to develop the first movement of the last sonata (B flat major DV 960) almost in slow motion. Richter’s Schubert has been accused of being brittle. If the listener allows himself to be drawn into his Schubertian image, something highly impressive can emerge: Richter plays the unfinished C major Sonata DV 840 in 1961 in a disjointed and cool but intense manner. This is a Schubert who moves between a glimmer of hope and frozen despair (Le Chant du Monde LDX 78295). In the same year, a record was made for EMI with Schubert's Wanderer Fantasy and a lyrical interpretation of the little A major Sonata DV 664, which has reference-quality sound. There are other records with Schubert sonatas from later years. Worth mentioning is one with the last sonata in B flat major DV 960 from 1972 and one with live recordings of the middle sonatas DV 575 and DV 625, recorded on the occasion of concerts in Tokyo in 1979.

Every music lover must check for himself whether he finds Richter's Schubert interpretations accessible.

 

 

Recordings from 1961 (EMI 1C 063-00 229).

 

Beethoven

Richter always made it clear that his playing was committed to faithfulness to the original and the "New Objectivity." Thus, passages in Richter's playing can appear to some listeners as dismissively sober, while to others they may appear as an expression of trance-like self-forgetfulness. His interpretations of Beethoven's piano sonatas in particular reveal this range between sobriety (in the slow movements) and possible intensity and purposefulness, which can be heard with finger-technical perfection (in the Allegro movements, for example). There are numerous recordings of Beethoven's sonatas by this pianist.

In addition to the already mentioned captivating interpretations of Beethoven's Sonatas Nos. 3, 7, 9, 12, 22 and 23, which are available in recordings from the 1960 Carnegie Hall concerts, I would just like to mention three more records here: In the summer of 1963, Philips recorded the Sonatas Nos. 9, 10, 11, 19 and 20 in Paris, which were released on two individual disks. Richter plays these relatively early sonatas (all were composed in the 18th century) with rhythmic freshness and makes the scores appear transparent, with little use of pedal. In terms of sound, the recordings are not exactly exhilarating for the time.

In 1977, EMI released a record with the 1st and 7th sonatas (ASD 3364). What is fascinating about these recordings with their good sound is how Richter is able to penetrate an "innocent" world in the first sonata (F minor). Such an approach also characterizes his recordings of Haydn's sonatas. Richter's concept for the 7th sonata in D major seems less uniform. He takes a streamlined, sober approach to the first movement. He approaches the finale with a dreamy undertone.

 

 

Philips SAL 3458.

 

Prokofiev, Rachmaninov, Scriabin, Shostakovich

Richter's pianistic skills made him a predestined interpreter of Prokofiev. Anyone who listens to one of his recordings of piano sonatas 6 to 9 or short piano pieces will hear perfect interpretations. One critic wrote somewhat provocatively, but not without justification, that Richter is the only one who enters a philosophical dimension with Prokofiev.

Richter's recordings of works by Russian composers (Tchaikovsky and Mussorgsky have already been mentioned above) are generally an excellent choice. The aforementioned DGG disc with Rachmaninov's 2nd Piano Concerto contains 6 Préludes from op. 23 and 32 by the same composer on the back (recorded in Warsaw in 1959). 13 preludes from the two cycles are also available in a recording from 1971 from Salzburg (Eurodisc-Melodiya 85744 MK or Melodiya/Angel SR-40235).

It is also always rewarding to hear Richter in his few recordings of works by Alexander Scriabin. A parenthetical remark: Vladimir Sofronitzsky (1901 – 1961), a pianist who has remained unknown in the West, is rightly regarded as the Scriabin interpreter par excellence. Richter himself also holds this opinion. Sofronitzky plays Scriabin in a freer way than Richter. Nevertheless, it is worth listening to Richter's interpretations.

The recording of six of the 24 Preludes and Fugues op. 87 by Dimitri Shostakovich – recorded by Philips in Paris in the summer of 1963 (SAL 3458, also available as a reissue) – also deserves special attention.

 

 

Debussy, live in Spoleto 1967 (Turnabout TV-S 34360).

 

Debussy

The fact that Richter was also a serious interpreter of Ravel and Debussy is shown above all by a live recording of the complete second book of Claude Debussy's Préludes from Spoleto on July 14, 1967 (Turnabout TV-S 34360). Although the sound is poor, what is usually difficult to capture in the studio succeeds here: to conjure up the magic of this composer's music emanating from the keys. Richter usually only played individual Preludes in concerts, but not the entire collection. The already mentioned recital in Spoleto is one of the great moments of Richter's piano playing. Another Turnabout record (TV 34359) contains the works that Richter probably played in the first part of the concert: The E major Sonata by Haydn, two Novelettes by Schumann and La sérénade interrompue by Debussy document a pianist with great creative culture and fine nuances of touch. Unfortunately, the sound is rather poor. (Incidentally, the last work on this disc – Prokofiev's 7th Sonata – is a recording from Moscow from 1958, without this being noted!)

 

...Piano Concertos by Dvorak, Bartok, Prokofiev, Grieg, Schumann and Britten

There are four noteworthy recordings of piano concertos from the 1970s: one reference recording is that of Antonín Dvořák's concerto with Carlos Kleiber and the Bavarian State Orchestra Munich. The primary quality of the recording lies in the orchestra's interplay with Richter under Kleiber's masterful direction. Soloist and orchestra listen to each other, both are highly inspired, the lyrical passages are magnificent, and Richter has moments of genius; listen to his introduction to the third movement. The sound of this recording from June 1976 is not spectacular, but it is very coherent and beautiful. (EMI ASD 3371). According to Sviatoslav Richter, however, neither he nor the conductor felt in the best of health during this recording.

 

 

A French EMI (2C 069-02161).

 

Richter only rarely played individual short pieces by Béla Bartók in concert. However, his 2nd Piano Concerto is available in a studio recording from 1970 (HMV ASD 2744). He is accompanied by the Orchestre de Paris under Lorin Maazel. The piano playing here is electrifying, and phenomenal in terms of fingering technique. The pianist conveys this rhythmically very angular score without giving it too much harshness and sharpness. Richter also allows poetry to flash through this wild work in a variety of ways. It is probably one of Richter's best contributions to the music of the 20th century. Unfortunately, Maazel's accompaniment is rather matter-of-fact and remote.

On the reverse side of the disc is Prokofiev's rarely heard 5th Piano Concerto with the same conductor and the London Symphony Orchestra. Richter is able to tame the "spiky" nature of this work, which was little appreciated by the composer himself. Personally, however, I prefer the 1958 Warsaw recording with Rowicki mentioned above. It is regrettable that Richter only played the First and Fifth piano concertos of Prokofiev's piano concertos – he was well-acquainted with the composer, who also wrote sonatas for him.

In November 1974 Richter recorded the Romantic concertos by Edward Grieg and Robert Schumann with Lovro von Matacic and the Orchestre National de l'Opéra de Monte Carlo. As in 1958 under Wislocki, Richter delivers a powerful and characterful interpretation of Schumann's concerto. Von Matacic responds well to Richter's interpretation. The performance of Grieg's concerto seems less convincing to me. In my opinion, Richter is excessively romantic here, especially in the outer movements, and his playing also lacks freshness.

Richter had a special affinity with the English composer Benjamin Britten. He performed several times at Britten’s festival in Aldeburgh. There are recordings (mostly only on CD) of four-hand piano music with Britten and Richter. There is a recording of Britten's Piano Concerto op. 13 on Decca (SXL 6512) with the English Chamber Orchestra conducted by the composer. This is undoubtedly the reference recording of the work. Nevertheless, it does not meet with general interest, as it is not an accessible work. Britten wrote better ones, such as the Violin Concerto, which can be found on the other side of the Decca record.

 

Other Recordings From the 1970s...

Richter made an exception to his habit of not playing complete cycles of works with the 48 Preludes and Fugues (from The Well-Tempered Clavier) by Johann Sebastian Bach. His recording made in Salzburg (first book July 1970, second book 1972/73) may be "wrong" for ears accustomed to historically informed performance practice on the harpsichord, because it sounds like Richter is romanticizing. In my opinion, however, it is never incorrect from the point of view of musical logic.

 

 

The four Scherzos by Chopin, recorded in 1977, here in a pressing by Melodiya (C 10-12059-60).

 

Richter repeatedly played works by Frédéric Chopin in his concerts. Some examples of this can be found on recital records. One LP devoted entirely to the four Scherzos (recorded in Munich in July 1977 for Melodiya and RCA Japan) is particularly recommended (released on many labels, including Ariola 25068 MK). Despite his technical brilliance, the pianist plays with great musicality, a wealth of color, and tonal beauty.

 

References to Recommendable Larger CD Editions with Live Recordings

 

The following remarks are not for listeners who want audiophile sound. Since Richter's death, there have probably been almost as many unreleased concert recordings on CD as there were recordings made during his lifetime! Here are the most exciting ones in my opinion:

– Between 1998 and 2011, the Canadian label DOREMI released a Richter Edition in 20 volumes (30 CDs in total) with many excellent live recordings from all decades. (http://www.doremi.com/richter.html).

– The US label TNC Recordings released 16 CDs in 2002 under the title Richter in Kiev, which are highly noteworthy in terms of interpretation (unfortunately, not sound). It is said that Richter, who performed a total of 89 times in Kiev, took more risks in concert there than in Moscow or Leningrad. You can hear that here. (http://www.tncmusic.net/product_info.php?products_id=710)

– Richter's concerts in Prague have been released several times on 15 CDs on the Praga label.

– The releases on the BBC Legends label (BBC Music), which documents the pianist's concerts in England (presumably 7 individual CDs), are significantly better in terms of sound.

– In 2016, a very expensive 27-CD album entitled Live In Moscow Conservatory 1951 – 1965 was released in Russia, which is unfortunately no longer available. (Label: Sound Archives of the Moscow Conservatory, SMC CD 0184, Limited Edition.) It contains numerous previously unreleased recordings and some great interpretations.

 

There is Much More to Mention

Basically, the attempt to present Sviatoslav Richter in a complete overview is an absurdity. There are too many recordings and the pianist's personality is too diverse. Much has gone unmentioned in this article. For example, it should be noted in passing that Richter devoted himself to chamber music more and more frequently as he grew older. Most readers will be familiar with the recordings of Beethoven's cello sonatas with Mstislav Rostropovich (Philips).

Several violin sonatas with David Oistrakh have also been released (Bartok, Brahms, Franck, Prokofiev). In addition, the recordings with the violinist Oleg Kagan (Mozart), who unfortunately died too early, are worthy of note. There are also good recordings with the Borodin Quartet on the market. It should not be forgotten that Richter was also occasionally active as a Lieder accompanist – for example, a recording of "Die schöne Magelone" by Brahms with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau from 1970. In addition, Richter frequently appeared in the 1950s as piano accompanist to his wife, the singer Nina Dorliak; a (complete?) edition of the recordings is only available on 3 CDs on the Cascavelle label.

The list could be extended. But that would go even further beyond the already overstretched scope of this article.

If it has become clear in this article what the typical "Richter virtues" are and in which recordings they are most likely to be found, the length of this article makes sense.

 

Header image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/Щербинин Юрий.


The 2024 La Jolla Concours d’Elegance: A Stunning Showcase for Classic Automobiles

The 2024 La Jolla Concours d’Elegance: A Stunning Showcase for Classic Automobiles

The 2024 La Jolla Concours d’Elegance: A Stunning Showcase for Classic Automobiles

B. Jan Montana

It was a dark and stormy night, the kind of night that tests men’s souls, the mettle of their courage, and the strength of their convictions.

Well, maybe that’s an exaggeration. Actually, it was an overcast day, which has a similar effect on Southern Californians. I could tell by their expressions as they wandered around the La Jolla Concours d’Elegance last month, bewildered and fearful of what might come next. It was disturbing, till I got to the VIP tent for a couple of single-malt energy drinks.

Although it's not uncommon for La Jolla to be socked in with fog, I'd never experienced it before during the La Jolla Concours. Even the cormorants were grounded due to a low cloud ceiling.

 




The paint and detailing on this Harley were just stunning.

 


Although these cars were of the same era, they are hardly of the same type.

 

 

When I think of a Rolls-Royce, this is what comes to mind, not the boxy sedans they are producing these days. 

 

 

Clearly, this driver prefers a Mercedes.

 

 

There were even some kit cars at the show, albeit outside the main gates. This one is about as striking as they come. They feature custom fiberglass bodies on a conventional production frame.

 

 

Here's a late '50s Thunderbird that only Liberace could love. Maybe he even owned it once. The owner was a bit dodgy on the subject.

 

 

The vehicles in the photos above can all be seen outside the gate, and are well worth a trip to La Jolla. But if you want to see the multi-million dollar vehicles close up inside the fence, you’ve got to pay the substantial entry fee to get through the gate. To me, being able to see cars like this 1929 Model A Duesenberg close-up makes it well worth the price of admission. This car from Beverly Hills got my vote for best of show.

 

 

Another impressive vehicle was this 1941 Mercedes-Benz 770K touring wagon. I'm told it was Hitler's vehicle of choice, although it was never revealed whether this was an actual vehicle he rode in.

 

 

The height of automotive Art Deco fashion is exemplified by this 1937 Talbot-Lago Type 150-C-S. I loved everything about it; the color, the interior, and the over-the-top styling. The only thing that annoyed me was that I didn’t own it.

 

 

 

 Like Woodies? Here was the only one at the show, complete with surfboard.

 

 

But it’s a stunner, considering this 1929 Olds is coming up on 95 years of age. We should look this good.

 

 

The interior looks like it came fresh out of the showroom. 

 

 

If you care about your offspring, you’ll order the optional child safety seat.

 

 

This 1926 Lincoln Model K LeBaron features a V12 engine. The K line was only produced during the Depression years from 1931 to 1940.

 

 

 

This 1934 Packard Speedster has two things in common with the Lincoln above. Its body was also built by the LeBaron company, and it has a V12 engine. Packard installed factory-produced V12s starting in 1916.

 

 

Even car engines were works of art during the Art Deco period.

 

 

When the kids got tired of looking at cars the seals were only a few steps away.

 

 

Despite the cloudy weather the grounds filled up during the afternoon.

 

 

Our editor has a passion for Corvettes, so I felt obligated to include some Corvette photos. 

 

 

This 1960 model is my all-time favorite.

 

 

Of course, we can't disappoint the Ford guys, so here's a gorgeous 1966 Mustang GT convertible. As a high school student, I would have traded half my manhood for one of these.

 

 

Here's a stunning row of Lamborghinis for the Italian car people, featuring a 1966 400 GT coupe. I have a friend who has one and though it's gorgeous, it's not user friendly. It's noisy, rides like a truck, and takes some gymnastics to get in and out of. Let's not even broach the subject of maintenance.

 

 

Here is an Italian car of a different kind, a 1926 Lancia Lambda.

 

 

To the left is the Ferrari lineup, featuring in the foreground a 1959 250 long-wheelbase Spider. The owner brought it all the way from Chicago. It's a privilege to be able to see all these fantastic cars in one location. The German car lineup is to the right. 

 

 

In public school I would have donated half my manhood for this 1955 Mercedes 190 SLR convertible. Good thing my juvenile wishes weren't granted or I'd have been singing soprano at my high school graduation.

 

 

I have no idea why I took this photo other than I was allured by her smile. Beats the hell out of the Mona Lisa, doesn’t it? 

 

 

We haven't forgotten the British car people. This line-up features a stunning Aston Martin from the '60s. In college I'd have given half…never mind. (I was out of parts anyway.)

 

 

Here's the perfect car for the guy who has lost all his parts. It has no back seat for girlfriends or kids, so he'll never need to explain why he doesn't have any.

 

 

And now for something completely different. Those who weren't attracted to any of the cars above may be interested in this staff car. It wasn't used in the European theater, or in the Africa campaign, or in the Pacific. It was used in the circus where it caused many casualties, leading to its demise.

   

 

Hospitality tents are critical to a large events like the La Jolla Concourse d’Elegance, as it takes hours to really appreciate. They allow attendees to take a break and rest before the second shift.

It's amazing that there are people willing to take all the trouble to make an event like this happen. Imagine the logistics of bringing all these amazing cars together in one location for our enjoyment. If you get the chance, go see it. This isn't your average fairground car show.

 

 

As an aside, last month I watched a PowerPoint presentation featuring photos of a riverboat trip down the Rhine. I was so impressed with the graphics I asked the presenter which camera he was using. I expected him to tell me he was using a large format Nikon or Canon DSLR.

He told me all the photos were taken on his cell phone, a Samsung Galaxy s24 Ultra. The next day I bought one and what you see in this article was my first attempt to use it. It's what I'll be using for all my event coverage this year. What a joy not to have to carry a bulky, heavy camera around my neck.


Back to My Reel-to-Reel Roots, Part Six: Rock On (or Not)

Back to My Reel-to-Reel Roots, Part Six: Rock On (or Not)

Back to My Reel-to-Reel Roots, Part Six: Rock On (or Not)

Ken Kessler

The Beatles represent a key element of the rock-music-on-reel-to-reel saga, and not just because they’re the reason I’m now an open-reel fetishist. Bear with me.

Repeatedly, I have noted and bemoaned the dearth of rock tapes, or, more precisely, “rock era” tapes. And not just the actual availability, as they were plentiful and nowadays they are snapped up in seconds when they appear on online selling sites: it’s the condition that’s the worry. I stress this repeatedly to warn off any of you who want to get (back) into open-reel tape, but who favor any genres other than classical, jazz, easy listening, popular “hit parade” music of the Sinatra/Streisand/Ella/Tony sort, world music, or show tunes and soundtracks.

By other genres, I mean, in addition to rock and roll, heavy rock, stadium rock, hard rock and other genres with “rock” in their names; heavy metal, hair metal, thrash, country and western, folk music, soul, blues, MOR and anything that wouldn’t necessarily have appealed to “grown-ups” in the 1950s and 1960s had, say, Van Halen or even Led Zeppelin existed back then. That said, crossover acts or those with broad audiences including Neil Diamond, the Carpenters, the Fifth Dimension, Blood Sweat & Tears, Peter Paul & Mary, the Kingston Trio, Loretta Lynn, Glen Campbell, Chicago, et al, were well-represented with reel-to-reel tapes.

To recap why rock was so ill-served, we must first deal with a couple of inescapable facts; my conjecture can wait. The first concern is time-related. The age of pre-recorded open-reel tapes from the major labels corresponded with the birth of hi-fi separates and, more precisely, the arrival of stereo, while it died around the mid-1980s because the cassette challenged it for convenience, price, and practicality, e.g. in-car playback and personal hi-fi usage, neither of which suited open-reel tapes, or LPs for that matter. Furthermore, it was never truly mainstream. Think of its market as similar to One-Step LPs and 45 rpm 180-gram vinyl today. Early hi-fi buyers and especially tape users were, to put it mildly, well-heeled.

As for rock-era music, such genres started out as singles-centric, with album purchases only taking off post-Beatles, arguably from Rubber Soul onwards, and after the Beach Boys gave us Pet Sounds, by which time the aforementioned cassette was about to rear its ugly little head(s). And the Beatles are crucial to this study, because they were the source of much controversy and mystery in the pre-recorded tape ethos.

In Issue 152, I alerted you to the vile 3-3/4 ips mono two-track tapes issued in the UK, the Beatles’ titles produced from 1963-1967. In 1968, but ending around 1970, EMI reissued the Beatles albums in stereo open-reel form, on 5-inch spools with plastic cases not dissimilar to cassette boxes. What causes collectors to need defibrillators is finding out that EMI also released, in this second tape series, both mono and stereo versions of the White Album, Abbey Road and Let It Be, titles which were not released in the earlier 4-inch spool editions. They also added a stereo edition of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band housed in the same plastic jewel boxes, more of which anon.

It goes without saying that those four (or seven if you want the three in mono as well) rank among the rarest of all Beatles tapes, regardless of national origin. If clean copies of the 7-1/2 ips US Revolver are snapped up at present at $300 a pop on eBay, I cannot imagine what the second series stereo UK tapes would command. What baffles me is that the risible, earlier mono tapes can fetch sums similar to the far more desirable – in sonic terms – 7-1/2 ips US tapes on Capitol. And that means as much as £150 for a sonic catastrophe.

As with its British cousins at EMI, Capitol was driven to reissue the Beatles open-reel tapes in a higher-quality form from 1967-8 (also notable by the boxes bearing blue edges), having originally released them at 3-3/4 ips “two-on-one” tapes, when the boxes were brown-edged; some of the earliest editions came on 5-inch spools according to one online source. It illustrates the cheapo reasoning and contempt for rock held by the labels, despite the Beatles probably earning more for Capitol and EMI than all of their other artists combined.

I stress this because the Beatles’ catalogue in particular serves as synecdoche for rock music vis-à-vis open-reel tape in terms of number of titles, tape speeds, label support and other issues. Why this matters, as part of the concern about time’s relationship to the sale of open-reel tapes, is that rock music didn’t get the attention it deserved until hi-fi became affordable in the mid to late 1960s, by which time it was too late for rock to be properly represented on open-reel.

This was entirely thanks to the arrival of entry-level Japanese electronics, greater disposable income in the youth demographic, and hi-fi outlets catering to college students or others who weren’t in the McIntosh/Marantz/Fisher/Bozak earning bracket of the previous decade. Hi-fi itself became mainstream, while rock music was populist from the outset.

As you can see, open-reel tapes for the rock audience thus enjoyed only a small window of opportunity. Rock fans were latecomers to decent hi-fi equipment, and  unfortunately for open-reel tape’s future, the widespread ownership of hi-fi among the young corresponded with the cassette’s ascent. Indeed, as a young audiophile in 1968, I only recall two or three of my equally fanatical contemporaries having open-reel machines, and one of those was a son of super-wealthy parents who bought him a Crown 800 series deck for use in his dorm room. The rest of us used cassettes for taping needs.

Mentioned before, however, were rock or rock-affiliated performers who did sell well on open-reel tape, and it’s clear that, whatever you think of their work, sound quality was a major selling point. Judging by what I have monitored in tape sales, and by the profusion of copies which I have seen offered, it appears that the aforementioned Neil Diamond, the Carpenters, the Fifth Dimension, Blood Sweat & Tears, Peter, Paul and Mary, the Kingston Trio, Glen Campbell, and Chicago shifted significant numbers of pre-recorded open-reel tapes.

It’s the second concern which will bother you more if you’ve reconciled your taste with what is on offer. [This acclimating to repertoire limitations is not unique to reel-to-reel. If, like my friend Steve Harris, who was my former boss at Hi-Fi News, you prefer 78s, you know that there ain’t much after 1958, and you need to go to India for Beatles 78s.] The worry is about condition. Simply put, nearly all of the rock tapes I’ve seen and/or acquired were treated with the sort of disdain drivers reserve for rental cars.

When one considers how expensive tapes were – double that of LPs – you’d have thought their owners and users would have shown concern for matters such as proper spooling, cleaning heads, demagnetizing, fitting leader tape and tails, and even something as simple as flipping over the spool when changing sides on machines without auto-reverse. Every time I receive a shipment of tapes, I dread opening the rock titles. Even the boxes have been treated like sh*t.

This, however, involves speculation, partly based on the number of tape boxes I have opened which smell like burning cannabis. It is no stretch to assume that someone listening to a Doors or Jefferson Airplane album on open-reel tape in 1969 was whacked out of his or her head, and tape hygiene and spooling procedures would hardly matter to someone who looked like the inspiration for a Robert Crumb comic.

I stopped counting the number of rock tapes I have acquired which are missing the first few feet of tape, resulting in the first song on Side 1 and the last song on Side 2 being truncated. Partly to blame are the labels for not fitting leader tape and tail (as mentioned in the last issue, something of which EMI undertook, even to the point of printing leader tape with the album’s title on it). As a result, the ends of these tapes are chewed beyond salvation. You can imagine the knots and tears, the tangles and stretches and – worse – missing segments because some early stoner accidentally hit the Record button.

As for current availability, fellow collector Peter Thomas of PMC loudspeakers fame posits that the good ones were snapped up years ago by prescient open-reel enthusiasts. My curse is that I am a latecomer, so I am scooping up hundreds of titles in the hopes that some gems might be buried in amongst the Mantovani and Peter Nero tapes.

It does still happen. One job lot of 40 tapes I bought on eBay included a decent copy of the Casino Royale soundtrack. As the LP can fetch $1,500, what’s the original open reel tape worth? The box of tapes, by the way, cost me $150.

Another surprise was a second copy of The Best of Sonny and Cher. This didn’t bother me because I trade or sell my duplicates after cleaning them up (to be discussed in a future column). Then I noticed: one copy was 7-1/2 ips, the other 3-3/4 ips. As a hi-fi reviewer, this gave me the perfect tools for comparing tape speeds. 

Spot the difference: two versions of The Best of Sonny and Cher on open-reel tape.


Spot the difference: two versions of The Best of Sonny and Cher on open-reel tape.

Back to the Beatles. Collectors also cherish anything Beatles-related. You would be staggered by the number of tapes with covers of Beatles songs, from Tony Bennett to Percy Faith, to well, everyone, but sometimes you find a real treasure. Not only was this tape unknown to me, it was also on a 5-inch spool: The Beatles Hits In Brass and Percussion on no less than Audio Fidelity. Value? Anyone’s guess. (See this article’s header image.)

But there are risks with rock tapes, far more than with popular or classical, as all are invariably sold as “untested” on eBay; you’re pretty safe with a copy of Camelot or anything from Leonard Bernstein. You can just picture the original owner, with his perfectly maintained ReVox G36. But in all fairness to the vendor, it was made clear that the vast sum I was spending on a rare UK stereo Series 2 copy of Sgt. Pepper‘s in the plastic box might not contain the right tape. I took the gamble.

Alas, the vendor was right: someone had recorded gobbledegook over all but about 10 minutes of side 2. And still it remains the only copy I have ever seen of any of the Series 2 British Beatles tapes. I won’t tell you what I paid for what is now just an empty box with a paper Beatles insert. By pure coincidence, as I was writing this, someone posted on eBay.co.uk a nearly complete set of the Beatles’ UK pre-recorded tapes, 12 titles including all of the Series 1 mono versions and three of the four Series 2 stereos, for a Buy It Now price of £1,500, or a few bucks over $2,000.

If the tone of this particular entry in the series is too negative for you, my apologies. But don’t blame me. Blame the stoners who didn’t know how to treat open-reel tapes back in the 1960s and 1970s. When you do find clean rock tapes on offer, the following artists can match or even exceed the Beatles for high prices: Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones. Curiously, Dylan tapes are usually priced in the $50 – $75 region, but nobody blinks at $500 for a copy of The Dark Side of the Moon.

Screen shot of a couple of recent eBay auctions.


Sticker shock: a couple of eBay auctions.

There is no consistency about pricing, no “norms” because this niche is so small. A dozen sources, from Discogs to eBay to rarerecords.net can give you accurate values for, say, a mint first pressing of the Doors eponymous debut. The open-reel tape? All over the place, from $30 to $250. There are no “market values” or “going rates” for any open-reel tapes. But now you can see why a love for pre-recorded reel-to-reel tapes, especially if rock is your preference, requires fortitude.

And possibly restraint: after just passing the 2,500 tapes mark, I am now heading – as one colleague noted – for an intervention.

 

This article originally appeared in Issue 153 and has been slightly updated.


Maybe the Last <em>Copper</em> CES 2024 Show Report?

Maybe the Last <em>Copper</em> CES 2024 Show Report?

Maybe the Last Copper CES 2024 Show Report?

Harris Fogel

So, you’re probably wondering, um, wasn’t CES back in January, and here it is five months later, so what’s with the delay with this article? It’s a reasonable question, but all I can do is offer a mea culpa. I had to deal with everything from health problems – I caught COVID again after NAMM 2024 – to a family member’s health, to trips to London, Sweden, Finland, and Estonia and back again to give a lecture on Andy Warhol and photography. The lecture’s conclusion? Warhol’s greatest impact was either providing free publicity for Polaroid, or more sinisterly, normalizing the theft of images from photographers and ripping them off, a subject that made it all the way to the Supreme Court last year with photographer Lynn Goldsmith’s lawsuit against the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. The result of that case is something that provides fresh new copyright protection for photographers and other creatives. I’m pretty sure that Warhol would have either hated the decision or just ignored it.

So, all of those things conspired against me finishing this article earlier. I’m also working on coverage of NAMM 2024, so expect that…soon. And Copper’s shift from bi-monthly to monthly means a missed deadline means at least a month delay. So, mea culpa, mea culpa. What can I say?

It was the Consumer Technology Association’s 100-year anniversary. Formerly the Consumer Electronics Association, they’re the organization that puts on CES. After a few years’ worth of an understandable huge drop in attendance as a result of COVID, the show once again felt like full steam ahead: we were back to complaining about lines again.

For most folks attending CES, one of the largest issues is where to stay. The combination of hidden “resort fees” and other charges, coupled with parking costs in casinos that used to have free parking, mean that for humble independent journalists, CES has suddenly become much more expensive, without anything additional to show for it. If you are backed by a large company, getting a hotel on the strip isn’t that big a deal, especially with the monorail to help get around. Journos, on the other hand, are all about poverty (I might be exaggerating a little, but who isn’t on a budget these days? Then again, I might not be exaggerating), so looking for the best deal becomes good sporting fun. Our CES 2024 team included myself, Nancy Burlan, and John Mulhern III, and between us we covered a lot of ground.

 

 

There was a lot to see at CES 2024, virtually as well as in the sprawling expanse of the show itself. Here, the author tries on the Ocutrx headset designed for folks living with macular degeneration. The field of view is specially tailored so that they can see the full image. Victoria McArtor looks on.

 

In the past many journalists stayed in the Motel 6 Las Vegas – Tropicana near the MGM Grand. It was cheap, especially if you rented for the entire week, around $250, has Wi-Fi with no additional fees, no pesky carpeting to hide bedbugs, and you can walk across the street to the monorail station at the MGM. But, they too started raising their prices during CES week, so that you still got a mediocre room with a plastic bathroom and a brick of a bed, but at the price of much nicer hotels. (To be fair, our penny-pinching editor has also stayed at the Trop many times and never encountered bedbugs.)

So, after talking to friends who lived in Las Vegas, we chose the Four Queens on Fremont Street. Yes, the other strip, full of noisy bands that played till 2 a.m., and drunk tourists, which sounds like the other strip, come to think of it. Our rooms were clean, a bit basic, but fine. After all, no one ever has time to use any hotel amenities during shows like CES, just the bed, bath, and sometimes free parking. Best yet, no hidden resort fees. Justin, who worked the front desk, upgraded us to a nicer room in the new tower, but most importantly, it’s away from Fremont, so it’s tons quieter…still noisy, but nothing like having a band blast away till past 2 a.m. a block away.

With free parking at the hotel, we drove to the CES venues each day, which fast became a problem. With the decision of some casinos to charge parking fees of over $20 a day, with no in-n-out privileges, having multiple appointments at different locales can really impact your wallet. We spent more on parking one day then the entire cost of our hotel room. In the past, casinos advertised free parking as a way to induce locals to gamble there. Not anymore, although some hotel credit cards with no annual fee include free parking, so we met a lot of folks who took advantage of this. If it’s Vegas, there’s always a hustle.

At Mac Edition Radio, my other gig, we cover a wide-range of tech-related products, and with the almost complete loss of higher-end home audio at CES, one has to search for such gear. One way to do this is to garner an invitation to pre-vetted media-only events, like Pepcom’s Digital Experience!, or ShowStoppers. Both are class-act affairs, with a large selection of products (along with open bars and buffets). So…they are understandably popular.

The ShowStoppers event had lots of interesting audio-related products including new earphones from Sennheiser and Anker, along with categories like AI snowblowers and lawnmowers. One interesting product was a unique headset for people suffering from macular degeneration, from Ocutrx. It produced images specially designed to be fully viewable even for those who have that ailment.

Audio aside, if your interest is in electronics per se, it’s all there: electric vehicles, electric toothbrushes, electrical storage batteries, electronic telescopes, electric grills, electric air purifiers, electric red light healing devices,  electric air fryers and pizza ovens, and countless other stuff, even digital meat thermometers. And some of the products have uses in audio as well as other areas, like the data storage solutions from Other World Computing. And to be fair, there were a number of companies like Audio-Technica and Sennheiser showing headphones in the environs of the Las Vegas Convention Center.

 

 

Peter Baker of Audio-Technica shows of their line of photo cartridges, from entry-level moving-magnet to high-end moving-coil. The company is showing an increased interest in ultra-high-end audiophile products. And of course they have the playful and popular Sound Burger portable turntable.

 

CES Unveiled is the press event that kicks off the show, and hosts lots of booths, startup companies, and foreign representation. This year’s theme was “All On,” and as always they featured open bars with great libations (Glenlivet, anyone?), coupled with inconsistent food, which seems to be the event trademark. This might sound cranky, but with Unveiled starting at 5:00 p.m., food matters, and there were some hangry journalists about! Two audio-related booths stood out. Mirai Speaker is a small company from Japan that offers a unique high-quality soundbar aimed at improving dialog clarity, with a distinctive, curved front panel.

 

 

Nancy Burlan of Mac Edition Radio notes this year's CES Unveiled theme, "All On."

  

Most importantly, Premium Audio Company was there, with the effervescent PR wiz Roberta Lewis spreading the word. We wouldn’t expect you to recognize Premium Audio as a brand, but you will certainly know their expanded product line, which includes Klipsch, Onkyo, Pioneer Elite, Integra, Mirage, JAMO, Magnat, and others. After meeting with them, I know they will be fighting to keep these brands in mindshare. A new line of feature-rich audio receivers from Onkyo caught my eye, and I look forward to reviewing one of them soon.

 

 

Derek Everson of Premium Audio holds the Klipsch Flexus Core 100 soundbar over his head at their suite in the Virgin Hotel.

 

 

Rob Vieira, Ryan Hansen, Dave Gans, Roberta Lewis, and Brian Mitchell of eCoustics at the Premium Audio booth at CES Unveiled 2024. As you can see from their product lineup, home theater has a thriving future.

 

Harman has become the real heavyweight for audio at the show. They take over much of the first floor of the Virgin Hotel, formerly the Hard Rock, and have a huge, lavish space to showcase their products. Our favorites are always the Luxury Audio Group, with brands like Mark Levinson, JBL, and others. This year, they showcased Arcam, which is having a resurgence of late.

We also bumped into two friends, Rob Darling and Danny Dulai, the founders of Roon. Why were they there? Well, because Harman just purchased Roon. How Harman plans to integrate Roon into its product line will be interesting, and we expect it will impact everything from high-end to automotive audio. Rob and Danny are great guys, so it’s lovely to see them do well. Harman’s annual concert is the hottest ticket in town (especially since the big Monster and CNET events are no more), and this year featured Green Day, who were absolute pros and rocked the gig.

Jim Garrett was hand to expertly guide us through Harman’s offerings, which included the new JBL Spinner Bluetooth-enabled turntable ($399.95), new JBL Bluetooth speakers, and the Arcam Radia ST5 streaming music player at $799. The legendary Carol Campbell, was there with a huge welcoming smile. Campbell is the founder of Women in Consumer Technology organization, and has had a long impact on the audio industry.

 

 

Green Day rocked the annual Harman/JBL concert. Here lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong belts out “American Idiot.”

 



Tre Cool, the drummer from Green Day, took a moment away from the skins to thank the audience. His real name is, Frank Edwin Wright III, so Tre is a play on that.


 

Jim Garrett of Harman, showing off the new JBL Spinner turntable. Gotta love that bright orange platter!

 

We were fortunate to meet the legendary engineer Dr. Karlheinz Brandenburg of Brandenburg Labs, who is one of the co-inventors of the MP3 format. We laughed about it, but he said that most of the time that an MP3 sounds bad, it’s not the fault of the MP3, it’s the fault of the person who encoded it. But he was really there to show us a new immersive audio augmented reality headphones system called Audio AR, which determined where you were in the room and changed what you heard in the music (via headphones). Turn your head toward the strings, and voila, more strings. It was very impressive and natural-feeling. They also demonstrated a 16-channel immersive audio loudspeaker system. Nancy tried on their bunny-eared headphones to hear the effect.

 

 

Nels Merten, engineer Dr. Karlheinz Brandenburg, creator of the MP3 format, and Cristina Rodriguez Ferreiro of Brandenburg Labs.

 

In another room, we entered into an exhibit full of bright orange boxes, boom boxes, and earphones. The folks looked familiar, and we soon found out why: they had started the popular Swedish headphones brand, Urbanista. How do you follow that up? With an entirely company, Defunc, with new headphones and speakers, all sporting lovely Scandinavian design principles with a hipster flair. In fact, they had some of the nicest products we saw at the show, with smart designs, packaging, and product features. I think they’ll be a hit.

 

 

Daniel Roos of Swedish brand, Defunc, was all smiles, surrounded by their new lineup of Scandinavian-designed lifestyle audio.

 

In the Central Hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center, there was a small booth with an increasingly large impact, namely Leiyin Audio of China. As noted in Copper’s CanJam NYC 2024 Part Two show report in Issue 206, Leiyin Audio is one of the major players in the burgeoning Chinese hi-fi manufacturing community, with brands like S.M.S.L, Topping, xDuoo, Gustard, Moondrop, TRUTHEAR, and others. We asked about the use of the term “Chi-Fi” and if they viewed it as derogatory, as some commentators have posited, and they said they saw nothing negative about using it. With all the equipment they had on display, what was the unit they were most excited about? Their new CD player, the S.M.S.L PL200 CD player/DAC with MQA decoding. Contrary to expectations, CDs aren’t dead – and sales are actually increasing. 

Not so long ago, phonograph maker Victrola was strictly a budget brand with an appropriated classic name, but they’ve been upping the quality of their gear each year and even starting to garner awards. At the Venetian they showed an expanded lineup of turntables (including the $599 Sonos-compatible Stream Pearl), retro-looking portable record players, and Bluetooth speakers. Crosley had a large booth, with a few lovely-looking products that referenced classic Braun audio component design, although no one at the booth had any idea that Braun made audio equipment or what I was talking about. I didn’t get a chance to check out how they sounded.

 

 

The large Crosley booth in CES' Central Hall featured new, minimalist, Bauhaus-inspired designs, such as this Fugue record player.

 

One invitation that fell through the cracks was an invite to the Wynn hotel to listen to a million-dollar system featuring the very latest McIntosh electronics and Sonus Faber speakers. To celebrate their respective 75th and 40th anniversaries, they’d set up a room with new and updated products, including 75th anniversary editions of several McIntosh products, the new MC2.1KW 2000-watt mono power amplifier, and the $750,000/pair Sonus Faber Suprema 2.2 loudspeakers. Unfortunately, we discovered the invites in our inbox the day after CES ended. Drat! Next year!

The newly-constructed Las Vegas Convention Center West Hall was all about cars, trucks, tractors, and automotive technology. It’s a slightly surreal space, open and well-lit, and hosted everything from a limited-edition Mercedes to giant John Deere tractors you had to climb into. Everyone in the hall had either a bright blue CAT cap, or a John Deere green cap, as the companies happily gave away thousands of them. Other booths featured everything from tire-changing machines to…lots of automotive stereo speakers, amps and components, all from China, destined to become either OEM (original equipment manufacturer) parts, or private-labeled.

The Bluetooth consortium had a large room across from the LVCC’s Central Hall and showed off their new Bluetooth Auracast system, which allows devices like phones, laptops, and public devices to broadcast audio to nearby devices such as speakers, headphones, and hearing aids. The Bluetooth representatives I talked with feel this will have a huge impact on how we listen to audio, whether in a movie theater, a synagogue or mega-church, or just as two star-crossed lovers like Nancy and I, wandering down the boardwalk sharing the same phone with the same content. If I were in the business of providing headsets and receivers to facilities like museums, schools, churches and synagogues, I’d be concerned about Auracast replacing such devices. It also promises higher audio fidelity and lower battery usage among other things.

However, the promise of better sound can be dependent on many factors. I’ve been working on a review of the Auris bluMe Pro DAC and Bluetooth streaming device. Once again the promise of Bluetooth audio quality is tempered by the company you use to stream from. Let me explain. I discovered that my Android OnePlus 10T 5G phone sounded great using Qobuz on the bluMe Pro, but the same songs from Qobuz on my Apple M1 MacBook Pro sounded, well…not so great.

I wondered why, and it turned out that my phone was happily sending music via Sony’s LDAC codec, at its highest possible quality, while Apple had quietly abandoned the ability to use their free Bluetooth Explorer app, which allowed Mac users to force the system to use AptX codecs for better audio quality. As a result, Mac users on modern computers are stuck with Apple codecs with Bluetooth, which might play well with Apple’s own branded earphones and headphones, but just ignores devices like the bluMe Pro, despite the latter’s rich feature set for high-quality codec support. (This is a reason to hang on to older Mac computers with older OS versions, since Bluetooth Explorer still works on them. So, that old computer might be perfect for a media server.)

I didn’t see any 8-track gear at CES, but there were folks showing their re-imaginings of the classic Sony Walkman portable cassette player. Cassettes are back! (Not to be confused with the knock-offs, Sony offers a line of Walkman portable digital music players.)

CES is in theory a trade-only event. For many companies, the costs of renting a suite, providing room and board for staff, and paying union fees for setup and freight to a B2B audience is proving not to be worth the ROI. There used to be many floors of high-end audio companies at The Venetian, for example, which had dwindled to a few floors in the years before COVID, and this year to just a few rooms, so I don’t expect to see a large-scale return of higher-quality audio to CES any time soon, but who knows, it might happen.

CES is still a very convenient way to meet with a lot of customers, members of the media, and potential partners. And the last night I was at the show I was invited to a Founders and Friends party/meetup sponsored by MistyWest, a design firm based out of Vancouver, Canada. It was held at The Doyle, a cool venue in a sort of dark and random industrial area, perfect for a community of creatives. They listed the party as “the premier unofficial event” of CES. That’s the thing about CES; you never know where you’ll end up and why, and what you might discover.

We hope to see more audiophile products and events at next year’s CES, and will dutifully report back, and hopefully on a timelier basis!. Still, there was personal, automotive, and consumer audio throughout the show, and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. There just weren’t the number of lavish suites of yore, apart from Harman and McIntosh/Sonus Faber. And it’s been announced that the Las Vegas area will be hosting a new audiophile show, slated for just after CES ends in 2025, by the same folks who bring you T.H.E. Show (held in Costa Mesa, California each June). slated to run January 10 – 12th, 2025, and they are currently running a social media contest for folks to guess the venue. Here’s an exclusive tip, it’s not at a hotel. It looks like it’ll be a good time. So get your entries ready!

Here are more images from CES 2024.

 

 

Hard-bitten journalists Dave Hamilton and Pete Harmon, of Mac Geek Gab, during CES Unveiled 2024.

 

 

Cher Lin and Ian Twinn of Withings showed off the latest in home health monitoring devices: here they hold the Withings Beam-O, seemingly science-fiction from a starship, but now available for your home.

 

 

Joseph Cruz and Keye Chen of Meater showed off their latest designs for Bluetooth digital food thermometers. We’ve tested them and found they really improved our grilled food!

 

 

Many of Copper’s readers utilize storage solutions from Other World Computing. Here the gang is out in force at Pepcom Digital Experience! Jeff Fochtman, Larry O’Connor, Steve Labus, Matt Burkey, Caroline Shamon, and Ryan Hartley.

 

 

This solar-powered webcam birdhouse was one of the most popular devices at CES Unveiled 2024.

 

 

1More was out in force, with Timothy Hsu and team. In the past we have reviewed their earphones and found that they represented a unique blend of style, audiophile performance, and bargain pricing. They were even graced with a coveted Red Dot design award.

 

 

Phiaton earned high marks from the audiophile community for their pioneering Bluetooth earbuds, among the first that actually sounded good. Hyo Lee and Paul Thavornv were showing their BonoBuds, a lovely set of earphones. 

 

 

David Glaubke and the always-glamorous Carol Campbell at the entrance to the Harman area at the Virgin Hotel.

 

 

If you use Roon, you can thank these two gents! Danny Dulai and Rob Darling, founders of Roon, at the Harman space in the Virgin Hotel.

 

 

The large SK Wonderland area showcased AI and clean technologies from Korea's SK Group. Their exhibit was a theme park featuring this constantly-changing sphere, serving as the centerpiece of the most elaborate booth we saw at CES, complete with its own mini-railroad and different virtual reality environments.

 

 

Nancy Burlan wearing the specially-adapted headphones used by Brandenburg Labs to demonstrate their spatial audio system. I called them “bunny ears.”

 

 

The team behind Omsleep, whose sleep mask is feature-rich for a better night’s sleep. They participated in a “Shark Tank”-type event held at Eureka Park. Here are Andriele Dasilva, Kate Wu, Jacie Lin, and Kaitlyn Emery.

 

 

Here's June Lai, founder of case company Catalyst, and PR person Chris Herbert.

 

 

In the midst of the new West Hall, which featured automotive products, was this violinist in the Magna International booth. Magna was showing their electric car of the future, and provides a variety of high-tech solutions for the automotive industry. The sound of live music reminded us of why we're so interested in good audio reproduction.

 

Header image: Nancy Burlan of Mac Edition Radio by one of the welcoming signs for CES 2024. All images courtesy of Harris Fogel.


Audio Group Denmark Brings Some Lower-Priced Audiophile Gear

Audio Group Denmark Brings Some Lower-Priced Audiophile Gear

Audio Group Denmark Brings Some Lower-Priced Audiophile Gear

Howard Kneller

It was 2020 when Audio Group Denmark hit the scene as the steward of three then-existing high-end brands. Børresen Acoustics featured speakers, Aavik Acoustics offered electronic components, and Ansuz Acoustics handled the audiophile’s needs for cables, power products, networking devices, and sundry accessories.

Fast forward to 2024 and the company now has a fourth brand, Axxess, under its umbrella. This brand sports speakers, components, and cables that are more affordably priced than those of its sister brands.

Which brings me to the subject of this photography column, the Axxess Forté 1 streaming integrated amplifier/digital-to-analog converter, and headphone amp ($5,500). The power output is 100 watts per channel into 8 ohms. Its digital inputs are Toslink optical, BNC, S/PDIF, and USB. A pair of single-ended pre-outs, a 1/4-inch headphone jack, and speaker terminals serve as outputs. While the Forté 1’s LED screen jumbo-sized with its red letters and numbers is difficult to photograph outside of a professional photography studio, the rest of it cleans up rather nicely.

Diehard tube enthusiasts or those who might prefer a bit of euphonic distortion should look elsewhere. However, others will revel in the Forté 1’s clean and dynamic sound, which seems to be “burdened” by way too little distortion for the money.  And the Forté 1 is the line’s entry-level model. Color me impressed.

 

 

 

 

The Forté 1 has an understated, clean appearance with distinctive design touches.

 

 

 

 The Forté 1 accommodates a variety of digital sources.

 

 

The control layout is easy and intuitive.

 

All images courtesy of Howard Kneller. Howard’s audiophile adventures are documented on his YouTube channel, fast-growing Facebook group (both, The Listening Chair with Howard Kneller), and Instagram account (@howardkneller).


PS Audio in the News – Issue 207

PS Audio in the News – Issue 207

PS Audio in the News – Issue 207

Frank Doris

Positive Feedback published a highly positive, extensive, in-depth review of the Aspen FR10 loudspeaker, and interviewed designer Chris Brunhaver. Reviewer Juan C. Ayllon said: “Voices were rich and natural, acoustic guitars well-articulated through their leading edges, transients, and decay, drum kits punchy and well-delineated, and the bass guitar deep and impressive.” He also stated, “…the FR10s are very musical, disappear, and sound astoundingly large for their size! No doubt, the rear-firing passive radiating bass drivers add immensely to their soundstage's breadth, depth, and sense of oomph! They certainly do an admirable job of delivering the goods to our listening area (a loveseat, couch, and overstuffed chair) in the front half of our 32' x 22' family room.”

Ayllon concluded, “The PS Audio Aspen FR10 loudspeaker is a great-looking and serious audiophile speaker, capable of delivering wonderfully immersive aural experiences. Whether you're into vinyl, streaming, digital file playback, or enjoying an HD show or movie over your HiFi system, the FR10s render it wondrously. They are very interior design friendly; unimposing in size, their sleek, contemporary lines fit nicely in homes with discerning tastes. Bottom line, if you have a budget for $10,000 speakers, the FR10s may be just for you!”

Future Audiophile reviewed the StellarGold DAC. The publication noted, “At the midpoint of [“The Court” by Peter Gabriel], there’s an acoustic piano and, despite hearing this track on upwards of five different DACs, the PS Audio StellarGold DAC delivered one of the most musical, open and airy presentations of that piano recording. There was really good imaging, but even more impressive was the overall depth of the soundstage with the PS Audio StellarGold DAC in the loop. Make no mistake, this is a high-end DAC, and delivers the goods for the money.”

The review concludes by saying, “It has been a lot of fun to spend time with the PS Audio StellarGold DAC, as it has provided a few really eye- (and ear-) opening moments that allowed me a chance to really hear what is on the master tape of some of my favorite music. If this is what you are looking for from your next audiophile upgrade, might I suggest that you order up a PS Audio StellarGold DAC?”

 

 

PS Audio StellarGold DAC.

 

Hi-Fi News gave the Aspen FR10 speaker a Hi-fi News Outstanding Product Award. The review states, “…they created a soundstage that was wide and deep, but also well ordered. Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson's version of ‘Ghost Riders In The Sky’…gave the two singers a vast ambience to work in. Every breath, string pluck and strike or tap of percussion was clean and focused, while the audience applause was truly vivid. It became clear to me very quickly that the FR10s are a compelling companion if you want to have your music presented in a way that properly fills your room.”

The review went on to note, “The FR10s dig impressively deep and are more than happy to thunder out a window-rattling performance if required, as evidenced by the solidity and scale they bought to Propellerheads’ 'Take California'... That said, they really come into their own when things are softer and more considered. Hi-Fi News wrapped up the review by saying, “The new FR10 slots comfortably into the range alongside its bigger brothers, promising a big-hearted, ebullient and hugely enjoyable performance…once suitably positioned, they reward handsomely, offering a scale and level of authority that belies their compact dimensions.”

 

Header image: PS Audio Aspen FR10 loudspeakers.


Chris Berardo Lets it Rock With <em>Wilder all the Time</em>

Chris Berardo Lets it Rock With <em>Wilder all the Time</em>

Chris Berardo Lets it Rock With Wilder all the Time

Ray Chelstowski

Chances are that if you saw the Doobie Brothers, The Marshall Tucker Band, Dickey Betts & Great Southern, or America in the last 30 years, you saw Chris Berardo open the show. With his band the DesBerardos, Chris has been delivering a sound that is one part Americana and two parts Laurel Canyon. His smoky vocals sit on top of a world-class band and whether they are in full force, or appearing as an acoustic trio, The DesBerardos command attention, with songs of hope, inspiration, love, and the human spirit.

It’s a rootsy kind of Americana that’s as authentic as it is sincere and is a sound that’s been honed on stages large and small, in honky tonks and arenas.

On the heels of 2020’s single “Somewhere Blue,” Chris now returns with a new album, the imminent Wilder All The Time (all produced by David Abeyta, formerly of Reckless Kelly). It’s something his fans have been waiting for and material that will only broaden his appeal and connect more deeply to those who have championed his career for years.

 

One of rock’s most endearing and entertaining live performers, Berardo and his band have a quick comedic sense with great stage banter – and even better performance chops. Copper had the chance to catch up with him about the new record, the recording process, and how his release of new holiday music at the end of the year is almost becoming a tradition as predictable as Santa sliding down the chimney.

Ray Chelstowski: You have a new album, Wilder All The Time, coming out; your first full-length in a while. You have said that it has a classic rock feel. What does that mean, and how did you select the songs that made the final cut?

Chris Berardo: Well, we were trying to get a little more of the feel of how the live shows always were, which was a little rougher and more rock energy than the previous records, but still keep a lot of the acoustic and rootsy elements we’ve always had. I guess that kind of feels to me like what I love about a lot of those great ’70’s bands that I was raised on, and this was just bringing out more of that side of the band sound and these songs.

I guess I had 15 – 18 songs around that I cared about, and since I hadn’t been in a big rush to put another album out, we got to play a lot of them live pretty often and make some demos, and really get under the hood and see what worked and what felt good. Then we picked the 10 that we thought would sound best coming out of your car with the windows down…

RC: You also have commented on the tracking process for the album, and that you sequenced it so that it would play like a live set. Does that mean that it closes with real rockers?

CB: I absolutely did lay it out that way, which I hadn’t always done before. That helped us choose which tunes to include as well, because it just felt like it should be a cohesive set of music, with an emotional and musical arc, kind of the way albums used to feel…

But to that end, it finishes with a madcap roots-rock freak out followed by a big ballad, which always feels to me like the right emotional punctuation point to go off into the night on.

RC: David Abeyta from Reckless Kelly produced the record. What specifically did he bring to the process?

CB: A lot…we hit it off right away like a tuned-up machine and it was one of the most fun and satisfying musical experiences I’ve ever had.

I was always a huge Reckless fan, and their sound is very much their own and different than mine, but I felt like there were elements of what they did and David’s guitar playing and his production work with Reckless that made me think he’d bring the right touch to what I was trying to get at. It was a lucky stroke.

We were opening a string of dates for them around the Northeast and Southeast and we got to talking in an Irish bar in Boston after the gig, and that got the idea started. He was sensitive to all the starts and stops I had had trying to get what I wanted on record, but it felt right, and from there we just heaved ourselves into it with the kind of open spirit and joy that made it a stone pleasure.

Beyond all that, he also had the big idea to bring in Jay Nazz (drums) and Joe Miller(bass) from Reckless Kelly along with my brother Marc (Marc Douglas Berardo) and Handsome Bill Kelly from our band, so it was three RK guys and three DesBerardos basically as the band on every track. We cut the whole thing in Austin and it immediately felt like a really sweet spot that we hit and also REALLY fun, so that was just some of what David brought to it.

RC: Your recent single “Something’s Gonna Happen” has much more orchestration and has a real majesty to it. Did you intend that when you went to record or did that evolve in the process of being in the studio?

CB: That song was originally somewhat of a product of the pandemic because David and my manager had gotten me set up with a home recording rig for my studio up here so that we could keep working together with him in Austin. That was a new trick for me, and since we couldn’t play with the musicians that we wanted to play with in the room, we decided to try to turn that into a positive by throwing all the usual approaches out the window and just going for whatever felt good and exciting. I had a song I’d just written, “Something’s Gonna Happen,” that I knew was a little different for me, and I asked David if he was interested in recording a thing where there are organs and hands clapping and girl singers and tambourines and everybody dances and soul shouts, and when he asked me what would possibly make me think there was any way in the world that he wouldn’t want to do that, we dove in!

 

I played the piano and sang my parts and banged on things up here in the woods in Connecticut, and he did most everything else there in Texas, and we put on strings and it was really, really joyful to heave ourselves into it. I think he did some really high-level work there. It’s like six and a half minutes long and it turns into, like, a 7-inch dance track from the old days, and we both loved doing it! Like a lot of folks at that time, we were looking to make something out of a tough situation and I think we did.

RC: You’ve recently signed with Blue Élan Records. What do you like most about this partnership so far?

CB: Well, I had a deal with a big major label right as the pandemic hit, and [it] stalled everything. As we were trying to regroup I just had the overwhelming feeling that a lot of people at a place like that were not really in the business of “music” and that a guy like me at this point in my career was just going to be lost there. I was grateful for the opportunity, believe me, but my manager was working on a lot of stuff with Blue Élan and it just sounded like a great place to me, like a real throwback to a label that’s actually [about] music first and artist first.

They had a whole bunch of artists on the label that I absolutely loved and admired, artists with long, important histories and great new ones as well. I watched them back up the claims that they made about nurturing artists and putting the art before the numbers of it all, and I was really excited when they wanted me to throw in with them. I’m excited now and really looking forward to working with them.

RC: You are just back from another year at SXSW (music festival). How has the festival evolved since you’ve been going and what was this year’s best memory?

CB: Well, I started going down to SXSW probably 20 years ago or more, just nosing around and discovering all the great music and drinking all the free beer at first, but pretty quickly after that me and the band started going down and playing all the really great unofficial parties and showcases all over the place for days at a time, which led us to start touring through Austin and the rest of Texas several times a year until it’s become almost a second home.

Over the last six or seven years we’ve been an official SXSW artist and although we still play the cool day parties and unofficial events, the best “official” showcases that we get to do are at the legendary Saxon Pub, where we have played for 20 years whenever we get to Texas. During the festival, my manager, Ann Henningsen from 360 Degrees, runs what I and a lot of folks think are the best showcases in town, with really incredible acts from all over the world, but with an emphasis on “Austin Royalty” – Michael Martin Murphey, Walt Wilkins, Jon Dee Graham, Fastball and so many others). Those nights are a ball and very special and make me really proud to be a part of it all.

The festival is bigger and bigger every year, but I still find myself checking out the same smaller joints that I love and seeking out the great and eclectic music there that turned me on to the scene in those early days.

RC: You seem to have a special relationship with The Cutting Room in New York City. What do you think makes that space so special?

CB: Well, it’s really become the best showcase venue in town, and it looks and sounds great. They’ve opened the doors for me to film a couple of videos there, which were really fun days that I appreciate, and they let me and the guys stay pretty late at the bar most of the time.

The live music clubs have really struggled in New York in the past decade or so, but these guys and a handful of others keep the great tradition alive. Nothing stays the same but it’s still New York City! It’s tough, but it means a lot.

RC: You’ve also had a great relationship with some of the great legacy acts. How did that develop and what is the glue that holds it all together?

CB: Well, we’ve been really lucky to play a lot of shows with people I consider heroes, and that has been fantastic…certainly the aforementioned Reckless Kelly, who are just about my favorite band, guys who have become real friends. Same goes for our pal Richie Furay, who is as much the architect of country rock music as anyone and it’s no mystery why he’s in the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame. Richie has had us along on so many shows, [has] graciously let me play my songs to his audiences, and [has] become a real friend to me and the guys. The Marshall Tucker Band meant a lot to me growing up, and playing shows and becoming pals with those guys is really great. Being asked on several occasions to join the Doobie Brothers on stage to sing “Listen To The Music” – as well as a bunch of times singing “A Horse With No Name” with America, is like the childhood dream payoff, that also lets you see up close how the great ones go about their business and why they have endured. Those kind of artists are a master class and that makes us lucky.

RC: You are becoming known for recording some really fantastic holiday songs. Do you think this year will close out with one more?

CB: Well, thank you! I’m like Perry Como, right?! In 2022 we put out my holiday song “This Year” and backed it with “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” a song I have always loved – although my mom sings it better – but that was a surprise and it felt really good. We’ll see if me and David catch the spirit this year and give it another try, although I’m thinking that there are a lot of holidays with less competition for airplay – maybe I’ll try to corner the market on Arbor Day tunes? Do they have a song for the anniversary of the opening of The US-African mail service?!

 

Header image courtesy of Tod V. Wolfson.


Test Records and Demo Discs, Part Three

Test Records and Demo Discs, Part Three

Test Records and Demo Discs, Part Three

Rich Isaacs

In the days before digital music, the primary medium for sound reproduction was vinyl records. Sure, there were some who preferred reel-to-reel tapes, but they were in the minority. The turntable was king, and it had to be properly set up. Any audiophile worth his (or her) salt owned at least one or two test records specifically designed for that task.

Over the years, I’ve collected a disproportionate number of such discs (it helped that I worked in record stores for much of my adult life, so I could obtain the ones I wanted at reasonable prices).

In the first part of this series (in Issue 205), the focus was on test records issued by record labels themselves. In Part Two (in Issue 206), albums from phono cartridge manufacturers were featured. This time, we are looking at albums from speaker manufacturers.

 

 

Acoustic Research Demonstration Record – Volume 1: The Sound of Musical Instruments (1972)

AR (Acoustic Research, not ARC – Audio Research Corporation) was one of the most famous and highly regarded speaker manufacturers of the 20th century. Edgar Villchur and Henry Kloss founded the company in 1954, producing speakers that bucked the prevailing hi-fi wisdom that said you needed a big ported (bass reflex) enclosure in order to get proper bass reproduction. Their first product was the AR-1, an acoustic suspension woofer in a relatively small enclosure. Acoustic suspension was a method of controlling woofer excursion using the trapped air inside a sealed cabinet, rather than relying on a stiffer, less linear mechanical element.

In 1957, they introduced their first “full-range” speaker, the two-way AR-2. It was very well received, putting the company on sound financial footing. One year later, the flagship AR-3 was introduced. As the model number implied, it was a three-way design, featuring their acoustic suspension woofer augmented by a dome midrange and dome tweeter. Before that, Henry Kloss had left to form rival manufacturer KLH (named for Kloss, Malcolm S. Low, and Josef Hofmann, the company’s founders).

When I was first getting into hi-fi, the AR-3a (with improved midrange and high-frequency drivers) was considered a true benchmark for accurate reproduction. AR conducted a large number of demonstrations around the country, pitting their speakers against a live string quartet and challenging the audience to tell the difference.

It is therefore appropriate that their later demo LP consisted entirely of recordings of acoustic instruments and ensembles, including tracks featuring clarinet, cello, piano, violin, guitar, double-bass, as well as organ and solo voice.

The liner notes state: “AR has developed this record as a useful listening aid in determining the accuracy of a loudspeaker. The highest level of recording skill has been used to capture the sound of familiar musical instruments. Most listeners have heard live a piano or a trumpet or a violin. If the sound of these instruments as heard through a loudspeaker resembles the memory of the live sound, then, chances are, it is an accurate loudspeaker.”

Over the years, AR has been bought and sold several times and is still in business, although it caters to a different demographic now, with wireless outdoor speakers (including a model with a built-in light), earbuds, and the like.

  

 

Music to listen to KLH by (1966)

The aforementioned KLH was another well-regarded speaker manufacturer in the 1960s. They branched out to include table radios, portable turntable-based systems, and a reel-to-reel tape deck as well as the classic Model Nine electrostatic speaker system. The KLH Nine was featured as recently as 2006 in a Stereophile article by founder J. Gordon Holt, with an editor’s note declaring it a contender for the title of “Best Available Loudspeaker System, Regardless of Cost.”

Predating the demo disc from his former company AR, Henry Kloss released a collection of music meant to show off KLH speakers. Rather than commissioning proprietary recordings, this release used existing tracks from labels Everest and Concert-Disc. Upon its release in 1966, J. Gordon Holt declared at the time that this was the “best, most musical, demonstration disc that’s come along to date.”

Side One (“Classical”) featured music performed by a number of different lineups, from solo instrumentals to full orchestral tracks. Side Two (“Popular”) showcased big band, traditional jazz, vocal groups, and solo guitar.

Like AR, KLH has experienced a number of ownership changes, including periods with Singer (yes, the sewing machine company) and Kyocera. Within the last decade, current owner Kelley Global Brands renamed the company KLH Audio. There has been a revival of sorts, with new speaker offerings, echoing the classic two- and three-way designs in conventional box enclosures with linen grille cloths. They also produce a number of tower speakers. Some of their products have recently won awards from audio magazines.

 

 

Stereo Imaging Demonstration Record (1982)

Ohm Acoustics Corporation is best known for its speakers that feature the Walsh omnidirectional driver. Described as a Coherent Line Source, it resembles an inverted narrow cone, augmented by a directional supertweeter.

Like the KLH disc, Ohm took existing recordings from a number of labels, this time including Vanguard, A&M, and audiophile imprint M&K RealTime records. Because of the Walsh driver’s omnidirectional nature, the performances were chosen to show off its imaging prowess. Odetta, Gino Vanelli, and Oregon are among the artists presented on Side One. Side Two includes a track from the PDQ Bach Ensemble (!) and one from the tape copy of the highly sought-after direct-to-disc audiophile release For Duke, by Bill Berry and His Ellington All-Stars. Also, like the KLH disc, For Duke was a Stereophile Recording of the Month in 1978, with Holt declaring it the best-sounding disc of its type at the time.

 

 

 

The Bottom End and Bottom End Musical Bass & Transient Test Record (1975 and 1979)

In 1969, Jonas Miller had a high-end stereo equipment store in Southern California. Ken Kreisel, fresh out of high school, started working part-time at the store and ultimately became a partner.

As an amateur recording engineer with an interest in electronics and sound reproduction, Kreisel began designing speakers with the aim of accurately reproducing the bass tones and transients present in his organ recordings. This resulted in M&K becoming one of the first high-end subwoofer manufacturers, a pioneer in the three-piece satellite/subwoofer segment of the audio market. M&K subs became quite popular with owners of Quad electrostatics and Magnepan planar magnetic speakers, as those transducers were not known for their strong bass output.

Impressed with the sound of Sheffield Labs’ direct-to-disc recordings after an encounter with mastering engineer Doug Sax, Kreisel created the aforementioned M&K RealTime label, ultimately releasing a number of directly and conventionally recorded albums.

The albums featured here were specifically created to assess and demonstrate the low-end output of the consumer’s system. Both were pressed at 45 RPM for enhanced fidelity. My copy of the 1975 release (with the black and white cover) has absolutely no explanatory text, and the front cover, back cover, and label feature the exact same simple graphics. (One of the drawbacks of buying used albums is that sometimes the previous owner either lost or decided to keep the informational inserts. Thanks, bud.) Both sides are unbanded, and it turns out that they are musical selections. Side One is a high-energy instrumental recording of a jazz ensemble with electric piano, bass, and drums. The bass drum work is impressive, but a bit relentless. Near the end of the cut, a female vocalist does some scat singing. The effect is a little jarring. Side Two features a solo pipe organ.

The 1979 release (with the color cover) has very well-written explanations of the tracks, which consist mostly of recordings of single instruments, along with a few ensemble cuts and a couple of cannon shots. Sounds featured include flamenco dancing, chest organ, Fender bass, pipe organ and saxophone, and wooden harp. Some of the tracks feature multiple repeats of the sounds contained within. The liner notes tell you what to expect from each band if reproduced properly. For example, the description of the first cut, “Cannon Crescendo from 1812 Overture,” states: “If you do not get a sharp impact with a wall bending, pants flapping, low frequency content, you are not getting what is on the record… With a sub-woofer with great transient response, this is an excellent lease breaker.”

The next installment in this series will feature test and demo records issued by publications and more stereo equipment manufacturers.


Is Class D Amplification Now Better Than Class A/B and Class A?

Is Class D Amplification Now Better Than Class A/B and Class A?

Is Class D Amplification Now Better Than Class A/B and Class A?

Robert Schryer

 

Copper has an exchange program with PMA Magazine (and others), where we share articles, including this one, between publications.

 

A couple of years ago, a designer of high-end tube equipment said something to me that left such an impact it eventually led me, now that the conditions seem right, to write this article. That mind-bomb was set off when I asked the designer if he’d ever consider making a Class-AB amp. Shaking his head, he replied that he wouldn’t, because in his view Class-AB couldn’t convey the soul of the music like a tube amp could. After a pause, he added: “But I believe Class-D might be able to do so one day. When that happens, I might consider building a Class-D amp.” So, has it happened?

You might think so by the growing chorus of accolades being bestowed on high-end Class-D amplifiers. In his 2023 The Absolute Sound review of the Amped America AMP2400 amplifier, Steven Stone praised the amp for offering “an excellent alternative to the traditional high-power amplifier designs that have predominated for many years,” and referred to the view shared by some audiophiles that Class-D amps are inherently inferior to Class-A or Class-AB as being “antiquated.”

Hi-Fi+’s Eric Neff in his 2023 review of a pair of Atma-Sphere Class D monoblocks threw down the gauntlet by exclaiming, “Move over Class-A, there is a new flagship in town, and you will want to use it year-round, no air conditioning required.” Stereophile’s Kalman Rubinson, in his 2021 review of NAD’s C 298, concluded that it “challenges more expensive amps and should impress discerning listeners regardless of budget,” while in the same year and magazine, Michael Fremer, in his review of PS Audio’s M1200 monoblocks, compared the model’s performance to a “Porsche Carrera S” and dubbed it a “miracle performer.”

 


Atma-Sphere Class D monoblocks.

It might be stretching the truth to say that Class-D is a recent amp phenomenon considering the technology was invented in the 1950s and commercialized in the 1960s. Except that it’s only recently that perfectionist audio companies have started using the topology in their higher-end offerings, which have been well-received by the audiophile community. Add in the number of China-based companies, such as Fosi Audio, Gustard, and Topping, that have gained a global reputation for offering excellent-value Class-D products and it may begin to seem like we’re in the midst of an audiophile revolution of the likes unseen since the release of the compact disc.

What does it all mean for us audio enthusiasts? Just how good is Class-D compared to Class-AB or the much-revered Class-A? Might Class-D even, generally speaking, surpass those more mature amplification classes?

I asked those questions in an e-mail sent to a few well-established audio manufacturers who design both Class-D and standard class designs. Their responses were immediate.

“Class-D can be better [than the other classes], but this could change as semiconductors improve,” wrote Atma-Sphere’s Ralph Karsten, before asserting, “Right now, Class-D can sound as good as Class-A or Class-AB, whether tube or solid state.

“It all has to do with distortion,” Ralph continued. “The distortion signature of an amp is literally the sonic signature of that amp; it’s the difference you hear between amps. If you can get the same distortion, the amps will sound the same. Obviously, it becomes important to have the most benign distortion signature, so the amp is musical.”

He added: “In my opinion, preventing distortion from rising with frequency might be the most important aspect of this, something at which most amps using feedback have failed to do over the last 70 years. The second most important aspect is the harmonic spectra. The 2nd and 3rd harmonics, which are benign and innocuous to the human ear, must have enough amplitude to mask higher-order harmonics, which cause harshness and brightness, especially at higher volumes. If distortion rises with frequency, harmonics above that frequency where this happens will be unmasked.”

What about the effects of the well-known, oft-cited total harmonic distortion (THD)? “It’s the least important aspect of distortion,” he said. “This is why low THD does not correlate with the most musical sound since the above qualities of distortion are far more audible.”

 

NAD C 298.

He concluded: “Class-D allows the designer to build an amp where the distortion versus frequency is a ruler-flat line across the audio band. If the harmonic spectra [follows the  2nd and 3rd harmonics guideline] I described, the amp will be perceived as musical. If the THD is also kept low while the other aspects here are observed, this will result in greater transparency, too, since distortion obscures detail.”

NAD’s Director of Technology, Greg Stidsen, had this to say: “Like all amplifier classes, there are advantages and disadvantages to Class-D.  What is attractive about Class-D is its relative efficiency and freedom from the vagaries of parts quality. In a linear amplifier such as Class-A or Class-AB, parts-matching and very close tolerances are required to get the best results, and even then, there is a limit to performance since the linearity of semiconductors varies considerably with temperature.

“With Class-D, it’s more the quality of the mathematics and engineering that determines the performance,” Greg said. “Another way of saying this is that in a linear amplifier the design is fairly simple, but the execution is critical; in a switching amplifier, the design is very difficult, but the execution is straightforward.”

What did he see as the biggest breakthrough in Class-D design? “Error correction — comparing the amplified output to the input and eliminating differences in real time,” he said. “This may sound simple enough, but the speeds involved in a switching amplifier have posed real challenges in circuit design. There will be further improvements as smart and passionate minds tackle the remaining problems. There may also be new regulatory mandates by governments requiring less energy consumption that could shape the market in the future.

“In our opinion,” he continued. “The best Class-D designs already compete and beat most Class-AB and Class-A amplifiers. We wouldn’t offer them to audiophiles if we didn’t believe in the performance. Objectively, using the benchmarks for measured performance, this is indisputable. Subjectively, this is more complicated since not all distortion sounds bad. Part of what drives the ‘audio hobby’ is the process of finding components with complimentary distortions that sound good together, what we call system matching.”

He added: “There is no such thing as perfection, and if we somehow attained it, would everyone agree? Probably not. But our [company’s] philosophy has always been to let the music speak for itself without adding or subtracting information. In other words, with high fidelity to the original.”

PS Audio Stellar M1200 monoblocks.

PS Audio’s Paul McGowan wrote: “If you look at Class-D, there are limitations you will always have to deal with. One of those, of course, is the analogue low-pass filter at its output, used to remove the switching pulses between transitions. While much wonderful work has been performed on this limitation, especially by Class-D’s resident genius, Bruno Putzeys, the fact remains it’s there in the signal path. Another limitation is the dynamic range. In a typical PWM-modulated signal running at 100 kHz or so, you’re basically limited to about 16 bits of resolution, about the same as a CD, which ain’t bad, but still.

“On the positive side,” he added. “The linearity of a Class-D amplifier will almost always exceed that of an analog-based power amp. They are different, and they sound different. In our products that use Class-D output stages, we work with them, as we do all our circuit topologies, in the same way a fine wine vintner [works his wines]. We blend this and that to come up with an award-winning output. For example, in our Class-D amplifier Stellar line, we use an analog input stage to feed the PWM modulator. In the lower-wattage models, that input stage is sweetened [using] low feedback FET designs, while in our highest wattage model, the M1200 monoblock, we add a tube input stage to perform a similar function.”

“Analog power amps, too, have their limitations or quirks,” Paul said, “which we also solved in the design by blending the proper amount of technology and topology to come up with winning design choices, all in service of the music.”

He concluded: “I think using Class-D technology for the power supply, as opposed to the huge analog transformers, etc., and using analog output and input stages for the audio signal is likely the best topology currently available today. Time will tell if that reverses or changes.”


Hypex Ncore NCx500 module.

About that resident genius Paul mentioned — Belgian engineer and Kii Audio co-founder Bruno Putzeys. I think it’s fair to say that Class-D amplification would not have the status it has today if not for the fact Bruno spearheaded the Class-D revolution with his Hypex UcD and Ncore Class-D designs used by most high-end audio manufacturers today. I also doubt that, if not for Putzeys' seminal role in making Class-D sound as good as it does, that the tube designer I spoke of at the start of this piece would’ve told me what he did that blew my mind.

When I asked Bruno if he’d be willing to contribute a paragraph to this discussion about Class-D’s future, he sent me his response with an intriguing foreword: “I do hope you can afford me a few more words than a paragraph, particularly because I’m fairly certain that it’ll run directly counter to at least some of the other replies you’ll get.

“To be completely blunt,” his response began, “State-of-the-art Class-D amplifiers are good, not because they’re Class-D, but in spite of it. I chose a career in Class-D because I liked the [technology’s] efficiency and compactness, and I was hoping to combine that with high fidelity.

“My first attempt immediately sounded appealing and engaging. The idea that Class-D sounded ‘harsh’ was never true and was only perpetuated by people who’d never heard one. As proof of that, rudimentary zero-feedback designs still regularly hit the shelves and garnered praise on account of their striking sonic character. But hi-fi, they were not. I wanted an amplifier you couldn’t hear, one that anyone could use and be happy with in any stratum of the market. And that turned out to be inordinately difficult [to design].

“The secret lay not in the power stage but in the control circuit, i.e., the modulator and the error correction. The mathematics required to fully understand a Class-D amplifier is similar to what’s used in sigma/delta A/D-D/A chips, only more complicated. It’s not taught at any school. But the change you can make by only tweaking the power stage (faster FETs, etc.) is tiny compared to the effect of better error control. So, mathematics it was.

“Designers of traditional amplifiers are not known to geek out on mathematics,” said Bruno. “They wouldn’t have to anyway; it’s not that difficult to build a respectable Class-A amplifier using nothing but a few well-worn rules of thumb. The result was that while Class-D crept steadily forward, Class-A pretty much stagnated.


Bel Canto e1X integrated amp.

“This has caused a curious paradigm reversal,” he continued. “The question is no longer whether Class-D is approaching the quality of Class-A, but how many Class-A amplifiers can really claim to be up there with the best of Class-D? Make no mistake, the fundamental fact still holds: any given level of performance is much easier to achieve in Class-A than in Class-D. But designers of Class-A amplifiers have, by and large, sat on their laurels. I could easily design a better Class-A amplifier, but I see no one waiting for a better petrol engine.

“The level of difficulty explains why virtually all demonstrably good Class-D-based products use pre-built modules,” he wrote. “The effort of working this stuff out only ever pays off if you can re-use the design in hundreds of products. That’s a mixed blessing. On the one hand, Class-D modules have turned high-end amplification into a commodity. On the other, it’s still de rigueur in the audiophile market to have distinguishing (i.e., home-grown) technology. Mine and my competitors’ work of decades raising Class-D to adulthood now lends a halo effect to any Class-D amplifier. Today, almost any Class-D amplifier gets a rave review, no matter how crude the design. This could well prove perilous in the longer run to Class-D’s hard-won reputation.”

He added: “[One] way to escape from this is for the audiophile market to [focus less on] separate components. If you want to know what’s scaring younger customers away, it’s the idea that they should suddenly school themselves in amplifiers, DACs, cables, and whatnot before they can buy something that plays quality sound. Active speakers are a way out of this. If high-end audio has a future, it’s in system [integration], where the amplifier is simply a necessary functional block but where the real cleverness lies in the concept of the system as a whole and how it functions, sonically and practically.

“There is a whole future in front of us with radically improved sound systems,” said Bruno. “If only the market were ready to accept that the amplifier part is basically a solved problem.”

 

Copyright 2024 PMA Magazine. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Header image courtesy of PMA Magazine.


Catching Up With The Immediate Family (the Band, That Is)

Catching Up With The Immediate Family (the Band, That Is)

Catching Up With The Immediate Family (the Band, That Is)

Ray Chelstowski

Since we last Zoomed with them for an interview and article (in Issue 142, July 2021) , The Immediate Family has been busier than ever. A documentary on the band from film maker Denny Tedesco (son of guitarist and studio legend Tommy Tedesco) was distributed late last year by Magnolia Films and has been a critic’s darling, and has become a viral item shared widely among people who love music. Why? Because it tells an incredible tale.

Danny Kortchmar, Waddy Wachtel (guitar), Russ Kunkel (drums), and Leland Sklar (bass) are musicians who at the height of the 1970s and 1980s were the most sought-after session cats in the game. Not only did they play on more songs you know and love than you can number, they often did it alongside each other. Many of them played together so frequently they became known as The Section, and even released albums under that name. The film celebrates their talent and work, as much as their brotherhood and sense of “family.” With the addition of guitarist/songwriter Steve Postell, they became The Immediate Family.

Along with the film’s release came Skin in the Game via Quarto Valley Records, a follow-up to The Immediate Family’s self-titled 2021 debut record. It’s an electrifying rock ride that has connections to lower Manhattan that run deeper than the band’s Laurel Canyon roots, and proves that this fivesome still has so much more to share. While their contributions to artists like James Taylor, Carole King, Lyle Lovett, Jackson Browne, Stevie Nicks and more made those songs really sing, this “Family” outing is all about the band, what they’ve learned, what they like, and where they are headed as artists. And it rocks!

 

 

The Immediate Family, Skin in the Game, album cover. Photo by Jay Gilbert/Chris Schmitt – cover artwork by Brian Porizek.

 

 

We caught up with The Immediate Family to talk about the record, the state of the music business, where session players sit in this current climate, how record labels fit into the mix, and what the future looks like for rock and roll. As always, it’s an exchange that is driven by a collective who has seen it all, has great insight into where things are going, and finds a way to good-naturedly bust each other’s chops while still making points about music that hit hard and hit home.

As with our conversation with The Immediate Family in 2021, we decided to keep this in a video format where the energy that still drives their passion for playing can be relayed with sight and sound. Speaking with them is as much a gift as the music they helped make the soundtrack of our lives, and this exchange is no exception. Look for them later this year when they head back out on tour. But for now, hit “play” and enjoy one more great ride from this band of brothers.

 

 

 

All in the Family: Courtesy of Alan Kozlowski.

 

Header image courtesy of Jay Gilbert/Chris Schmitt. Seated: Danny Kortchmar, Waddy Wachtel, and Steve Postell. Standing: Russ Kunkel, Leland Sklar.


Musings About the 45-RPM Single

Musings About the 45-RPM Single

Musings About the 45-RPM Single

Larry Jaffee

Delving into the psyche of one collector’s reflection of amassing such an assemblage of records that rarely get played

It takes a special crate-digging mood to go through a haphazard stack of scratchy, often-sleeveless, 45-RPM singles found in a record or thrift store to find those gems akin to a needle in a haystack.

In January 2021 a pop-up store that’s still there three-and-a-half years later opened a block away from my apartment in Upper Manhattan on Riverside Drive. It contains the former belongings of a collector of all kinds of books and records who passed away of COVID in the summer of 2020 and on his deathbed donated them to a non-profit community bookstore.

After making at least a dozen trips that yielded several hundred LPs over the next nine months, finally one day I turned my attention to the 50-cent singles, which landed a bonanza of beloved one-hit wonders from the 1960s to 1970s for a very reasonable sum. To name a few of the dozens acquired that day, reflecting my eclectic tastes: Mungo Jerry’s “In the Summertime”; Tommy Edwards’ “It’s All in the Game”; The Marmalade’s “Reflections of My Life”;  The Angels’ “My Boyfriend’s Back”; The Idles of March’s “Vehicle”; The Status Quo’s “Pictures of Matchbook Men”; The Crazy World of Arthur Brown’s “Fire”; David Essex’s “Rock On”; Billy Swan’s “I Can Help”; Roy Head’s “One Night”; Kim Carnes’s “Bette Davis Eyes”; and Abba member Frida’s solo sole hit “Something Going On.”

On that marathon hunting session at the pop-up store, which took several hours, I also bought original vintage pressings of chart toppers by perennial hitmakers, such as The Beatles’ “Something”/“Come Together” and “I Want to Hold Your Hand”/“I Saw Her Standing There”; Paul McCartney and Wings’ “Junior’s Farm”; The Zombies’ “She’s Not There”; Procol Harum’s “A Whiter Shade of Pale”; and Dionne Warwick’s “What the World Needs Now”/“I’ll Never Fall in Love Again.”

The haul also yielded Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams”/“Songbird” and “Sara”/“That’s Enough for Me,” and a promo-copy remix of the band’s “Sisters of the Moon” plus a longer version of the song by 26 seconds.

You might find this hard to believe but I’m not a completist, especially since nearly all of these songs already exist on LPs and CDs in my physical media collection.

 

 

Seek and ye shall find! These are just some of the 45s that Larry has scored at thrift stores in recent months.

 

When I started collecting records as a teenager, singles were important because I had less disposable income. Even then, back in 1973, I would buy a much-loved fluke hit that I couldnt get enough of on Top 40 radio. Among my first 45-RPM purchases were Focus’ “Hocus Pocus” and ELO’s “Roll Over Beethoven,” both of which I remember blasting from my bedroom after having a fight with my mother. 

Fast forward a half century: my 7-inch purchases now often come down to finding a cover version that I didnt know existed, or an unusual song title.

 

For example, a visit last year to a Newark, New Jersey store not far from where I taught at Rutgers University landed me B.B. King’s rendition of the Lovin Spoonful’s “Summer in the City,” and the Intruders’ “(Love Is Like a) Baseball Game” by the formidable songwriting team of Gamble and Huff.

What the 7-inch, 45-rpm single provided during its 1950s to 1970s heyday and largely lost during the CD era was consumer empowerment: i.e., the right to buy a single song — and also get a value-added B side.

Ironically in the digital age, the single was brought back by Apple Computer’s iTunes, boiling down to the rhetorical question, and today’s streaming services:

Why buy a full album when really all you want is want the hit?

 

 

Here are some more recent finds in Larry's collection.

 

EMI in England certainly understood this nearly a half century ago, circa 1963 – 1970, with its year-round deluge of Beatles singles and EPs, while the insidious Americans over at Capitol would slice and dice the full albums because they wanted to pay less royalties, and then make new LPs out of all the extraneous tracks (e.g., Yesterday and Today, Hey Jude). And of course, the Yanks also put out plenty of American Beatles singles along the way.

My 45-single collection numbers probably a thousand and pales significantly next to my haphazardly-catalogued treasure trove of 4,000 LPs. Of course, that goes along with a thousand-plus CDs, at least 500 cassettes, and a hundred music DVDs and VHS tapes.

In the mid-1970s for a few months, I occasionally bought used 8-track tapes because the used car I drove – a blue AMC Hornet – came with an 8-track deck, and at garage sales I would pick up curios on the format such as a Kinks two-fer of The Kinks are the Village Green Preservation Society and Arthur or the Velvet Underground’s Live at Max’s Kansas City, which Lou Reed autographed for me in 2003. But then the deck and most of the tapes were stolen, so I let go of the potential 8-track obsession. (Thankfully, the Velvets and Kinks weren’t in the Hornet, and I still have them in my possession, as well as Jimmy Cliff’s soundtrack to The Harder They Come, also from that era of collecting.)

At record shows, I would pick up collectible laserdiscs of favorite movies, such as Bob Dylan’s Don’t Look Back or Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now, even though I never owned a laserdisc player. It reinforces how I've always been format-agnostic. Among the few physical pre-recorded media formats I hadn’t collected to date are Edison cylinders and reel-to-reels.

During iTunes’ heyday, my full-album download purchases occurred only when I needed: a) immediate gratification, or b) the CD or vinyl was not available from Amazon and eBay, other online merchants, or brick-and-mortar stores. Falling in this category, I remember being frustrated in 2011 to only being able to get a digital download of Robbie Robertson’s then-new How to Become Clairvoyant.

Back to 45s, more often than not, in the 1970s and 1980s the 7-inch singles I often purchased were reissues – often with double-sided hits, or releases that never made it to a studio album, although could have showed up on a greatest hits compilation.

An example that comes to mind is Crosby Stills Nash & Young's "Ohio," which I bought about four years after it was released in 1970. At the time, I was amazed it was still in Sam Goody's slim 45 bins. The obvious cover should have been the iconic photograph of the distraught teenage runaway standing over the body of one of the four Kent State students who were killed by National Guardsmen, instead of the nondescript uniform sleeve that the label used for reissues.

Those 45 singles in my collection that do have picture sleeves I most likely bought more for the artifact or music than the aesthetics. I couldn't resist owning, for example, the German 45 pressing of "Whatever Gets You Through The Night" b/w "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," recorded live at an Elton John concert at Madison Square Garden, marking John Lennon's last public performances. Too bad the photo of them is absolutely hideous.

I now think of the 45 picture sleeves that I once had in my possession but have no longer, such as Bob Dylan's "Hurricane" for the then-jailed, middleweight boxing champion Ruben Carter (a photo of him adorned the cover), or Bob Marley's "Zimbabwe," which featured a photo of Joshua Nkomo, who led a guerrilla faction (longtime Zimbabwe dictator Robert Mugabe led the other) that toppled the former apartheid regime known as Rhodesia. That record I stupidly traded to a relentless completist Marley collector who wore me down, and gave me a Peter Tosh songbook in exchange. I'd frame that rare single today if I had it.

Speaking of reggae, I’ll spend hours searching for a single I know is somewhere in my non-organized collection when a reggae artist dies, such as Lee Perry, for example, whose 45s of “Return of Django” and “Iron Fist” hit my turntable as inspiration for a Facebook tribute post. 

Let’s face it, singles, whether 7-inch or 12-inch, are a pain in the ass to buy – Discogs being an exception – let alone play, especially on a manual turntable. Of course, 78-RPM collectors have to make an even bigger effort to consume what’s emanating from the speakers.

I keep on telling myself that I’m going down this rabbit hole of 45-RPM singles collecting for the eventual purchase of a long-coveted jukebox. But the reality is, I don’t have the space in my already-extremely-cramped apartment to fit a jukebox. Nor do I think my neighbors would appreciate the added aural fidelity pounding through the walls. Also, a friend who has a jukebox says to be prepared to spend at least $7,000 for a machine that’s in good working condition and doesn’t’t need replacement parts.

Nevertheless, I still periodically peruse eBay’s listings and fantasize that it would be as good a reason as any to move into a house isolated in the middle of nowhere. Never say never: the things we do for the love of music!

 

 

And still more original-issue 45s.

 

Larry Jaffee is author of Record Store Day: The Most Improbable Comeback of the 21st Century (Rare Bird Books, 2022). For more information, visit https://larryjaffee.com.

Header image courtesy of PublicDomainPictures.net/Linnaea Mallette.


The Other Folk Singers, Part Two

The Other Folk Singers, Part Two

The Other Folk Singers, Part Two

Jeff Weiner

I belong to a listening group that gets together to socialize and listen to music. We meet in each of our homes on a rotating basis. The host provides the playlist, wine, and food. When it is my turn, I usually make a playlist with a specific theme. In preparation for one of these sessions, I decided on folk singers as my theme. I created a much-too-long list of every folk singer or group whom I ever enjoyed, and was faced with the dilemma of selecting which ones to play for the group. I decided on familiarity as my main criterion and chose artists associated with the folk music revival of the 1960s: Bob Dylan, Judy Collins, Leonard Cohen, the Kingston Trio, et al.

When I was done, I found that there were 21 unincluded folk singers or groups that I liked, mostly artists from an earlier time. This led to my constructing a second playlist for my own enjoyment, which can be viewed as a “B-side” to my first one. I find that I prefer this second playlist and listen to it much more frequently than the first.

This is the second of a series of three articles discussing “the other folk singers” on that second playlist.

 

 

Lead Belly. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/American Folklife Center, Library of Congress/public domain.

 

Lead Belly

Huddie Ledbetter, better known as Lead Belly, was born on a Louisiana plantation in 1888 or 1889. His preferred instrument was the 12-string guitar but he also played accordion, piano, harmonica, mandolin, violin, and bass. As a teenager, he developed his musical style in the saloons and brothels on Shreveport’s Fannin Street, an area now referred to as Ledbetter Heights. Beginning in 1915, Lead Belly served a series of prison terms. In 1918, he was convicted of murder in Texas and given a sentence of 30 years. That sentence was commuted by the Governor of Texas after seven years after having seen Lead Belly perform while visiting the prison.

A few years later, Lead Belly was convicted of attempted murder and sent to Louisiana’s Angola prison. There he was discovered by father and son folklorists John and Alan Lomax, who were working on a project for the Library of Congress whose goal was to preserve traditional music. The Lomaxes secured his release from Angola and recorded 48 of his songs. Lead Belly then embarked on a concert tour of Eastern colleges. His first commercial recordings were blues, rather than folk-oriented and had little commercial success. He moved to New York City and did a series of performances at Harlem’s Apollo Theater. Before long he was jailed again, this time for assault.

Alan Lomax raised money for Lead Belly’s legal defense and helped secure his release, after which Lead Belly was a regular on Lomax’s radio show. He then teamed with folk singer Josh White on a six-month engagement at the Village Vanguard in New York’s Greenwich Village. He became a key player in New York’s thriving folk music scene and befriended Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and many other artists of that genre. His career began to take off and he went to California in 1940 to record an album for RCA Victor.

 

Lead Belly was an accomplished songwriter who had a repertoire of 500 songs. He authored “Cotton Fields” and “Goodnight, Irene” among many others. The Weavers’ rendition of “Goodnight, Irene” sold over one million copies and was the first folk song to reach number one on the popular music charts. Lead Belly brought traditional songs such as “Rock Island Line” and “The Midnight Special” to the forefront of folk music, so much so that they are sometimes mistakenly attributed to his authorship.

Lead Belly developed Lou Gehrig’s disease (ALS) and died in 1949. He was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The Smithsonian has released a five-CD box set of his recordings.

  

 

Ramblin' Jack Elliott, 100 Classic Recordings from the Early Years, album cover. 

 

Ramblin’ Jack Elliott

Ramblin’ Jack Elliott (neé Elliott Charles Adnopoz) was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1931. His father was a successful surgeon and it was expected that Elliott would follow in those footsteps. However, he became enamored with the rodeo and rebelled, running away from home at the age of 14 to join a traveling rodeo. He wanted to be a cowboy! After a few months, his family tracked him down and brought him home.

However, he was hooked. Having had a few lessons from some rodeo people, Elliott taught himself how to play the guitar and became acclaimed at both the traditional finger-picking and flat-picking styles. After graduating from high school, he met Woody Guthrie and moved in with the Guthrie family. Elliott began traveling with Guthrie and became so enthralled by his friend that he studied and adopted his musical persona. Guthrie has been quoted as saying, “Jack sounds more like me than I do.” Guthrie became ill and began a very long confinement in mental institutions when his son, Arlo, was a very young boy. Accordingly, Arlo never got to know his father very well and learned Woody’s songs and performing style from Elliott.

 

After traveling with Guthrie for several years, Elliott met and married his first of five wives and moved to England. There he had a string of hits and toured throughout Europe, often singing Guthrie’s songs. When he returned to the US in 1961, he became a legend in the Greenwich Village folk scene. Elliott met Bob Dylan while visiting Guthrie in the hospital and became a mentor of Dylan's. He would sometimes refer to Dylan as “my son.” He was in high demand at that time and recorded with the likes of Johnny Cash, Phil Ochs, and Tim Hardin.

While Elliott traveled his entire adult life, his “Ramblin’” nickname is based upon the manner in which he tells stories. They ramble! He has two Grammy awards to his credit and was the recipient of the National Medal of the Arts from President Clinton. Elliott is alive and well and still ramblin’ at the age of 92.

 

 

The Browns, Looking Back to See, album cover.

 

The Browns

Jim Ed Brown and his older sister, Maxine, began singing as a duo in country music venues in Arkansas in the early 1950s. Younger sister Bonnie joined the act a few years later and the Browns were born. They had quite a few top country hits during that decade. In 1959, they recorded their signature song, “The Three Bells,” that reached number one on both the country and popular music charts. “The Three Bells” had been one of Edith Piaf’s greatest hits. The Browns’ rendition sold over a million copies and was nominated for the Grammy Record of the Year Award. Sometimes there is a fine line between folk music and country, blues, or more recently, singer-songwriter genres. The Browns clearly crossed that line.

“The Three Bells was so popular with fans of folk and pop music that it led to network TV appearances and overseas tours for the Browns. They appeared on shows such as American Bandstand and The Ed Sullivan Show. During the next two years, multiple songs by the Browns found their way onto the popular music charts, most notably “Scarlet Ribbons (For Her Hair)” and “The Old Lamplighter.” In 1963, they were awarded membership in The Grand Ole Opry.

 

In 1965 Jim Ed began performing as a solo artist in addition to continuing with his sisters. While their popularity with the more general audience dwindled, they continued to regularly find their way onto the country music charts. In 1968, the Browns disbanded. Maxine had a brief solo career but both sisters left the music business and went home to Arkansas to raise their families.

Jim Ed continued his solo career. He performed as a duet for several years with country artist Helen Cornelius. In addition to occasionally hosting the Grand Ole Opry, he also hosted a syndicated television program for six years. He then hosted two series on The Nashville Network and, later, a syndicated radio program that was carried by over 300 stations. He passed away at the age of 81 in 2015. Both sisters died shortly thereafter.

 


The Very Best of Burl Ives, album cover.

 

Burl Ives

Born in 1909, Burl Ives had an extensive career as a singer, musician, actor, and author. After dropping out of college, he became an itinerant singer, wandering, doing odd jobs, and street singing. His travels took him to 46 states, Canada, and Mexico where he performed as “Burl Ives, The Vagabond Lover.” His primary instrument was the banjo but he also played guitar. Later he settled in Indiana where he, surprisingly, was a semi-professional football player!

Ives moved to New York City and found his way into Broadway musicals. This led to a four-month engagement at the Village Vanguard in Greenwich Village and his own national CBS radio show called The Wayfaring Stranger. On this show he popularized many of the songs that he learned during his travels. Children were fascinated by this gentle giant (he stood 6 ft. 3 in. and weighed almost 300 pounds) and he popularized songs such as “Big Rock Candy Mountain” and “Frosty the Snowman.”

Ives was drafted into the Army during World War II. After being discharged for medical reasons, he continued to entertain the troops and also returned to Broadway. Next came Hollywood, where he made his film debut in 1945. Over the next decade, Ives wrote his autobiography and short stories and produced folk song anthologies and verses for children. In the 1950s, his Hollywood career blossomed with roles in East of Eden, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and The Big Country, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. The 1960s saw his attention turn to television, where he made numerous appearances. He officially retired from show business in 1989.

Burl Ives had a remarkable career: 100 record albums, 30-plus movies, 13 Broadway shows, many TV appearances, and much more. He was a lifelong smoker of pipes and cigars and died from oral cancer at the age of 85.

 

 

 

Fred Neil, Clear, album cover.

 

Fred Neil

Frederick Morlock, Jr., better known as Fred Neil, was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1936 and raised in St. Petersburg, Florida. He may be the greatest singer/songwriter that most people have never heard of. Neil had a beautiful, deep baritone voice, was an accomplished 12-string guitar player, and wrote songs best known for being covered by others. His most recognized song is surely “Everybody’s Talkin’,” the theme song from Midnight Cowboy that vaulted Harry Nilsson to stardom. Some of his early songs were covered by the likes of Buddy Holly and Roy Orbison.

 

In the early 1960s, Neil became a fixture in the Greenwich Village music scene. Bob Dylan’s first paid engagement after arriving in New York was backing Neil on harmonica. Unlike many of his folk music contemporaries, Neil seldom addressed political and social issues of the day, touching more on internal emotional themes. His “The Other Side of This Life” was recorded by Jefferson Airplane, the Lovin’ Spoonful, Peter, Paul and Mary, and many others. Those who recorded “The Dolphins” include Linda Ronstadt, Dion, and Tim Buckley. “Candy Man,” co-written by Neil, was covered by Roy Orbison, Al Kooper, Waylon Jennings, the Hollies, and more. In addition to Bob Dylan, it is said that he greatly influenced David Crosby, Stephen Stills, John Sebastian, Richie Havens, Joni Mitchell, Tim Hardin, and many others.

I got to see Fred Neil several times at the Cafe Au Go Go. At that time, he was known as the “King of Greenwich Village” and it was clear that Neil was revered in the folk music community. In all honesty, I was not a fan and didn’t come to appreciate his greatness until much later. I think this was largely due to Neil refusing to do the things he needed to succeed as an artist. He didn’t interact much with the audience and that undoubtedly contributed to my not appreciating his music. In that vein, in the decade or so in which he performed, he only granted one published interview. Neil also refused to tour and had periodic contractual issues with his record companies.

Howard Solomon, the owner of the Cafe Au Go Go, sold the club in 1969 and became Neil’s manager. Capitol Records was withholding royalties due to his failure to deliver music as stipulated in his contract. Solomon pulled together one final Fred Neil album, Other Side of This Life, that was produced in 1971. Neil then returned to Florida to dedicate himself to the Save the Dolphins effort and rarely performed again. It is said that he could often be seen playing his guitar and singing to the dolphins.

Fred Neil died in 2001 at the age of 65. Years ago, the iconic sportscaster, Howard Cosell, wrote his autobiography called I Never Played the Game. If Fred Neil had written a book about his life, that would be an appropriate title.

 

 

The Chad Mitchell Trio. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/1965 Michiganensian, p. 42/public domain.

 

The Chad Mitchell Trio

The Chad Mitchell Trio was formed in 1958 by Mike Kobluk, Mike Pugh, and Chad Mitchell, three glee club members at Gonzaga University. They were a vocal group accompanied by session musicians. (One of those session musicians was Jim McGuinn, who went by his middle name, Roger, instead of Jim when he formed the Byrds.) A common element to much of the folk music popularity of that era was political and social commentary. A key distinguishing characteristic of the Chad Mitchell Trio was their use of satire. They made people laugh.

Shortly after the Chad Mitchell Trio formed they were booked for a four-week stint at the Blue Angel in Greenwich Village. They were so successful that four weeks became 12, which led to an association with Harry Belafonte and an appearance at one of his Carnegie Hall concerts. Three Chad Mitchell Trio songs appear on Belafonte’s second Carnegie Hall album (Belafonte Returns to Carnegie Hall). They were then signed to a contract by Belafonte’s management firm. Mike Pugh then left the group, replaced by baritone Joe Frazier. The Belafonte team had them performing mostly conventional folk songs and they left to sign with Kapp Records. They now began adding satire to their music with songs such as “The John Birch Society.”

By the early 1960s, the Chad Mitchell Trio was one of the top folk groups on the college and club circuit, rivaling the Kingston Trio and Peter, Paul and Mary. They were regularly appearing on television and radio. They became very interested in what was then a little-known song, Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ In The Wind,” and wanted to release it as a single. Their record company refused. Several months later, Peter, Paul and Mary recorded that song and it became a smash hit, making “Blowin’ in the Wind” one of the signature songs of the folk era. The group had missed a golden opportunity and it turned out to be a turning point in their career. They would forever be in the shadow of Peter, Paul and Mary and other folk artists and would never achieve large record sales. This seriously damaged their relationship with their producer and record label, and they moved on to Mercury Records in 1963.

 

Their new label didn’t seem all that interested in promoting the Chad Mitchell Trio. In 1965, Dylan had gone electric and folk-rock was taking center stage. Chad Mitchell left the group to pursue a solo career and a young John Denver replaced him. The group was now known as the Mitchell Trio. Both acts had limited success and within a few years, Chad Mitchell had stopped recording and the Mitchell Trio was no more. However, there have been periodic reunion concerts of the original trio over the years.

  

 

Harry Belafonte. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/Arquivo Nacional/public domain.

 

Harry Belafonte

Born in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood, Harry Belafonte was a compelling singer, actor and social activist and a key figure in 1950’s folk music. His parents were born on the islands of Jamaica and Martinique and that contributed to his interest in calypso music, which he popularized internationally. His Calypso album was the first album ever to sell over a million copies. His song, “Day-O” (“The Banana Boat Song”), can be considered one of the most enduring songs in all of music. To this day, countless sports teams regularly use Belafonte’s “Day-O” chant as a rallying cry during games. Belafonte was a recipient of Grammy, Emmy, and Tony awards, and an honorary Oscar. He was also an important player in the civil rights movement and other social causes.

 

Belafonte began his career as a club singer, primarily to pay for acting lessons. He soon took a liking to folk music and enjoyed rapid success in the music business. Before long, he was performing at New York’s Village Vanguard. This led to a contract with the prestigious RCA Victor label, for which he recorded for over 20 years. His first hit single was “Matilda,” which he recorded in 1953. Next came a Broadway debut, Almanac, that resulted in his winning a Tony award for Best Supporting Actor in a Musical.

In 1953 Belafonte also made his film debut, and the following year had the lead role in Carmen Jones, a huge success. In addition to other starring roles, he began producing films. He then took a break from films and began producing for television. Belafonte continued to record and, in 1960, won a Grammy for Best Folk Performance and, years later, their Lifetime Achievement Award. He continued to record and received much acclaim for two live recordings of concerts at Carnegie Hall (Belafonte at Carnegie Hall and Belafonte Returns to Carnegie Hall). [The former is an audiophile classic and sounds amazing on a good system – Ed.] He was recruited by Frank Sinatra to perform at the inaugural gala for President Kennedy. In 1970, he returned to film and acted in numerous movies into the 1990s. His final film appearance was in 2018.

If that wasn’t enough, Belafonte was heavily involved in social causes. He was one of Martin Luther King’s most trusted friends and helped organize the famous Freedom March on Washington, DC. Dr. King’s wife wrote in her autobiography, "Whenever we got into trouble or when tragedy struck, Harry has always come to our aid, his generous heart wide-open." He helped organize Nelson Mandela’s first trip to the US after Mandela was released from prison. Belafonte’s social activism wasn’t limited to civil rights. He became a UNICEF goodwill ambassador and was also given the Humanitarian Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Harry Belafonte died a year ago at the age of 96. 

This is the second of a series of three articles on “the other folk singers.” The final installment will feature the Highwaymen, Cisco Houston, Karen Dalton, the Brothers Four, the Clancy Brothers, Patrick Sky, and Pete Seeger.

 

Header image: Ramblin' Jack Elliott, ourtesy of Wikimedia Commons/K8 fan at English Wikipedia.


Getting to the Point-to-Point

Getting to the Point-to-Point

Getting to the Point-to-Point

Frank Doris

 

Glass behind glass: here's a guy testing kenotron rectifier tubes the old-fashioned way. From Radio Craft, May 1947.

 

 

Now that's what we call point-to-point wiring! Here's a 1930 Courtenay Junior radio, made in New Zealand by William Marks. It utilized a crystal radio, a rectifier and two power tubes, and connected to an external speaker. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/Essentialtech.


 

 

How many left-handed electric guitarists were around in 1923? How could she not fall for him? From Radio News, May 1923.

 

 

Looking at cassette decks like this Harman/Kardon CD391 makes us nostalgic. It was made from 1983 to 1990 and is certainly one of the more elegant-looking devices of its kind. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons/Retired electrician.

 

And we thought alnico magnets were only good for loudspeakers. Not according to this General Electric ad from 1950!


Birdsong

Birdsong

Birdsong

Peter Xeni

 

 

This cartoon originally appeared in Issue 147.


Delightful

Delightful

Delightful

Rich Isaacs
Each winter, the Oakland (California) Zoo presents “Glowfari,” a large-scale installation of hundreds of lantern animals and plants that covers most of the grounds. Most of the lanterns are larger than life-sized and some are animated. A few are big enough to walk through. I took about 150 photos when I went; here's one of them.