In Part One of our Capital Audiofest 2022 coverage (Issue 180), I touched upon the family nature of the specialty audio business. And I’ve found it interesting how the industry seems to skip generations. Our sons have little interest in audio, despite having grown up with great gear. What they didn’t skip over was my wife’s and my love of music without reservation. Our home has always been full of any and all genres of music and they picked up on that diversity. But it’s not unusual for kids to not appreciate their parents’ interests, although all of us are into the fabulous L.A. Dodgers, Phillipe, cats, dogs, and tech. That said, Thomas loves his pair of Audioengine A5+ powered speakers, while our younger son Jonathan adores his Oppo PM-3 closed-back planar magnetic headphones, so perhaps all isn’t lost.
When the vinyl revival started to happen, my oldest son Thomas was on the hunt for fun, cool records. But, funnily enough he wasn’t as concerned about having a turntable. Recent statistics bear this out. According to Billboard magazine, vinyl represented $43.5 million in sales in 2022, yet only 50 percent of vinyl buyers owned a record player. There are various theories for this, ranging from a hipster love of all things retro, to a tangible response to the invisibility of the digital age, in which music, as well as much of our lives, takes place with no physical footprint. So, what could be more basic than a wafer of plastic, with a true analogous signal with wavy lines or something cool-looking on it. I do find it odd that folks would spend that much money on sometimes-overpriced LPs, and not be able to play them. But maybe I’m strange that way. And it is gratifying to have a large piece of artwork that you can hold in your hand, which is satisfying in a way that a Roon GUI isn’t.
Fortunately, some of the most dedicated vinyl enthusiasts are young, hip, passionate, and buy turntables. It’s one reason for the success of companies like Music Hall, Pro-Ject, Audio-Technica, Victrola and many others, all of whom have commendable and good-sounding gear at attractive pricing. Even IKEA has gotten in the act, although their OBEGRÄNSAD record player has gotten negative reviews. (At CES 2023, we saw a lovely new JBL turntable, that clocks in at very competitive $400 with a decent Audio-Technica cartridge. So even large companies are responding.) Affordable digital gear from manufacturers like Schiit, Geshelli Labs, Fosi Audio, Aiyima, Topping, S.M.S.L, LOXJIE Audio, and the Emotiva BasX line is also making huge inroads, especially since advances in technology and build quality mean that some really inexpensive gear sounds pretty musical.
Naturally, life is a balancing act, full of compromises, but as evidenced by the superb reviews that Andrew Jones’ inexpensive speakers for ELAC have garnered, users can have a really serious musical experience for even just a few hundred dollars’ worth of gear. Certainly, the trashing that Class D amplifiers used to receive is no longer valid. At Capital Audiofest 2022 we heard some great Class-D amps, and the availability of low-cost, low-distortion, high-power chips from Texas Instruments and amplifier modules from ICEpower and others has driven down the cost of musical horsepower.
I liken it to the early days of sports cars, where enthusiasts could purchase wonderful entry-level models, leaving the fancier and more expensive cars to those who could afford them. Based on what I’ve seen at Capital Audiofest, CanJam, and more recently, CES 2023, I think we are in the golden age of audio, since $200 for a headphone amp and some headphones can get you some impressive sound. Maybe not comparable to a $25,000 system, but capable of real enjoyment. I tend to think of it as a trickle-down audio equivalent of trickle-down economics, whereas unlike trickle-down economics, the audio version actually works and benefits consumers.
That’s just one of the reasons why I totally enjoy the irreverent energy of the audio scene, especially as evidenced by the headphones community, whose love of independent inventors, irreverent reviewers and personalities, and enthusiastic listeners powers the whole gang. There were lots of visitors to Capital Audiofest with that vibe. The cool thing is that they were happy to listen to a $250,000 system, as well as one costing a few hundred bucks. And one of the largest rooms, with stunning equipment, was also among my least favorite. To be honest, the room was just too big. I’ve eaten in some of the finest restaurants in the world, and the best of them had a small intimate feel to them despite their actual size. They made you feel welcome. On the other hand, at the recent New York Audio Show, Greg Takesh (of GT Audio Works) had the largest room, and it sounded great. At Capitol Audiofest, he had a smaller, standard sized room, and it sounded great also. He told me that he actually dug the smaller room since it was more intimate. With room size bigger isn’t always better. It’s important to match the speakers to the room.
I say this because many of my favorite rooms weren’t necessarily large, but were welcoming. I enjoy spending time with Boris Meltsner of Amped America and Roy Hall of Music Hall, lovely to spend time with because I think both can be hilariously fun straight shooters. I’ve been talking with Roy Hall for years about reviewing one of his turntables, but it hasn’t happened. But having a wee dram of Scotch with him is enough.
I had a great time hanging out with Steve Jain in the Fidelity Imports room. Later we were joined by Hideki Kato of Soulnote Audio, whose gorgeous gear from Japan was contributing to the lovely sounds in the room. I’ve long been a fan of Michal Jurewicz of Mytek Audio, whose Brooklyn DAC+ is a component that I thought couldn’t be much improved upon, although his latest version has managed to do just that. It was a treat to listen to his newest creations, which sounded fantastic combined with JMLab speakers and other gear. Mytek also has an entirely revised product line due in part to a separation from the original factory that manufactured their products, and a new distributor. The new components sport a number of improvements and refinements, so while the shakeup might have been difficult, the resulting new products reveal enhancements across the board.
Well-run audio shows have something for everybody, and the 2022 Capital Audiofest proved it once again. Here are more photos, and we’ll have even more next issue.
Three dangerous men of audio, who've dedicated their lives to things that vibrate. Norman Varney and Dale Stultz
(AV RoomService, Ltd.), whose job it is to reduce vibrations with their line of acoustic isolators, while J.R. Boisclair
(WAM Engineering/WallyTools) lives for the vibrations produced by the stylus on a phono cartridge.
Mike Levy
(Alta Audio) and Mathilda Looman
(Infigo Audio) welcomed folks to the Alta and Infigo room, which featured the Alta Titanium Hestia II loudspeakers, and the Infigo Method 3 monoblock amps, Method 4 DAC and Fluvius streamer.
Move over Steve (the Audiophiliac) Guttenberg!
Robyatt Audio’s Robin Wyatt’s the new man to beat when it comes to cool shirts. He had some equally cool turntables on display. He also has arguably the most useful business card an audiophile can have. I’m not giving away the secret.
Boris Meltsner and Roy Hall always show visitors a good time, with exemplary audio. This includes the recentl- released Amped America AAP-1 preamp/DAC/phono stage and AMP 2400 Class-D power amp, feeding
Acoustique Quality Passion Fever loudspeakers from loudspeakers from the Czech Republic. The popular and highly-rated Music Hall Stealth direct drive turntable provided clean, musical sound.
– Andrew Jones was one of the stars of the show, unveiling his first foray into a new speaker since leaving ELAC. The
MoFi Electronics SourcePoint 10 brought in the most consistently crowded room at the show. Here he is delivering the soliloquy from Hamlet: “To be a single driver, coaxial, or concentric, that is the question. Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to suffer the time-induced slings and arrows of outrageous fortune by taking arms against latency and oppose a sea of troubles…”
Hideyuki Ozawa and Toshiki Sunasaka, two top designers from
Audio-Technica brought some cool audio gear with them.
Tom Vu (CEO of
Triangle Art), and Kelly Phan (CFO of Triangle Art) made everyone feel welcome! Married for 30 years, they personify how family plays a strong role in audio.
The
McGary Audio/
Salk Sound/
Anticables room was packed with cool gear, including Salk BePure 3 speakers, a McGary SPA1 vacuum tube preamplifier, Holo Spring 3 DAC, Salk StreamPlayer, and McGary MA1 vacuum tube monoblocks. It sounded warm rich, dynamic, and revealing.
Thomas Artale of
VPI and an enthusiastic fan are showing some turntable love.
VPI’s Harry Weisfeld, customer David Hoeffel, and Mat Weisfeld. Why is David so happy? Because he just upgraded to a VPI Avenger and discovered that he didn’t have to win a karate match against Mat to do so!
Haniwa Audio offers a unique approach to audio reproduction. The speakers appear like horns but aren’t, and the turntable uses a special phono cartridge and Waveform Recovery Circuit phono amplifier.
So with all this talk about sophisticated power cords and fancy pants electrical connectors, let’s not forget that electricity begins with your electrical service. Here Rex and Bob Hungerford of
Kingrex Electric show off their audiophile-grade electrical service panel. That’s a whole lot of copper going on inside! It’s designed from the ground up for audiophile use.
Justin Wilson of
HeadAmp with a prototype amp. He hadn’t finished the power supply, so AA batteries provide ~ 5VDC to engage relays inside the amplifier that turn on the high voltage supplies. I actually loved seeing a work-in-progress unit, something a corporate behemoth wouldn’t allow. Can’t wait to see it in finished form as their new flagship Grand Cayman electrostatic amp. due in 2023.
Merrill Audio, with the happy couple of Merrill Wettasinghe and Rose Cermele at the helm in the the Distinctive Stereo room. They are standing in front of the
Genesis Audio Tribute loudspeakers, inspired by the late, great audio designer, Arnie Nudell. Also in the room: a Merrill Audio Christine MX preamplifier and Element 116MX monoblock amplifiers, with
AudioQuest and
Puritan Audio Laboratories power conditioning. The analog sources were a VPI Avenger Direct turntable, The
Wand tonearm, Hyper Sonic X4 cartridge, VPI-Genesis Avenger phono stage, and a Genesis Premium Platinum phono stage. The digital side was handled by an
Aurender N20 music server/streamer and
EMM Labs DA2 DAC. Genesis provided the various cables. Also present was the prototype Merrill Audio PRO MX tape head preamp, due in the first half of 2023.
German manufacturer
Stromtank takes a unique approach to power distribution. Much of their product line includes battery-powered systems that remove the power company from your system’s electrical supply. Here, Edward DeVito of
Audio Ultra holds the Stromtank SEQ 5 Audio Distribution Bar, with a total capacity of 2,000 watts.
Few components exude as complete a dedication to engineering and physical presence as
Valve Amplification Company (VAC). Not only did they have one of the largest rooms at the show in conjunction with The Audio Company, but the array of equipment was formidable. Here a close-up view of the Statement 452 iQ Musicbloc amplifier, glowing with sublime beauty.
Sitting on some lovely
Critical Mass Systems Ultra Q racks were a VAC Statement phono preamplifier and line preamplifier, Esoteric K1 Grandioso CD/SACD player, XD streamer and G-01 clock, and an Aurender W20SE music server. A
Kronos Audio Pro turntable with Black Beauty tonearm and Hana Umami Red cartridge completed the electronics.
I first met the ebullient Oz Turan
(High-End by Oz) during T.H.E. Show in Long Beach California, and quickly learned that his after-hours listening parties were legendary fun. He’s a great host, and for those curious about a very, very specialized and expensive audio addiction, his demonstration of the best that reel-to-reel audio can provide is as good an introduction as you’ll find.
Who can resist a room with large speakers with fun toys on them? John Wolff assured me that the special audiophile-grade parrot and Nipper statutes served to open up the soundstage in the
Classic Audio Loudspeakers room. The analog source was a venerable Technics SP10 turntable with a
Tri-Planar 12-inch arm and
van den Hul The Colibri Signature cartridge. The electronics, which also included
Atma-Sphere MP1 preamplifier and MK3.3 Novacron monoblock amplifiers. fed Wolff’s formidable T-3.4 field coil speakers.
Martin Ramos and Chris Berens of
Audeze, having a great time in the headphones area.
Adel Soliman and Nicole from VPI take some time off to enjoy themselves.
Ari Margolis (Aurender) and David Solomon
(Qobuz) partnered at the festival, and kept the high-resolution tunes coming.
Anne Bisson was on hand to promote her latest recording, Be My Lover. She was signing copies of the limited-edition LPs. Mastered by Bernie Grundman, pressed at RTI and limited to 3,000 copies, this is a keeper!
Steve Jain (Fidelity Imports) and Hideki Kato (SoulNote) hang out in the Fidelity Imports room.
Songer Audio’s room featured their beautiful natural wood two-way, open-baffle, dipole, S2 speakers and a surprisingly clean and simple electronics chain. They utilized an affordable Topping D90SE DAC, and another Oregon-created product from Wilsonville, the
Whammerdyne Heavy Industries 2A3 SET DGA Ultra amplifier brought those speakers to life. What does DGA stand for? Damn Good Amp!
Kimberly and Ken Songer of Songer Audio showed their gorgeous baffle-less speaker designs. Even though they came all the way from Portland, Oregon, we didn’t spot any Gore-Tex in sight, just a positive Pacific Northwest vibe.
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Geshelli Labs is a family and friends affair. Here Geno, Sherri, Jake, and Joe Bisceglia light up their room. Their room had the coolest collection of colored lights at the show. If you’re bored with boring metal, beige, and black boxes, head over to Geshelli Labs and add a splash of color to your overly-sterile audio life.
Header image: the Triangle Art rooms never fail to dazzle. The beauty of the gear on display is a reminder of what happens when you pull out all the stops on analog reproduction. The room included Anubis and Maestro turntables, and Osiris Diamond 12-inch and Horus 12-inch tonearms, outfitted with Apollo MC and Zeus MC cartridges. The electronics included P200 dual mono tube phonostage, L200 dual mono tube line stage, and an M100 monoblock amplifier. Power management was handled by the RA Ultimate power conditioner with Rhea Reference cables. A pair of Metis speakers made it all come alive.