Metrum Octave First Impressions


To wrap in up in one statement: "Analog has (finally) met its match"

As soon as I hooked up the Metrum Octave to my system I was taken back 30 years to my brother-in-laws vinyl based audiophile system sound. I would spend hours listening to it and love the intricacies, subtleties and realism it reveled in the music. I went straight to digital for my own system but I knew it never quite matched the sound quality of his system in some ways. (but digital was better in others). Over the past 30 years digital has improved vastly, more in recording then playback, but never quite matched analog. Finally I have a system that sounds, to my ears, as good as his system did. (but with all the benefits of digital too, of course)

My system consists of a SB Touch now feeding the Metrum Octave via coax, going into a HK990 amp in analog direct mode, powering a pair of Dyanaudio X12 speakers and a Rythmik F12SE sub. All interconnects are great quality Mono Price cables (don't get me started:) and some 11AWG copper to the speakers. All source material is redbook CD ripped to flac on a 12TB RAID 5 NAS drive.

I did a lot of reading on the Internet about the different DACs. I know my HK990 already had a decent dac in it so it was going to take something special to improve the sound quality over what I already had. After months of research I read a short comment about the Octave and after a little more research I knew its was the DAC I had been looking for.

On my first listen, I played a very quite song with female vocals and a piano (Audrey Assad - Show Me). My first impression was that I was in the recording studio. Everything sounded so very clear and distinct. I could pick up rustling in the background I was very very very impressed with the sound. It was as if everything was less mushed together and more distinct, creating more silence withing the music (very hard to explain). I have always felt that digital does not reproduce piano with the timber of a real piano but the octave got me to a whole new level of realism.

As I played other music the first thing that really jumped out at me was how real the symbols sounded. I've never had an issue with the sound of symbols except with the very first CD players ever made, but now im hearing symbols that sound so fantastic, so real, so amazing. Then I noticed how acoustic guitar strings rang with new vibrancy and clarity.

Last night I could just not stop listening to music. It was the best musical experience I had ever had. I was always told that the issue with digital was the low resolution of the Redbook standard. I now know that the issue was in the recording and playback of the standard, not the standard itself.

You dont even know what your missing until you hear something better. Symbols sounded fine on my existing system until I heard this DAC, and then I just went WOW, I had no idea how good they could sound. The other thing I noticed is that clarity of sound allows me to play the music louder without fatigue. The entire sound spectrum sounds heavenly but the areas that really jumped out at me on my first listen where the Symbols , Acoustic Guitar and Piano. Ill try to add more impressions as I have more time to listen.

I was bracing myself for a quick sell on ebay if this thing did not sound much different then my existing DACs. No chance of that happening! Everything I had read about this DAC was confirmed last night. It is fantastic. I also ordered a Audio gd Digital Interface to reclock the digital input after reading so much about how it makes the sound even better. Im pretty skeptical that it will really improve the sound but it was worth the chance.

More to come...

Earl
earlxtr

Showing 2 responses by earlxtr

Stanwal,

Your reviews and comments on this DAC helped me decide to purchase it. Thank You!
AudioJedi, The metrum stays on all the time so it will be interesting to see if the sound changes with time.

The first CD player I tried in 1983 was $700 and sounded very synthetic, especially the symbols. I keep it for 3 days any returned it for a $1500 Sony player that sounded much more real. It seams that high frequency jagged waveforms have been the most difficult for DACs to reproduce accurately. I also believe that all instruments and vocals have a high frequency component to them that the latest higher end DACs and especially the metrum are able to reproduce with amazing accuracy.

jult52, your comments along that others make me very curios about the DI-3 (I got the upgraded clock version). I hope it's as good as I'm reading it is...

I'm on vacation for the next 3 weeks so I'll write more in a month or so:)) Thanks for your responses, everyone.