Subtlety ? do any American amps do it?


Not heard that many but it strikes me that everything from the colonies sounds a bit stark and bleached. Spent a year trying to come to terms with a Pass Labs which is vastly overated ( and I mean vastly), listened a lot
to Mark Levinson and thought Thank God I did not spend a fortune on that - clean, clear, hifi and so bereft of soul that it was like a visit to the Dentist !
I'm not that biased, it's taken Naim years to make something resembling music - PRAT ? until recently bunch of narrow minded PRATS.I know lots of Naim fans and their mindset belongs to the third reich !
UK companies like Meridian and Musical Fidelity have managed to do the bizz for at least 30 years that I've known/used and they still manage to make a noise that at least resembles real music. MF get tarred with a do it cheap brush but anyone who has heard their gear and says it's crap is probably a dealer who wants to sell you something at 3/4x the price.
The Brazilians do it a treat - Heard Audiopax 88s at the last Edinburgh show and if anyone there had ears, they should have packed up and went home - different league does not describe it.
Realise this is antagonistic but want some input.
Even the UK press seems blinkered to the crap - Pass, Krell
- whoah, nice hifi, shame there's nothing remotely musical involved, apart from the laughter as they take our hard earned money !

I have a Quicksilver phonostage - lovely and a great customer focused company, had a Lancelot Camelot, super and amazingly friendly & helpful people but go to the Big boys and it's just a money grabbing frenzy ?
I dreamed of a Pass Labs for years and ? my next amp will be coming from somewhere in Europe !

Si
simon74

Showing 1 response by sgr

I know that my Levinson system can sound subtle and stealthy especially when I play the soundtrack Sneakers. (If you haven't heard this yet your in for a treat!) Here I am in that musically induced Zen state listening to the subtleness and microdynamics of the system when Wham! I'm knocked back in my seat by dynamic drum and piano that remind me,"Yeah, this is what I'm paying for! while being musically transported to another place.
When I reflect on these "HiFi" comments that seek to put down other brands of equipment, I can't help but comparing the sounds I hear at a "live" performance and sadly all audio equipment and systems that I've heard, have got a long way to come before they sound like the "real thing".
In my experience, most good systems sound more alike than different as most audio engineers strive to make their components "the absolute sound". What sets some systems over the edge is the owner's perserverence to tweak their system's setup over a period of years instead of trading equipment once a month.