ZYX Optimum phono cartridge - a defining statement


ZYX Optimum phono cartridge


Following is a review of the latest ZYX cartridge the Universe Optimum.

Without further ado I would like to thank Mehran of SORAsound who goes so far above and beyond in realizing this audio quest for his ZYX family.

I have owned all the ZYX Universe models since 2006. All have the characteristic ZYX warm, natural and detailed sound. Each was the low output 0.24mV design. The original Universe was solid is resolving difficult passages especially in chamber and jazz music. Moving forward to the Universe II the cartridge took on a lot of low end energy and prat. Rock music was more dynamic, the transients enhanced and it had that extra body in the lower register.

My system started with the Galibier Gavia turntable, triplanar arm and Doshi Aalap full function preamp. During the time I had my Universe II, I upgraded the tonearm to a Durand Talea, Daedalus Ulysses speakers and a KL Audio LP 200 electrostatic cleaner. All significantly enhanced my system.

Fast forward to stepping up to the Universe Premium. This was a very apparent jump in sonic realism. The sound opened up in a tangible and natural way. The instruments just hung there in space. The tonal qualities resolved further and separation was enhanced. Overtones, details, things like really picking out a buried bass drum or percussive elements.

Moving forward to the present - the Universe Optimum is just as much a quantium leap as the Universe II to the Universe Premium was. Everything snapped into place. Micro and macro dynamics fully rendered. Incredible detail and imaging. The presentation just occupies a space completely natural and open.

Instruments are even more defined, the sound converges around the source. The bass is so taunt that even the most subtle bass line is drawn out distinctly but in no way bloated.

Reggie Workman at times plays very subtle and his upright bass is buried in the mix in active portions of John Coltrane’s A Love Supreme. Not so with the ZYX Optimum - the bass line is crystal clear and lower in volume. Toms, snare and bass drums were felt in a three dimension sense - the tautness, size and velocity and tone on the heads, particularly the bass drum are very apparent and accurately rendered. Cymbals, brushes or resonating piano keys have a distinct pulse and luscious decay when approprate. Stringed instruments have a warm bodied resonance. You are in the room for Bill Evans, Paul Motian and Scott Lafaro during Sunday at the Village Vanguard.

I was overwhelmed hearing my standard go by - Steely Dan’s Aja side 1. This album and all it’s nuances is in my DNA. Everything was rendered with such realism. This fully suspended the thought that I was listening to an audio system.I was floored with glee.

Vocals have such body and emotion whether it be Ella and Louis, James Taylor, David Bowie, Joni Mitchell, Rebecca Pigeon, Norah Jones, Sufjan Stevens, Nina Simone, Sam Cooke, Marvin Gaye, etc.. Vocal harmonies from CSN, The Beatles, Yes, Ray Charles, and Gillian Welch/Dave Rawlings are very well defined and engaging.

Acoustic instruments are rendered organically with warm overtones. Electric guitars and synths cut through strongly when intended.

It’s been a true joy replaying familiar records and introducing new ones. It is interesting that lesser songs seem to grab me more and I appreciate what the artist had intended.

Jaqueline Dupre’s Elgar Cello Concerto has the most delicate then dynamic elements. The detail of the ensemble playing in Yes’ Fragile is magical - doubling of parts standing out like never before. Bob Dylan’s More Blood recording is an "in room" experience. The Living Stereo Charles Munch / Boston Symphony recordings - Ravel Daphne and Chloe and Fritz and the Fritz Reiner Chicago Symphony Bartok Symphonie Fantastic are explosive with quick and composed dynamics and subtle in the quieter nuanced sections. The drone of Chris Wood’s saxophone as it builds up in Traffic’s Low Spark of High Heeled Boys gave me goosebumps.

My whole system has been elevated in a major way.

The ZYX Optimum is one of those mind boggling components that dramatically converges on realism. The Optimum brings out the passion in reproduced music in ways I have never fully experienced before. The "you are there" essence is palpatible and so engaging.



Tom

128x128audiotomb

the person is trying to sell me something
  • I am in no way that persuasive
or the reviewer is trying to get his own equipment cheap or even free
  • wrong
  • I do not work for an audio magazine or have a high profile website

finally that the person is a head case
  • Not with regard to audio

more measured in your comments
  • I was being objective using common descriptive terms
  • I use live acoustic music as the standard to aspire to
  • perhaps if you read the professional review posts I provided in the "members reviews" duplicate thread you would see I am not alone.
https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/zyx-optimum-photo-cartridge-a-defining-statement#1758127

  • several of my audiophile friends had the same experience
  • there was no "A is better than B" other than in a specific line of cartridge upgrades with detailed tangible benefits
  • I am a scientist and my son is a classical musician

especially when describing stuff that very few of us can afford.
  • you are more than welcome to write comments on your expensive trip to visit the Taj Mahal. Many potential travelers would encourage you and get insight from this, even if they never go.
  • wouldn’t it be more important when a larger outlay is involved?
  • One might focus on which rooms to visit at a major audio show
  • The benefits of trickle down design



@audiotomb , Oratio pro domo is well known but not very
convincing argument. Lewm, our most eloquent member 
noticed the following: ''If you examine your own writing in your
post, you could see that you are using the same description 
terms over and over again to describe each new model''.
To me this means the limitations of the ordinary language 
for specific purpose. Each science has its own elaborated
terminology which make it possible that, say, Lewm can
talk about his own science with colleague from different
countries with poor knowledge of English. This is only possible
among people involved in the same science and thanks to
their own elaborated terminology. This, say, language is
different from the ordinary language used for all purposes.
I ever started a thread about ''irreparable  carts'' naming Sony
XL and ZYX as such. Their glued together acrylic body does
not allow acces to the inside of the cart. My own ZYX needed
new suspension and my friend Axel Schurholz needed to
drill hols and cut some parts to get acces to those crews on
the generator to fasten, among other , also the tension wire.
I then decided to never again buy any ZYX. Consider whomever
who spend such amount of money for the newest ''Optimum''
in need for an new suspension. 

I concur with @audiotomb that something special is going on with this cartridge. I acquired one just last week after owning the UNI Premium and the UNIverse II before that. I've only put 6 or 7 hours on the cartridge so far, but already its strengths are apparent.  It does not sound new and stiff to me at all - no need to make excuses about how it sounds during the break-in period. I will simply say that it sounds natural and real in a way that I haven't heard before, and that throws an interesting light on the high end Zyx carts that came before (the ones that I've heard). I liked and admired the UNI Premium but in hindsight I see that I never quite fell in love with it. While it sounded fuller in the midrange and deeper in the bass, and is probably the objectively better cartridge (IMHO), I didn't feel compelled by it in the way I did with the UNI II. I'm not sure what precise terms to put to that experience (@nandric I hear you) but perhaps it was a sense of clarity and liveliness that I missed after giving up the UNI II.

This is the kind of thing that we tend to fall back on the word "magic" for (a magical word). I think it's a kind of realism that's present in any good design or artistic performance.  A good sports car feels like it isn't there, even though of course you're flying down the highway. The design allows the car to get out of its own way. A great musician can seem to be channeling the music rather than producing it. Sometimes a good song appears to write itself, choosing it's author rather than the other way around. The Zyx UNI Optimum (what on Earth will he name the next one?) appears to have that same quality. All of a sudden the music just feels right, or real, or present, or however you want to say it.  

so to break it down more tightly, I'd just say there's a sense of greater detail in this cartridge, but without seeming exaggerated ('analytical'). The bass and midrange both have a resonant quality that I haven't heard before. You not only hear the front edge of the notes and all of its "slam" but also the resonance that comes afterwards. It's convincing and something new in my audio journey. Full midrange glory without skimping on the ends of the spectrum either. That is perhaps the most apparent and important quality of the sound that I've heard so far (not even 15 LPs yet!). Here's one more thing. This cartridge separates the instruments in a way that is profound but also natural. I've owned another popular one (I won't name names but its initials are AT ART9) that does separation so well that it seems forced, as if the musicians are playing on different stages. not so here.  

I'll stop there. I think the OP did a very good job of describing this cartridge and its strengths, and he braved the inevitable blowback to anyone extolling the virtues of a mega-costly and exclusive piece of audio gear. I understand the criticism and I wrestled with the issue quite a bit before deciding to make the move up the Zyx chain (and yes I do think it goes in that direction). I felt skeptical that any great stride could be made at this level, and for once I began to think that I was acting like an addict or a fool and not a rational consumer. (Well I guess that ship probably sailed a long time ago, but still). It's obviously reasonable to question the validity of these kinds of prices for a piece of gear, especially when it's the most delicate and potentially short-lived item that you'll buy. Most people would reasonably want to avoid spending that much on an entire audio system. And no question that the markup in high-end audio is sometimes (often?) exorbitant and even exploitive. But on the other hand there are intangibles in a product like this that are very difficult to tag with a monetary value. What price the work of a craftsman at the top of his game, honing the craft in a way that few people can?  

Jeez, I had no intention of going on like this but it's an interesting thread. I agree with you @nandric that our language can be imprecise and that comparisons are a bit of a crutch. But conversely, academic training can just as well produce rigidity and tunnel vision so I applaud the efforts here, even if they're imperfect. (my own comments are limited by the relatively small sample size of cartridges that I've heard in my own system).  And yes, @lewm makes a good point about the terms used by the OP (that the same descriptors are used repetitively and imprecisely in successive reviews.) But surely that same point applies to the entire output of Stereophile and Absolute Sound magazines, no? 


@jollytinker , The problem of the grammar of comparison is
its limited range. We are forced in some curious move from
''the Universe is the best'' but ''Optimum is even better''. This
is like ''Peter is the longest guy in our group but John is even
longer''. The thing is that we are forced to exaggerate to make
our point. What about general statement that some MC carts
 are marginal  better than other? This is the opposite side of
exaggeration. We are making subjectieve value judgments
while value judgment are not truth functional. Not a question
about truth or falsity. So we try to get consensus in valuation
in order to get some ''objectivity''.  I agree with chakster about
his valuation of the FR-7fz. So FR-7fz is objective an fantastic
cart? But truth and falsity are not an question of consensus.



Whoever said "the Universe is best"?


I’ve listened to plenty top flight cartridges that have impressed me.

This is my first step into the upper echelon. Like many, I was reluctant to dip my toe in the water. I have friends who have acquired very musically engaging (and as usual expensive) cartridges, Members of the local audiophile club have aspired in that direction as well.


Best? Of course not. What I can comment on is a progression within a single reputable cartridge line where their known strengths have become more refined. I sincerely apologize for my exuberance and lack of time to formulate a more formal review. I didn’t choose to come up with more elaborate words when describing improvement in the same area, hence the same general observations. I gave plenty of specific examples of artists / recordings that I found more impactful. It may be difficult to say one is exaggerating when one hasn’t had personal first hand experience. For some strange reason I didn’t have to utilize Latin to do so.


Thank you Jollytinker for your enthusiastic comments on your Optimum experiences and keen insights.

Enjoy