Fremer lays an Ostrich egg...


From the start, let us say i am a little biased. i read with particular interest the review about the Levinson 53 Amplifiers in the current Stereophile, amps i currently own of course. i also have a Levinson 326S preamp, an EMM Lab CDP, and Von Schweikert VR9SE speakers, all linked up with transparent wire.
my previous amps btw were Levinson 33H mono's which i loved.
According to Mikey, the amps basically suck. no life. no harmonics. uninvolving. flat. they measure great for the most part, except for some anomilies outside of stuff the human ear can detect anyway. they are put together nicely too. But... they have a (dreaded) switch-mode power supply which i get the distinct impression MF decided ahead of time was going to screw up the sound. and so it did (i guess- who really knows what goes on in his head?) so every OTHER sentence in the review emphasizes transparency and dead quiet, neutral sound while the "meat" of the article states the amplifier doesn't have "heart and soul". the Absolute Sound did not reach the same conclusion, but did intimate the amps had an austere quality.
AND THIS is MY review- the ML#53's are not for everybody. they are DEAD NEUTRAL. they are DYNAMIC. DETAILED. my system COOKS when i put on a really good recording of a really good performance. if however the signal lacks in significant areas then I HAVE TO EXTRACT THE MUSIC out of the sound my speakers are making. if i love the performance this is easy for me to do. if i don't care that much about the CD, then it gets sold or just not played that much. other good attributes- the amps never get HOT, they are not impossible to move around (with a little help), they have protection circuitry that kicks in whenever the power goes out. AND FINALLY there is a pair of speakers they won't power up somewhere on the planet. i would like
to see them so i can warn people not to match them up. this could take awhile however.
it floored me when Fremer sold his SF Amati Homage speakers and got Watt Puppy 7's instead. He couldn't say enough good things about the Sonus Fabers, and yet he traded them for a much more analytical sounding speaker, probably for the super-detailed, super focused sound. His reviews of $$,$$$ phono stages are hilarious- what a set of ears he possesses!
when it comes to VPI turntables, he disliked the Aries but LOVED the less-accomplished Scoutmaster. I would guess the Classic-3 is pretty good as well, but i have 0.01% confidence
in M.Fremers' opinion of it. BUT i would welcome anyone ELSE'S professional opinion. At $6,000 it's not an inexpensive investment. add an SDS and a cartridge (and a record cleaning machine) and you're looking at $8500. If in fact VPI (and SO MANY OTHER TURNTABLES) have long engineered an OUTBOARD MOTOR UNIT to isolate noise and enhance the sound, wouldn't you want to know EXACTLY what the deal is with the Classic line? i sure would, and i am a HUGE fan of SOME of VPI's products and i own several.
OTOH, i am a mere peon, peasant, ignorant on the subject of SOTA Analog, and whatever other descripion you might want to label me with. But i think i can say my opinions are consistent and follow a logical pattern.
trying to detect that quality from M.F.'s writings is difficult and at times impossible. and yes, even laughable. i myself have owned (over a long period of time) Levinson, Krell, S. Faber, Pass, and Rowland amplifiers and listened to them in my own home. the ML#53's are very accomplished amps and represent some of the best solid state available, cleaner and faster than the ML-33H's that Stereophile liked so much. Yes they are probably better suited for classical and jazz, and hi-rez recordings are invaluable to bring out the best in them.
but they do not "sound flat and uninvolving". amps don't generally do that anyway- speakers do. Put on a Rachel Podger SACD on Pentatone of Mozart and/or Haydn (or Julia Fisher) and bathe in the warmth of
the sound flowing out of your speakers. Everyone (including ordinary people with ordinary hearing) who have heard my system thinks it sounds "really nice". That's good enough for me. I also think it sounds "really nice".
And i can be pretty picky.
french_fries
I agree with Mapman and Tpreaves above. Why do you care what some reviewer says about your amps? Remember, this is the guy who claimed that the Harmonic Technology Cyber Light Cables were the most significant improvement he had ever heard in his life and they turned out to be so full of harmonic distortion and sonic issues that John Atkinson deemed them to be broken. Funny that that issue quietly went away. And reviewers have different systems and listening bias, obviously. The important thing is that you like how your amps sound. Period.
I'm in with the in crowd... Sometimes people want their opinions validated. Or their taste in cars, wine or audio equipment, etc. Nothing wrong with that. I have disagreements with some of the salespeople at my favorite audio store many times. I know my background, in electronics and music. I have heard people speak volumes about particular speakers only to listen for myself and find them really bad. Same for amps. I still find most Krell amps to be overly bright. However, this is my musical opinion. I still tell people to go listen for themselves. or better, take it home and install it in their personal system and listen for themselves. If you know what you like and you hear it in your system, then you are "there". Doesn't matter what others think. However, it is difficult to read a reviewer blast the equipment you purchased. That is just the game that is played. I strongly disagree with Stereophile's philosophy regarding their best lists. It is based solely on what they reviewed lately. Regardless of whether a piece of equipment is still in production. This to me makes no sense. To validate their publication, in my opinion, they should keep equipment in their lists until it is no longer in production if they reviewed it previously. Taking it out of their list because it has not been recently reviewed is disingenuous at the least. But, remember, magazines like this try hard to run the industry by forcing manufacturers to submit equipment for review and to keep coming out with newer and better equipment (even though most times they aren't) just so they can get their equipment reviewed or in that particular magazine. My opinion? find what you like and enjoy life.

enjoy
This morning I was reading my treasured copies of The Audio Critic. The previous post reminds me of Peter. I read the Audio Critic from time to time to cleanse my mind of all the pollution it can pick up on this site.

The OP:
The OP needs to remind himself that the purpose of an amp is to make small electrical signals into bigger electrical signals. Thats all. If your amp or any amp is doing anything else, like sucking air out of music, or being dry or acting like an amusing little amp, and all other such nonsense, then you have a faulty piece of equipment and you should return it for repair or a refund. The comments of Mr Fermer are not true simply because amps CANNOT do what he says yours are doing. Go online and read the Audio Critic, your mind may need cleaning or degaussing or whatever. You stay here long enough you will be sucked in without realizing it. The Critic has a few choice words for the gang at the rag in question.
Cheers
Chadeffect, well said. Kalman's analogy

["Class-D amplifiers are to the High End what electric cars are to the auto industry. Everyone acknowledges the advantages of the technology in terms of efficiency and ecological benevolence, but so far, neither has captured the souls of aficionados who demand cutting-edge sound regardless of the cost, wheather in dollars or degrees."] Kalman Rubinson.

I'm a class D fan and am currently using Hypex nCore 400 kits powering my studio monitors. At the same time I'm using a pair of tetrodes in my main system.

The nCores were less than $1400 delivered and I've never spent over $5000 retail for my other class D choices. While the ML 53's have an impressive design and build does the effort warrant their $50,000 cost? I haven't a clue.

In my studio nothing come close to what class D offers in transparency and bass definition. I've come to realize that these attributes are not my preferred choice for overall everyday listening. I find the improvement Bruno has brought to this technology extremely encouraging.

Vicdamone,

thank you. I am just debating using the Hypex nCore for my near field studio monitors. Could I PM you on your thoughts? I don't want to derail this thread.

Part of me cannot be bothered to run in and get used to yet another set of active monitors.