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Jules Coleman on CES 2004: |
When my soul needed nourishment, I found myself returning to three rooms at the CES. There was a magic in these rooms, a naturalness of sound, an ease of presentation in which barriers between sound and music, between hearing and feeling, between passively listening and actively experiencing were largely -- and occasionally entirely -- removed. In no particular order (and referring to the rooms by the names of the speakers for simplicity) I touched and was touched by the soul of music in the Audiopax, Duevel and FJ rooms.
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If the Audiopax speaker was my outstanding new product introduced at this year's CES, then the Duevel room gets a special nod for introducing two products that have attained fame elsewhere but are nearly unknown here: The Duevel omni-directional, partially horn-loaded loudspeaker and the Pluto turntable. The Duevel loudspeakers have regularly won "Best of Show" awards at European High-End shows, including the prestigious Frankfurt Show where they are often paired with the Klimo Beltaine 300B amplifiers. Ted Lindblad of HighEndAudio.com imports both into the States and thus was able to give Vegas showgoers an ample dose of what it is that has captured the imagination of our European counterparts. On hand were the Bella Luna Diamante, a full-range, omni-directional loudspeaker driven with a mere 5 watts/channel by the superb Klimo Beltaine monoblock. When you think omni-directional, you think mbl. When you think mbl, you do not think 5 watts. You also don't think full-range loudspeakers for 7.5K; and certainly not as beautifully finished as these. When you think Duevel Bella Luna, this, my friend, is exactly how you are encouraged to think. Very liberating, n'est ce pas? Magnifique.
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It takes time for some people raised on audiophile-approved loudspeakers to adjust to an omni-directional radiator. Images are stable but less finely delineated in space - in other words, more like live music, less like music reproduction. In the Duevel room, sound was full, spatial cues and effects eerie. What distinguished the room from others was the mixture of tonal correctness and naturalness. Visitors to the room were awash in an enthralling, natural soundscape. It was hard to leave; many apparently never did.
While a scribe at UltraAudio, I reviewed the smaller Duevel Venus. After living with the baby of the Duevel family and hearing the much larger Jupiter (the granddaddy of all Duevels), I did a Goldilocks and purchased a pair of the Bella Luna on display in Vegas. In fact, that very pair was just reviewed by fellow moonie, John Potis. He loved 'em. So do I.
The Audiopax room had a digital front-end to die for. Digital playback in the Duevel room was handled by the new Audio Logic MXL DAC, designed by digital guru Jerry Ozment. The name may not ring a bell for you, but Ozment's designs are at the heart of a good number of SOTA digital playback devices you are familiar with - Altis, for example. For years, Jerry has designed and manufactured a very limited number of digital products under the Audio Logic brand name. Ask around; folks in the know will tell you that everything he touches is special - and this $4K DAC is a marvel. I own one. So does moonman Jeff Day, albeit he was romanced by an earlier version already.
For analogue junkies, the real treat in the Duevel room was the appearance of both the Pluto 1 turntable and its designer, Eddie Driessen. There was simply no better turntable sound at the show. There may well be no better turntable in the world. I spent most of my time in the Duevel room begging Mr. Driessen for an opportunity to review his table. He was polite but pretended not to understand my English. I'm working on it, though. He and I are going to discuss the possibility of a review when he returns to the States in three months' time. Let's keep our fingers crossed. Perhaps his "hearing" will improve?
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Down the hall meanwhile was German Grand Central for Duevel and Klimo, with Pluto's mighty 10A turntable from The Netherlands, plus an important smattering of Americana (Audio Logic 24 MXL tube DAC) and Japanese Zen minimalism (47Lab Flatfish transport).
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I knew from John's and Jules' respective Duevel speaker reviews that their omnidirectional dispersion pattern would make for a different, less focused presentation than that which direct radiators deliver. Regardless of mental preparations, my ear/brain machine didn't manage to entirely transition into omni land during the admittedly brief 2-track short which wasn't enough to acclimate completely to their more diffuse presentation.
Regardless, there was something supremely airy, spacious and non-electronic about this 7-watt triode-driven room that, for lack of a less overgrazed word, must be dubbed relaxed and very natural. Curiously enough, this very same quality also caused a slightly distanced reaction in me. By comparison, I found the Audiopax/Zanden room more involving. Still, I got enough of an 'omni hit' to want to delve far more deeply into this brand than my pressed-for-time show presence allowed. Incidentally, our own Count Turoczi [or Les-is-more to his friends] is slated to do the honors on Marcus Duevel's top Jupiters once importer Ted can secure a review pair. Jules meanwhile's got the major reviewer Jones for the massive Pluto table and, audio gods willing, may actually get his hands on one for a 2004 write-up. And while greed's ruling, someone here at 6moons oughta do not lunch but Dusan Klimo's Beltane monoblocks. Monsieur Ted?
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See how sexist this headline reads? Let's flush it down van der loo and let Marja share her impressions of CES 04 from a different perspective, one that refuses to get mixed up in this type of male-dominated skewed reality. Here goes:
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