Well, well, well...we had a slight breakthrough this evening. As some may have observed, I decided to go back after 10-12 years and explore where grounding has gotten to in all those years. There are quite a lot of posts under the bridge about my experiences with the then new Tripoint Troy Signature vs the Entreq Silver Tellus at the time (much less expensive but very very good nonetheless)...and my decision at that time to run with Tripoint. For all the reasons of clarity, nuance, air, decay and just pure EASE.Furthermore, once I have decided which I think is right...I might still try to see if I can have my cake and eat it too. A gentle nudge in upper bass power is something I am ruminating as we get to know the sound.
As for the 10% of tracks where I have a coin-toss between Koda and Mephisto...Tron Legacy soundtrack - Track 17. Those opening Kodo-like drums are a very very good example...perhaps the clearest example so far. I know them well from the Gryphon Mephisto. You have greater articulation through the Kodas but at super low levels of volume, the Mephisto's upper bass balance allows you to listen at level 1...and never feel the need to increase volume because the power is there.
On the Robert Koda, you do feel that itch to turn it up a bit...not for detail but for power.
The other one is Dark Knight Rises...the opening track. The bass is more congealed with the Gryphon...power, drama...B-A-S-S. With the Koda, you get drama, power, BASS...but it is more articulated by far and you really start to hear how Hans Zimmer built up the bass lines in this.
Here it is definitely more convincing that you run with Koda over Mephstio (vs the Tron soundtrack above)...and also because the bass power of the music is more evenly distributed between upper bass and lower bass (where again the Robert Koda is actually more powerful than the Mephisto).
But once again, if you listen casually, there is a raw power pull that you hear with the Gryphon which is also compelling. Again, in this instance, I also find that at super low volumes, there is something compelling about the Gryphon...but it is not nearly as 50-50 balanced between the winner as with Tron Track 17. Here I still find that Dark Knight Rises goes to Koda as winner.
Still, I always remembered that the Entreq had a way with deep house, specifically when there are LOADS of inter-mixed beats and syncopated rhythms...the Entreq always seemed to have a much better way of keeping them perfectly in synch...truly effortless...in a way the Tripoint did not match...and also with FAR greater propulsion (I said so at the time even after making clear my decision to run with Tripoint which we still use today).
Fast forward to the last 5.5 days...we have had the latest Entreq Olympus Infinity Tungsten and Entreq Pluton (3 Olympus Infinity Tungsten's in 1 box)...so a total of 4 Olympus Infinity Tungsten boxes...accompanied by a cadre of their reference Olympus signal cables and reference Peak 4 binding posts.
Day 1-2, it was definitely an upgrade over the Tripoint Troy Signature (now 10 years old)...but [at first] a nice incremental one...but worth a change? Hmmm...
Day 3-5...then along came some improvements...ok, definitely more...perhaps more obvious on certain tracks...but the above reference tracks where bass was not quite as all-out-assault powerful with Koda as Gryphon...not yet that obvious.
...then along came the last 5 hours...smokes! The entire presentation of bass has sharpened, become MUCH more powerful than the Gryphon...and THAT is saying something! And it retains the remarkable integration of an organic whole with the rest of the spectrum...and LOADS more detail that always came with the wonderous Robert Koda monos.
...it's all new right now...but this is now definitive across 6 different albums (soundtracks of Tron, Mission Impossible, Mary Queen of Scots, as well as Mark Isham albums, 1492, etc)...and yes on other test house albums from Fabric.
...perhaps we should wait a bit longer, but if this remains, then it is DEFINITELY about having cake and eating it too. Organic, of a whole, SUPER powerful, an extraordinary way with multiple subtle house electronic rhythms at once...you really hear inter-related beats not just between drum tracks but repeated whispers or keyboard notes which before were just playing in their own time...NOW, they play OFF other beats in the music which was just not understandable (at all) before.
and decay, decay, decay. Such a deft hand with the bass now and yet wackingly great POWER (again, definitely greater than the Gryphon in the house using Tripoint.)
...more to come. Well done Entreq.
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