I had an unplanned, last minute and extremely enjoyable lunch with Myles yesterday.
After lunch Myles invited me to visit his new apartment, his new cats and his new system. It was great to see again Myles' wonderful wife, Heidi!
Since Tinka and I visited Myles and Heidi in early 2017, Myles switched from conrad-johnson electronics to Goldman electronics, and from Magico S series loudspeakers to the Zellaton Plural Evo.
I don't know the effect of cj versus Goldmund but the Zellaton Plural Evo seemed great. The sound was very analog, very organic and very natural sounding. I perceived emotionally a materially easier suspension of disbelief than the Magico-based system.
Instead of a merely excellent-sounding stereo (and Myles had his S series Magico speakers playing the best I've ever heard the S series sound) the system sounds like music. I could relax and enjoy the music, and not hear electronic artifice or any artificiality.
I think the mid-range driver covering from 1 kHz to 7 kHz must have something to do with the organic and continuous sound I heard. The texture and the resolution of low frequencies was incredible whenever I chose to focus on it. The speaker also seemed "quiet" -- similar in the way that I love from the Wilson Audio XVX.
The experience suggested to me that I did not hear the Zellaton Statement in Munich statement in a complementary system. (There I perceived and explained a sonic attribute I described as a "hyper-fast sound" which I decidedly did not care for.)
As I told Myles, I don't know if I personally would prefer the prior c-j electronics over the Goldmund electronics, but there was nothing solid-state sounding about the Goldmund electronics.
In Myles' and Heidi's new and much larger apartment, it was very fun to receive a tour of Myles' extremely extensive and carefully organized record collection!
Thanks to Myles and Heidi for a fantastic, relaxing and music-filled afternoon!
After lunch Myles invited me to visit his new apartment, his new cats and his new system. It was great to see again Myles' wonderful wife, Heidi!
Since Tinka and I visited Myles and Heidi in early 2017, Myles switched from conrad-johnson electronics to Goldman electronics, and from Magico S series loudspeakers to the Zellaton Plural Evo.
I don't know the effect of cj versus Goldmund but the Zellaton Plural Evo seemed great. The sound was very analog, very organic and very natural sounding. I perceived emotionally a materially easier suspension of disbelief than the Magico-based system.
Instead of a merely excellent-sounding stereo (and Myles had his S series Magico speakers playing the best I've ever heard the S series sound) the system sounds like music. I could relax and enjoy the music, and not hear electronic artifice or any artificiality.
I think the mid-range driver covering from 1 kHz to 7 kHz must have something to do with the organic and continuous sound I heard. The texture and the resolution of low frequencies was incredible whenever I chose to focus on it. The speaker also seemed "quiet" -- similar in the way that I love from the Wilson Audio XVX.
The experience suggested to me that I did not hear the Zellaton Statement in Munich statement in a complementary system. (There I perceived and explained a sonic attribute I described as a "hyper-fast sound" which I decidedly did not care for.)
As I told Myles, I don't know if I personally would prefer the prior c-j electronics over the Goldmund electronics, but there was nothing solid-state sounding about the Goldmund electronics.
In Myles' and Heidi's new and much larger apartment, it was very fun to receive a tour of Myles' extremely extensive and carefully organized record collection!
Thanks to Myles and Heidi for a fantastic, relaxing and music-filled afternoon!
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