A Tale Of Two Amps:
Well. That was quick.
As I mentioned I was lent a new Bryston 4B3 amp from a friend while one of my Conrad Johnson monoblocks was being fixed. First time in years that I put a SS amp back in to the main system. I used to own a Bryston 4BST for a while, many years ago, along with my CJ. But it was mostly to have a SS reference when I used to do some speaker reviews. I always preferred the CJs.
In went the Bryston and even on the little Spendors I immediately recognized "that sound." Solid state, especially the sound I used to hear from my Bryston amp.
"Tight" and "Taught" were the words that immediately came to mind."Squeezed" was another. Bass was firmly in grip, every instrument and voice had excellent solid presence in the soundfield. Buzzing with energy and snap. The scrappy surf guitar parts on B-52s (vinyl) were clean and snappy. Rhythm guitar parts had solidity and energy. This was somewhat promising because if there are any nits to pick with the Joseph Speakers in my system, it’s that from the upper mids upward they can be a bit polite, dynamically. Rock certainly rocks and they are dynamic, but my Thiels are more solid from top to bottom. So I was curious about a beefy SS amp on the Josephs.
But still sticking with the Spendors, things I noticed were: the speakers sounded smaller. As if all the energy I’m used to hearing in the bass was tightened and pulled upwards, like putting a girdle on. So it’s like I became acutely aware of a distinct cut off point for the bass frequencies, almost like I could see it as an invisible line appearing just beneath the speakers. "No bass below here."
Similarly, the highs were a bit darkened, losing that slight golden airy open glow from the CJs. So, on top, I felt another "line" appear "highs stop here!" Thus I felt like I was "viewing" the sound through a narrower band.
I can only surmise this was due to the Bryston putting on a show of control over the speakers. No letting their hair down when Capn’ Bryston is on deck.
So the result was a more taught, tight, bouncy, transient-oriented sound.Every instrument sqeezed by the grip of the Bryston in to a slightly smaller space in the soundstage. Though the speakers still disappeared and soundstaged with precision, it didn’t feel as relaxed and natural in doing so.
Voices, usually peerless on the Spendors, still sounded good, but to my surprise some of the magic "wow that’s a human being singing right there!" was missing. Voices sounded just harder and tighter, smaller, more obviously a recording.
And though I listened for a little while with fascination, it was harder for me to get in to the music. I recognized that sort of "tense" sound that I perceive in typical solid state driven systems vs what I’m used to at home. It was kind of freaking me out that I wasn’t enjoying the Spendors nearly as much as normal, so I switched the Bryston on to the Joseph Perspectives.
The Josephs are so suave, so grain free and relaxed, and they disappear so effortlessly, that they didn’t immediately shout "solid state!" with the Bryston. I did notice, again, a particularly solid, tight, punchy feel for the bass, very focused. And guitar parts did take on an added bit of solidity.But as I played more familiar tracks, the SS nature of the sound became more clear. One of my favorite all time albums, Everything But The Girl Amplified Heart, has tracks were distant string sections gently well up in to the song. Here they sounded less beautiful, more grey and steely.The vocals sounded harder, more processed, more electronic in the sibilance.
I put on an Italian movie soundtrack that I was listening to just before my CJ died - lots of jazzy funky drumming with surprising horns, vocals, piano, strings etc.
The drums were solid with nice kick, snare had pop but not as much as I was expecting..in fact the tonality seemed less "real" than I’m used to, a little too dark. The high hat work though was very vivid and metallic and convincing. The most realistic high hat I’d heard on the system.
Then came a part where some luscious strings, distant though very vividly textured, usually appear swelling in from the background, like appearing from behind a curtain. Usually this part just makes me melt it’s so beautiful. But...huh? The strings appeared but not in that uprising tonally gorgeous way. More gray, suppressed, sitting back.The "moment" didn’t happen. Yikes.
Then I threw on my new CD, a re-recording of the Conan The Barbarian soundtrack, which has a massive, roaring overture with tons of kettle drums rumbling under your feet. This blew me away when I got it a few weeks ago. Powered by the Bryston, on either the Spendors or the Josephs, the sound was...well...very good but "where is that awe?"What the Bryston did superbly in my system, when it’s precision and grip really paid dividends, was on separating all the instrumental parts especially in the lower mids/upper bass, the power region of the string and lower horn sections. The lines being played by the many different horn sections have never been so clearly rendered. That was really impressive!
But I found it just didn’t sound as beautiful and real and natural as I remembered.
Anyway, I was able to get my CJ back from repair today and fired them back up. Started with the Spendors. And....
Oh...my....goodness! There it was! I’m NOT crazy! I WAS missing this.
The sound was huge, rich, vivid yet relaxed, energetic but not pushy or tense in the least. The speakers just seemed to disappear more. The bass was richer and fuller, the top glowed a bit more. Now the "top" and "bottom" opened up so I was no longer aware of some hard stopping/starting points in the frequency range so the "small speaker" effect was much less pronounced.
And...voices! They were back! Now the Spendors were doing that magic - the softness, roundness and richness with voices that made them sound human. Acoustic guitars, drum cymbals, had a luxurious golden harmonic sparkle.
Keep in mind, I’m going all audiophile in these descriptions. To the average Joe this may seem like subtle stuff, but the way the sound seemed to expand to fill virtually all my "button pushing" criteria had a profound effect. I could slip in to the sensation of hearing the performer, rather than a recording, in a way that I just couldn’t with the Bryston.
I’ve done this comparison many times over the years and it’s always the same. Every time I own, or borrow, a solid state amp I have a hard time sitting in front of my system to listen for very long. It’s like "Yeah, that’s neat...but time to do something else and I’ll just crank it for background music." But with the CJs powering speakers, I’m entranced. It’s luxurious, it does just what I want a high end system to do to keep me in my seat.
So, yup, yet another confirmation I’m a tube amp guy and love those darned CJ Premier 12s!
(And in no way would I suggest the CJs are some "ultimate" amp. They are like a 25 year old design, maybe older. And no doubt all sorts of attributes can be surpassed by other amps. But they still hold up damned well and have a certain sound that I can’t seem to give up).
Cheerio!
Well. That was quick.
As I mentioned I was lent a new Bryston 4B3 amp from a friend while one of my Conrad Johnson monoblocks was being fixed. First time in years that I put a SS amp back in to the main system. I used to own a Bryston 4BST for a while, many years ago, along with my CJ. But it was mostly to have a SS reference when I used to do some speaker reviews. I always preferred the CJs.
In went the Bryston and even on the little Spendors I immediately recognized "that sound." Solid state, especially the sound I used to hear from my Bryston amp.
"Tight" and "Taught" were the words that immediately came to mind."Squeezed" was another. Bass was firmly in grip, every instrument and voice had excellent solid presence in the soundfield. Buzzing with energy and snap. The scrappy surf guitar parts on B-52s (vinyl) were clean and snappy. Rhythm guitar parts had solidity and energy. This was somewhat promising because if there are any nits to pick with the Joseph Speakers in my system, it’s that from the upper mids upward they can be a bit polite, dynamically. Rock certainly rocks and they are dynamic, but my Thiels are more solid from top to bottom. So I was curious about a beefy SS amp on the Josephs.
But still sticking with the Spendors, things I noticed were: the speakers sounded smaller. As if all the energy I’m used to hearing in the bass was tightened and pulled upwards, like putting a girdle on. So it’s like I became acutely aware of a distinct cut off point for the bass frequencies, almost like I could see it as an invisible line appearing just beneath the speakers. "No bass below here."
Similarly, the highs were a bit darkened, losing that slight golden airy open glow from the CJs. So, on top, I felt another "line" appear "highs stop here!" Thus I felt like I was "viewing" the sound through a narrower band.
I can only surmise this was due to the Bryston putting on a show of control over the speakers. No letting their hair down when Capn’ Bryston is on deck.
So the result was a more taught, tight, bouncy, transient-oriented sound.Every instrument sqeezed by the grip of the Bryston in to a slightly smaller space in the soundstage. Though the speakers still disappeared and soundstaged with precision, it didn’t feel as relaxed and natural in doing so.
Voices, usually peerless on the Spendors, still sounded good, but to my surprise some of the magic "wow that’s a human being singing right there!" was missing. Voices sounded just harder and tighter, smaller, more obviously a recording.
And though I listened for a little while with fascination, it was harder for me to get in to the music. I recognized that sort of "tense" sound that I perceive in typical solid state driven systems vs what I’m used to at home. It was kind of freaking me out that I wasn’t enjoying the Spendors nearly as much as normal, so I switched the Bryston on to the Joseph Perspectives.
The Josephs are so suave, so grain free and relaxed, and they disappear so effortlessly, that they didn’t immediately shout "solid state!" with the Bryston. I did notice, again, a particularly solid, tight, punchy feel for the bass, very focused. And guitar parts did take on an added bit of solidity.But as I played more familiar tracks, the SS nature of the sound became more clear. One of my favorite all time albums, Everything But The Girl Amplified Heart, has tracks were distant string sections gently well up in to the song. Here they sounded less beautiful, more grey and steely.The vocals sounded harder, more processed, more electronic in the sibilance.
I put on an Italian movie soundtrack that I was listening to just before my CJ died - lots of jazzy funky drumming with surprising horns, vocals, piano, strings etc.
The drums were solid with nice kick, snare had pop but not as much as I was expecting..in fact the tonality seemed less "real" than I’m used to, a little too dark. The high hat work though was very vivid and metallic and convincing. The most realistic high hat I’d heard on the system.
Then came a part where some luscious strings, distant though very vividly textured, usually appear swelling in from the background, like appearing from behind a curtain. Usually this part just makes me melt it’s so beautiful. But...huh? The strings appeared but not in that uprising tonally gorgeous way. More gray, suppressed, sitting back.The "moment" didn’t happen. Yikes.
Then I threw on my new CD, a re-recording of the Conan The Barbarian soundtrack, which has a massive, roaring overture with tons of kettle drums rumbling under your feet. This blew me away when I got it a few weeks ago. Powered by the Bryston, on either the Spendors or the Josephs, the sound was...well...very good but "where is that awe?"What the Bryston did superbly in my system, when it’s precision and grip really paid dividends, was on separating all the instrumental parts especially in the lower mids/upper bass, the power region of the string and lower horn sections. The lines being played by the many different horn sections have never been so clearly rendered. That was really impressive!
But I found it just didn’t sound as beautiful and real and natural as I remembered.
Anyway, I was able to get my CJ back from repair today and fired them back up. Started with the Spendors. And....
Oh...my....goodness! There it was! I’m NOT crazy! I WAS missing this.
The sound was huge, rich, vivid yet relaxed, energetic but not pushy or tense in the least. The speakers just seemed to disappear more. The bass was richer and fuller, the top glowed a bit more. Now the "top" and "bottom" opened up so I was no longer aware of some hard stopping/starting points in the frequency range so the "small speaker" effect was much less pronounced.
And...voices! They were back! Now the Spendors were doing that magic - the softness, roundness and richness with voices that made them sound human. Acoustic guitars, drum cymbals, had a luxurious golden harmonic sparkle.
Keep in mind, I’m going all audiophile in these descriptions. To the average Joe this may seem like subtle stuff, but the way the sound seemed to expand to fill virtually all my "button pushing" criteria had a profound effect. I could slip in to the sensation of hearing the performer, rather than a recording, in a way that I just couldn’t with the Bryston.
I’ve done this comparison many times over the years and it’s always the same. Every time I own, or borrow, a solid state amp I have a hard time sitting in front of my system to listen for very long. It’s like "Yeah, that’s neat...but time to do something else and I’ll just crank it for background music." But with the CJs powering speakers, I’m entranced. It’s luxurious, it does just what I want a high end system to do to keep me in my seat.
So, yup, yet another confirmation I’m a tube amp guy and love those darned CJ Premier 12s!
(And in no way would I suggest the CJs are some "ultimate" amp. They are like a 25 year old design, maybe older. And no doubt all sorts of attributes can be surpassed by other amps. But they still hold up damned well and have a certain sound that I can’t seem to give up).
Cheerio!