Daer Thom,
After speaking with you yesterday I revisited this thread as you suggested in reference to the cartridge being or not being a balanced component. I am convinced that there is no downside to treating the source pickup as integrely balanced. I think the wiring of the tonearm from cartridge clips straight through to the phono pre line stage is the best way to exploit what potentialy can be a sound advantage in a fully balanced system.
I think that the advantages of a fully differental balanced system with first rate Phono Stage design intergrated into the Line stage to avoid signal degredation through interconnects in concert with seperate stand alone dedicated power supplies says a lot about what makes a good phono pre line amplifier.
I am so glad I did take a second look The first time I was here it left my head swimming trying to understand the logic of the technical positions presented here. I have learned no small amount since then, I understand more yet I still am content to just soak it up and keep listening to all the points of view.
Some things may feel repetitious at times but my experience is one of participents trying to achive clarity and understanding of the ideas they expound and, in this thread particularly, add detail and nuance to them in the process.
Thank you for taking the high road and encouraging the serious conversation we have enjoyed on this thread.
Now something I do have an area of expertise in is the venues of New York City. Avery Fisher Hall is best for theatre not music. Full of dead spots and more bounce then a pensy pinky. It is a failed experiment that an acoustic remodling failed to cure. The New York State Theatre and The Met are architectural monuments of beauty but not sound. Carnegie Hall has the BMT train running underneath it (besides practice its the best way to get there).
Now Town Hall is nice, it once housed the NY Philharmonic and Metropolitan Opera. It is a preferred medium sized venue. A while back I saw Elvis Costello and the Brodsky Quartet perform the Julliet Letters there. Very intimate yet a very large sound.
It is a shame that the plans to move the Met and Lincoln Center as part of a downtown arts center rebuilding the Ground Zero Battery Park area never bore fruit. IM Pei or Frank Gehry was supposed to design it.
The Opera Houses of Europe like the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, the Gustav Mailer Hall in Viena, and La Scala Opera, these are made for Music.
In NYC give me Upstairs at Max's, CBGB's, the Fillmore East, the Lennox Lounge, The Blue Note, The Village Vanguard,The Ritz, Bonds, Irving Plaza The Cotton Club, the Bottom Line and the Apollo Theatre.
If I had to think of the place I'd like my system to sound like it would be the Electric Circus back in the sixties on Saint Marks Place. When Hendrix was recording across town at Electric Ladyland Studio he would play with everyone there. He once said if I could just get whats in my head out on stage or on the record it would be far out., but I just can't do it man.
BTW Thom did you know that on the Beatles first American tour ticket sales were poor at Red Rocks so they canceled a show, but they sold out the Hollywood Bowl twice, but I have digressed.
Thanks again
Groovey Records
Listening to
Stravinsky-The Firebird-Anatal Dorati-London Symphony Orchestra
Original Mercury Living Presence SR 90226
After speaking with you yesterday I revisited this thread as you suggested in reference to the cartridge being or not being a balanced component. I am convinced that there is no downside to treating the source pickup as integrely balanced. I think the wiring of the tonearm from cartridge clips straight through to the phono pre line stage is the best way to exploit what potentialy can be a sound advantage in a fully balanced system.
I think that the advantages of a fully differental balanced system with first rate Phono Stage design intergrated into the Line stage to avoid signal degredation through interconnects in concert with seperate stand alone dedicated power supplies says a lot about what makes a good phono pre line amplifier.
I am so glad I did take a second look The first time I was here it left my head swimming trying to understand the logic of the technical positions presented here. I have learned no small amount since then, I understand more yet I still am content to just soak it up and keep listening to all the points of view.
Some things may feel repetitious at times but my experience is one of participents trying to achive clarity and understanding of the ideas they expound and, in this thread particularly, add detail and nuance to them in the process.
Thank you for taking the high road and encouraging the serious conversation we have enjoyed on this thread.
Now something I do have an area of expertise in is the venues of New York City. Avery Fisher Hall is best for theatre not music. Full of dead spots and more bounce then a pensy pinky. It is a failed experiment that an acoustic remodling failed to cure. The New York State Theatre and The Met are architectural monuments of beauty but not sound. Carnegie Hall has the BMT train running underneath it (besides practice its the best way to get there).
Now Town Hall is nice, it once housed the NY Philharmonic and Metropolitan Opera. It is a preferred medium sized venue. A while back I saw Elvis Costello and the Brodsky Quartet perform the Julliet Letters there. Very intimate yet a very large sound.
It is a shame that the plans to move the Met and Lincoln Center as part of a downtown arts center rebuilding the Ground Zero Battery Park area never bore fruit. IM Pei or Frank Gehry was supposed to design it.
The Opera Houses of Europe like the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam, the Gustav Mailer Hall in Viena, and La Scala Opera, these are made for Music.
In NYC give me Upstairs at Max's, CBGB's, the Fillmore East, the Lennox Lounge, The Blue Note, The Village Vanguard,The Ritz, Bonds, Irving Plaza The Cotton Club, the Bottom Line and the Apollo Theatre.
If I had to think of the place I'd like my system to sound like it would be the Electric Circus back in the sixties on Saint Marks Place. When Hendrix was recording across town at Electric Ladyland Studio he would play with everyone there. He once said if I could just get whats in my head out on stage or on the record it would be far out., but I just can't do it man.
BTW Thom did you know that on the Beatles first American tour ticket sales were poor at Red Rocks so they canceled a show, but they sold out the Hollywood Bowl twice, but I have digressed.
Thanks again
Groovey Records
Listening to
Stravinsky-The Firebird-Anatal Dorati-London Symphony Orchestra
Original Mercury Living Presence SR 90226