The Fastest most musical amp


Since I got the upgrade bug and the only cure is to change my preamp and amp I am looking for some advice of our great Audiophile community to help me find the amplifier and preamp combo that suits me best. My priority are the folowing: I want to find the FASTEST and MOST MUSICAL amp and preamp ( It can be tube preamp ( tough I think all tube preamp are slow) or solid state preamp but only solid state amp.) I know that spectral is known to be one of the fastest but I don`t like the idea of being forced to use the Networked MIT cable (which slow up the sound much)
dismalonyx
Nomenclature in the audio world can be a little strange at times. "Fast" what is fast in an amplifier. All electons travel at the same speed. While I make some fun of the term, and can not explain fully what "fast" is--I immediately knew what character was being referred to. The amp that immediately came to mind was the Bel Canto Evo 200.2 (I believe that was the model). I was really impressed with this amp, it seemed to effortlessly be there with all the reserves for the music. What was more impressive is that it is a digital amp and did not lose it's musicality--something I did not expect. I've only auditioned it once, and thus do not have enough experience with it to point out where it might fall short. But I can say on my short audition--it is definitely "fast".
Dis:

Not a clue as to where you are coming from, based on your posts/answers (which seem to be all over the map), and also considering that you do not have a listed system.

As far as an informed opinions go I will suggest that you list the rest of the intended setup, then go from there.
Dismalonyx writes: "I think all tube preamp are slow"

Ah, nothing like generalizations to stir the pot.

That's not my experience. I do own a hand-made valve preamp from the '80s (made by Allen Wright) that one may call a little slow, but it has a ton of magic. In contrast, my BAT VK-50SE is a rocket ship - slow is not a word that springs to mind when listening to this unit at my place.

Regards
The Edge NL10 is very fast, and lets you hear micro- dynamic contrasts better than any amp I've ever heard. It allows you to listen deep into the music, and hear things you've never heard. Indeed, many high-end amps I've had lately didn't even reproduce these contrasts and micro-dynamics. But the truly remarkable thing about the NL10 is how grain free, liquid, and full bodied the midrange is. This is the only solidstate amp I've owned that I can honestly say reproduces music in ways very similar to the best tube amps, while still keeping all the advantages of solidstate. I have owned and auditioned solidstate amps in the past that pretend to be tube amps by making the midrange more robust and full bodied, but less transparent in the process. I truly disdain this when I hear it. My allegiance is really towards tube amps, my last being a Wyetech Topaz and ASL Hurricanes modified by Israel Blume. But because of current hungry speakers, I bought the Edge. I now have very efficient speakers (97db), and surprisingly, the Edge works equally well with them.

The Edge is very transparent, but in a natural way that is totally unfatiguing and amazingly detailed. Speed is excellent at all frequencies. Cymbals have the right amount of attack and decay, guitar strings and bass sound natural without a thickening of the notes and overemphasis on sounds that are incidental to the playing of the instrument, such as fingers sliding off the strings (a phenomenon I have found in the best SETs), but not part of the music itself. Human breaths in vocals sounds right, without becoming too obvious (a fault I noted in the Joule Electra OTL). The wetness of the breath is still there, and the Edge is the only solidstate amp I've heard to date that can reproduce it.

For bass speed, I would use the example of the Waterworld soundtrack, where the solo bass drums are used in the opening title. When the drums hit their lowest notes, the lowest note of the drum can sometimes linger into the next, higher note. The Edge keeps each note clean, without any exageration of the decay of the instrument.

I read a comment in the Audiogon Discussion Forums about the Edge amps having a "bite". The NL10 does, until you have about 200 hours on it, but really sounds great after 500. After that, this amp is completely free of electronic artifacts, and an absolute joy to listen to. The amps I would consider from here would possibly be the Tenor OTLs, which I heard at the 2003 CES.