I heard the new D'Agostino Progression 800w monoblocks last night


Last night was the 11th Music Matters event at Seattle's Definitive Audio.

Here's a pic of Dan D'Agostino with his monoblocks, and flanked by the very new Wilson Alexx.

Facebook picture of Dan at the event

This was a true premier event. Dan Wilson and Dan D'Agostino were still doing final soldering on their respective units the weekend before this event.

The monoblocks are around 170 lbs ea (IIRC), and make 800/1600/3200/6400 watts into 8/4/2/1 ohm respectively.

This was a new experience for me--to hear audio playback with NO discernible ceiling on power. Completely unfettered dynamic range. Of course, these not only have incredible brute power, but also incredible finesse, with very natural timbres, unfailingly musical presentation, and subterranean bass extension. To my audio memory, they made the $100K Alexx's sound much like the $200K XLFs I heard a few years earlier.

They played music from digital sources and also from LPs played on an AMG turntable. All sounded great. D'Agostino also featured a phono preamp and a great line stage as well. 

johnnyb53
Thanks for sharing! certainly remarkable ! The craftsmanship put in by Dan speaks for itself. 

If I was so fortunate to be able to attend that event I am not sure how everything else would measure up after that. 
Are these amps Class A or Class A/B?
Dan and co. never mentioned the topology, but given that they're stable and double power all the way down to a 1-ohm load (6400 W), weigh over 150 lbs. each, have 84 output transistors, and functioned as space heaters in the demo room, I'm inclined to guess Class A.

If I was so fortunate to be able to attend that event I am not sure how everything else would measure up after that.

That's why I always start with the Wilson room. Anything that impresses me after that has to have it going on. As it happens, I was also very impressed with the Audio Research/Magnepan 20.7 room and the McIntosh/Focal Sopra No.2 room. Personally, I liked the airy and realistic soundstage presented by the Maggie 20.7s. The Sopras were also very impressive for their output, transparency, and bass extension at $14K (same price as the 20.7s).