>>"Koln Concert", a favorite of mine, the piano was difficult to listen to at normal listening levels.<<
I thought this was interesting, so I got both my original vinyl and later CD copies of Koln Concert to listen to on Black Shadows/Def4s. It's been a years since I listened to this on Black Shadows and never have on Def4s. The reason is that I mostly listen to piano on my Druids system, and that is powered by the Audion 300B PSET amps, which have KR Audio 300B tubes installed.
For anyone who doesn't know, Jarret's "Koln Concert" is a live recording at the opera house in Koln, Germany, in 1975. It was a startlingly clear recording when it was released, having come out smack in the middle of the junk vinyl era after the first Arab oil embargo and the general 70s assault on quality on just about everything. Atypical for the era, the surface is very quiet. Before audiophile LPs went mainstream with Sinatra and classic rock, this was about as good as a common record store disc got. This is an excellent recording and I'm glad Jordan brought it up because more people ought to know it and use it to get familiar with new gear. The piano is quite close-mic'd and the recording gives you some idea of why clean dynamic power helps even a solo piano recording, all other things being reasonably equal. Even then, on the not-as-wide-bandwidth speakers of the mid-70s, the recording sounded assertive and shifted somewhat bright. Not at all ever harsh but it nakedly lays open the tonality, transients and dynamics of an open concert piano.
Koln Concert was one of the first recordings I listened to on Definition 1.5s back in 2005. Played loud, this recording excited enough of that speaker's untamed MDF cabinet talk to limit pleasing SPLs. It was how I first noticed Def1.5's mid-to-treble glare. Of course at the same time, Druid v3.5's darkness over-tamed the recording, rendering it beautiful in an amber way but not quite revealed for what is in the groove. Druid 4-08 handled it quite nicely, for balance and transmitting the smack of the mic'ing arrangement. Def2 gave it a fairly objective reading with some tonal forgiveness thrown in by virtue of its midrange recession.
I listened today on Druids/Audion PSET 300B first, because that's how I've listened to the recording exclusively over the past few years, with Druid V being the voicing speaker since last autumn. I also listen to this now and then on Stax headphones driven by a vintage Stax tube energizer/preamp. That's always a good linear check on whether anything downstream of the source is telling the truth or not. The brightness intrinsic to the clarity and mic placement (and the quality of the mics themselves) is there no matter what I've ever played the recording on, BUT it's not objectionable *to me* because that's how I came to understand the recording to represent the performance from the start. Put another way, if I'd had my ears where the mics were placed in 1975, I feel pretty certain I'd have heard a similar glare where the recording has them too.
So after listening to the vinyl copy, I went to the CD. My CD copy is a Japanese SHM-CD print from maybe 10 years ago or so -- whenever SHM first appeared. It is clearly mastered a little differently than the vinyl LP, sounding somewhat less immediate and focused though quite beautiful for CD. Its perspective is a bit back and away from the soundboard, and the spikey glare of the sharpest piano notes in the first cut aren't as peaky nor is there all the graceful decay of the analog pressing. Stax again to verify, then moved both recordings over to Def4/Black Shadow.
The "phasey" part might be new tubes limbering in. The brightness -- all there and I can imagine new 845Bs aggravating it some. I put a softer-sounding rectifier in my preamp and changed out my Siemens CCa input tubes for the milder and more euphonic RCA 6922s. Hmm...just like dialing back the midrange tone control a skosh on a Marantz 1060 integrated amp. Then I also pulled the muscular NOS Tung-Sol 5687 drivers, subbing in the Buick-ride, whitewall Raytheons. Shaved the remaining glare right off while still keeping the essence of piano chime, making everything more distant.
So to me, the Audion amps and the truth-telling Def4s are playing what's there. But the recording is vivid and not leavened for a distant audience perspective. No doubt, if you'd been in the 5th row of the opera that night in 1975, your experience of the sound projection would have been quite different from someone else in the 25th. This recording forces you near the stage.
I went back to the Druids/300B system. I replaced the x-ray KR 300Bs with the willfully euphonic Sophia mesh plates. More mist and romance but the brightness persists. I changed phono cartridges from the agile Denon 103D to Ortofon SPU Synergy. Whoa, Baby -- did that piano suddenly get Way Huge, Dude! All the SPU glories in heaps but no getting away from the mic'ing. Going back to the CD, I replaced the vivid Bendix 2c51 output tubes in my DAC with the creamy Hytron 5670s. There's that magic Marantz midrange tone control again, dialed back just a bit.
The Black Shadows have all-silver signal paths and those amps had the Nichicon power supply recap. They're not going to be hiding much about the essence of a recording and neither are Def4s. But if you hear a pattern of recording traits that seem worth shaping in your environment, the small glass are the tack hammers; the 845 is the sledge.
Phil
I thought this was interesting, so I got both my original vinyl and later CD copies of Koln Concert to listen to on Black Shadows/Def4s. It's been a years since I listened to this on Black Shadows and never have on Def4s. The reason is that I mostly listen to piano on my Druids system, and that is powered by the Audion 300B PSET amps, which have KR Audio 300B tubes installed.
For anyone who doesn't know, Jarret's "Koln Concert" is a live recording at the opera house in Koln, Germany, in 1975. It was a startlingly clear recording when it was released, having come out smack in the middle of the junk vinyl era after the first Arab oil embargo and the general 70s assault on quality on just about everything. Atypical for the era, the surface is very quiet. Before audiophile LPs went mainstream with Sinatra and classic rock, this was about as good as a common record store disc got. This is an excellent recording and I'm glad Jordan brought it up because more people ought to know it and use it to get familiar with new gear. The piano is quite close-mic'd and the recording gives you some idea of why clean dynamic power helps even a solo piano recording, all other things being reasonably equal. Even then, on the not-as-wide-bandwidth speakers of the mid-70s, the recording sounded assertive and shifted somewhat bright. Not at all ever harsh but it nakedly lays open the tonality, transients and dynamics of an open concert piano.
Koln Concert was one of the first recordings I listened to on Definition 1.5s back in 2005. Played loud, this recording excited enough of that speaker's untamed MDF cabinet talk to limit pleasing SPLs. It was how I first noticed Def1.5's mid-to-treble glare. Of course at the same time, Druid v3.5's darkness over-tamed the recording, rendering it beautiful in an amber way but not quite revealed for what is in the groove. Druid 4-08 handled it quite nicely, for balance and transmitting the smack of the mic'ing arrangement. Def2 gave it a fairly objective reading with some tonal forgiveness thrown in by virtue of its midrange recession.
I listened today on Druids/Audion PSET 300B first, because that's how I've listened to the recording exclusively over the past few years, with Druid V being the voicing speaker since last autumn. I also listen to this now and then on Stax headphones driven by a vintage Stax tube energizer/preamp. That's always a good linear check on whether anything downstream of the source is telling the truth or not. The brightness intrinsic to the clarity and mic placement (and the quality of the mics themselves) is there no matter what I've ever played the recording on, BUT it's not objectionable *to me* because that's how I came to understand the recording to represent the performance from the start. Put another way, if I'd had my ears where the mics were placed in 1975, I feel pretty certain I'd have heard a similar glare where the recording has them too.
So after listening to the vinyl copy, I went to the CD. My CD copy is a Japanese SHM-CD print from maybe 10 years ago or so -- whenever SHM first appeared. It is clearly mastered a little differently than the vinyl LP, sounding somewhat less immediate and focused though quite beautiful for CD. Its perspective is a bit back and away from the soundboard, and the spikey glare of the sharpest piano notes in the first cut aren't as peaky nor is there all the graceful decay of the analog pressing. Stax again to verify, then moved both recordings over to Def4/Black Shadow.
The "phasey" part might be new tubes limbering in. The brightness -- all there and I can imagine new 845Bs aggravating it some. I put a softer-sounding rectifier in my preamp and changed out my Siemens CCa input tubes for the milder and more euphonic RCA 6922s. Hmm...just like dialing back the midrange tone control a skosh on a Marantz 1060 integrated amp. Then I also pulled the muscular NOS Tung-Sol 5687 drivers, subbing in the Buick-ride, whitewall Raytheons. Shaved the remaining glare right off while still keeping the essence of piano chime, making everything more distant.
So to me, the Audion amps and the truth-telling Def4s are playing what's there. But the recording is vivid and not leavened for a distant audience perspective. No doubt, if you'd been in the 5th row of the opera that night in 1975, your experience of the sound projection would have been quite different from someone else in the 25th. This recording forces you near the stage.
I went back to the Druids/300B system. I replaced the x-ray KR 300Bs with the willfully euphonic Sophia mesh plates. More mist and romance but the brightness persists. I changed phono cartridges from the agile Denon 103D to Ortofon SPU Synergy. Whoa, Baby -- did that piano suddenly get Way Huge, Dude! All the SPU glories in heaps but no getting away from the mic'ing. Going back to the CD, I replaced the vivid Bendix 2c51 output tubes in my DAC with the creamy Hytron 5670s. There's that magic Marantz midrange tone control again, dialed back just a bit.
The Black Shadows have all-silver signal paths and those amps had the Nichicon power supply recap. They're not going to be hiding much about the essence of a recording and neither are Def4s. But if you hear a pattern of recording traits that seem worth shaping in your environment, the small glass are the tack hammers; the 845 is the sledge.
Phil