Shahinian fans remember a bizarre Stereophile-review of the Diapasons that was published in May 1993. The speakers were trashed by both J. Gordon Holt and John Atkinson. The trashing was all the more astonishing as Holt in April 1990, after having listened to them for hours at several expositions, had named the Diapasons amazing speakers that reminded him more of a real concert that any other speakers he had ever listened to. In May 1993, however, he noted that the speakers sounded "awful", with steely highs. What had happened, I think, was
exactly the same phenomenon Stan Holzhauer describes. I my self own Diapasons. Last year, I gave the subwoofer to a carpenter from the Tretyakov gallery here in Moscow, to get them refurbished as I did not like the old oak look. The work took ten weeks. When I got the speakers back, and I reconnected the Diapason module after these weeks, again they sounded steely and awful. Fortunately, I knew it was going to pass. And it did. (By the way, this happened with other speakers I own, too.)
When the British magazine HiFiplus reviewed the Shahinian Obelisk last year, their reviewer wanted to return the speakers as well because of the awful sound. He concluded that this was the most torterous run-in of any speakers he had ever experienced. Later on, however, he praised them as the best speakers he had ever listened to. The German magazine Image HiFi, which reviewed a couple of Shahinians with excellent results, said the same: You ned a run-in that can last for months. But then Shahininas are some of the best speakers under the sun, as they and another German magazine, Stereo, found out.
In the US, Shahinian never quite recovered from that trashing in Stereophile, I think. Audiogoners would find them to be much more musically satisfying than a lot of other speakers they cherish. In contrast to Europe, where Shahinians get reviewed, US publications do not do it. It is, as with VMPS speakers, or LAT-International cables, a proof for the market not always going for the best product. The Absolute Sound published a review of the Shahinian Hawk speakers recently, and praised them, too. But they were careful not to publish the review in the magazine, only as a web-exclusive. You can find the review on their site in the review archive, typing "Shahinian". It is ironical that Americans still have to discover one of their greatest musical treasures in high end.
exactly the same phenomenon Stan Holzhauer describes. I my self own Diapasons. Last year, I gave the subwoofer to a carpenter from the Tretyakov gallery here in Moscow, to get them refurbished as I did not like the old oak look. The work took ten weeks. When I got the speakers back, and I reconnected the Diapason module after these weeks, again they sounded steely and awful. Fortunately, I knew it was going to pass. And it did. (By the way, this happened with other speakers I own, too.)
When the British magazine HiFiplus reviewed the Shahinian Obelisk last year, their reviewer wanted to return the speakers as well because of the awful sound. He concluded that this was the most torterous run-in of any speakers he had ever experienced. Later on, however, he praised them as the best speakers he had ever listened to. The German magazine Image HiFi, which reviewed a couple of Shahinians with excellent results, said the same: You ned a run-in that can last for months. But then Shahininas are some of the best speakers under the sun, as they and another German magazine, Stereo, found out.
In the US, Shahinian never quite recovered from that trashing in Stereophile, I think. Audiogoners would find them to be much more musically satisfying than a lot of other speakers they cherish. In contrast to Europe, where Shahinians get reviewed, US publications do not do it. It is, as with VMPS speakers, or LAT-International cables, a proof for the market not always going for the best product. The Absolute Sound published a review of the Shahinian Hawk speakers recently, and praised them, too. But they were careful not to publish the review in the magazine, only as a web-exclusive. You can find the review on their site in the review archive, typing "Shahinian". It is ironical that Americans still have to discover one of their greatest musical treasures in high end.