Why We Need Audiophiles

This is Michael Fremer. He’s listening to “Avalon” by Roxy Music on his $350,000 stereo system. It sounds excellent. He’s a bit crazy, but if you love music, you need him.

Fremer, if you have yet to decipher this, is an audiophile of the highest calibre. Literally millions of dollars of premium audio equipment have passed through his listening room under review for Stereophile magazine, and he’s been obsessing about vinyl since he was four years old, memorizing the labels of his parents’ 78s. A man who, when digital recording and reproduction methods began to surface culminating in the compact disc’s takeover as the predominant music format, became a figurehead for the vinyl superiority movement, staunchly advocating its greater tonal resolution over a CD’s 44.1 kHz max. (See this MTV clip for Fremer in action, circa 1993.)

In short, a species of human I had never known prior to hanging out with him in his New Jersey basement listening room last week, and a species, frankly, I was skeptical of in just about every possible way.

Upon getting picked up by Fremer at the train station near his home, my fears immediately began to feel all too real. It was but a minute or two into our car ride from the station that a rant on Walt Mossberg’s inferior review of the Airport Express, Apple’s music-streaming mini-router that Fremer and I both enjoy in our home systems, begins in earnest:

“If he’s not going to tell people how it sounds, then what’s the fucking point? Don’t step into my world, Walt!” Multiple emails of complaint to poor Walt are cited. I am definitely thinking “uh oh” at this point.

But then, settled into the lone leather chaise in Fremer’s basement audio temple, nestled right in the sweetspot of his $65,000 Wilson MAXX3 speakers, I hear the needle drop on Air’s “Run” from Talkie Walkie. It’s a song I’ve never heard (kind of fell off Air after overusing Moon Safari considerably), but one that I’m now listening to all the time. Because, with all honesty, I have never heard anything like that song played on that stereo system at that moment. Ever.

The song ends, and after emerging from an opiate-like haze, I hear a hiss. And yes, while the record was playing, I heard a pop, a crackle or two. Isn’t this as high-end an audiophile system as they come? Shouldn’t the sound be of such purity so as to sustain life in lieu of water for days on end?

I mention this slight—very slight, but noticeable—hiss to Fremer, and it’s probably a frequency that 50 plus years of rocking have eliminated from his spectrum. He doesn’t even care. This is when I start to understand.

After hearing I’m a Bowie fan, Fremer drops into his near limitless stacks and spins a pressing of “Heroes” with part of the title track’s chorus in German. I’m giggling with pleasure at the frankly obscene level of detail I hear (Ich! Ich werde König!), but of course, I’m hearing the pops and crackles that a 30+ year-old record is likely to have. Shouldn’t a $350,000 stereo system be completely free of such impurities?

“It’s like when you go to the symphony, and the old men are coughing—same thing,” Fremer says. Necessary impurities. Reminders of being in the real world.

We play my solid 256kbps VBR MP3 of “Heroes” off my iPod; it sounds like shit. Free of pops and crackles, yes, but completely lifeless, flat in every way. This is the detail that matters: Audiophiles are basically synesthesiacs. They “see” music in three-dimensional visual space. You close your eyes in Fremer’s chair, and you can perceive a detailed 3D matrix of sound, with each element occupying its own special space in the air. It’s crazy and I’ve never experienced anything like it.

It is within this 3D space where the audiophile lives and operates, and spends all his money. Fremer himself is the first to admit that it would only take $3,000 to $5,000 to build a system that will be deeply satisfying to most music fans. On a scale of 1 to 100 completely of my own devising, let’s put this system at around 85. Now, imagine that you’ve tasted 85, and you want to go higher; you want Bowie’s cries of kissing by the wall to inhabit the most perfect point in your system’s matrix, and Bryan Ferry’s back-up fly girls on “Avalon” to flank him just beautifully. That, friends, is where you might end up paying hundreds of thousands.

Our little scale, unfortunately, is logarithmic, in that going from zero to 85 doesn’t take a lot of effort or money, but going from 98.6 to 99.1 by swapping out a $2,600 AC power cable for a $4,000 one becomes a justifiable end. We did exactly that, and I strained to hear any difference at all (more impressions of our test will follow later in the week), but to Fremer, the difference was abundantly clear—not necessarily better with the more expensive cable, but different, a warmer, fuller sound, as Fremer described it. Here’s the breakdown of his current listening-room hardware:

The point is, people like Fremer can not only hear the difference, they crave it. I walked into his listening room expecting to discern absolutely zero difference in the comparison tests we had planned, swapping out speaker cables that cost as much as a meal at the best restaurant in New York for another set that cost as much as a year of undergrad at Harvard. I actually did hear a tiny difference. But to people like Fremer, that tiny difference becomes a mind-boggling disparity, and it’s worth paying for if it means a few decimal points closer to perfection. Unfortunately, the logarithmic curve is asymptotic: There is no ceiling. Fremer will be the first to admit that this type of dragon chasing is not and should not be for everyone.

This obsession with tiny differences explains Fremer’s fevered defense of analog music sources over digital. Two anecdotes from the past are particularly illuminative:

The first is his memories of rushing to the record store in 1979 to pick up Ry Cooder’s Bop ‘Til You Drop, the first mainstream rock release to be recorded using an all-digital process, which at the time was being lauded as the next big thing. But upon getting it home and dropping it into his high-end system, the results were not good:

“It made me feel horrible!” he remembers. Even though it was played on vinyl, Fremer could already detect some missing elements in the 3D audiophile space that just weren’t there. “And it’s not like I was a digiphobe at this point—I had no reason to be. I was as excited as anyone to hear this.”

The second was the first public playing of a compact disc, to a room full of expectant audiophiles a few years later. While they breathlessly applauded the first track played from the then refrigerator-sized device, Fremer was horrified. He heard the same flatness and lack of detail in the 3D audio world he loved to inhabit. “I felt…weird. My hands were shaking. All I could think, then, was WE’RE FUCKED!” A few days later, a new, custom-printed bumper sticker was slapped on Fremer’s car: “COMPACT DISCS SUCK.”

And thus began a long battle, and thankfully, it seems to have ended happily. Both with the advent of SACDs—which Fremer is a great fan of, proving that he’s not hung up on nostalgia—and the greater acceptance and continued life of vinyl, Fremer is a happy man these days. “I’m on top of the world right now. I set out to save vinyl, and we did it.”

Because the thing is, Fremer loves music first and foremost. The audiophile I had feared was one who cares far more about the overpriced gadgetry than the actual music. This is not who I ended up meeting. This man listens to music and makes sure it was recorded with the best fidelity, that the intents of the artist have been preserved. And thank God he does, because we certainly don’t.

I listen to most of my music on downloaded, compressed, lossy MP3s, and so do you. But even if you can’t hear the sound quality, we need someone like Fremer up on that wall, a preservationist of archival recordings and an ombudsman for new recording techniques, because one day you’ll want to hear it, and it’ll be there because of audiophiles.

These guardians in and outside of the recording industry ensure that, whether it’s in a movie theater tomorrow or in your own home listening room on some far off future date, you’ll be able always get back to a recording that expresses every frequency, every ounce of warmth and life, of the original performance. Because if you can hear, it, if you ever get to live in that 3D space, you’ll be glad Fremer helped defend it.

For more audio goodness, hit up Fremer’s own site at musicangle.com

Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Let’s Start Over: Music to Reinstall an Operating System To

Reinstalling an operating system always feels like a herculean task, especially if your hard drive is as disorganized as mine. That’s why we’ve created a playlist to listen to as you go through the not-so-fun process.

There are always emotional phases to this kinda stuff.

The anger frustration comes from knowing you have to backup the important files from your hard drive and waste a night shuffling 0s and 1s back and forth, finding those obscure files you’ll know you won’t even think about for like 5 years. You hate your computer for making you do this. You might even kick it a few times. Although by the time you’re erasing the drive, you have already accepted the fact that you’ll have to set everything up again. And by the time you’ve started your install, you can see the ray of light at the end of the tunnel, although waiting for the install can test one’s patience as you watch the “pot of water” boil.

But when it’s all done, you’re left with a pristine system, free of corruption (and 5pcs Cialis). You have a sense of new beginning: now that your computer is clean, you’re free to take on the world. Everything that you haven’t accomplished will be ten times easier now…at least, until next week, when your computer desktop looks as disheveled as ever.

Here’s a soundtrack to get you through the ordeal.

Backing Up Your Data, Formatting
Save Me, Nina Simone


Or the Aretha Franklin cover, which I prefer.

Where Is My Mind? by the Pixies, via Michael Yap

Melt! by Flying Lotus

*The last minute of this youtube clip is Melt!

Ride of the Valkyries

Search and Destroy by Iggy Pop and the Stooges, via Kat Hannaford

Installing
Ghostwriter by RJD2

Computer Love by Kraftwerk.

Computer Camp Love (Villains Remix) by Datarock, via hiredg3Ek
*this is not the remix video

La Guitaristic House Organization by rinôçérôse, Installation Sonore.

Fingerstips, Stevie Wonder.

Bits and Pieces by Junior Boys


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Listening Test: Gizmodo’s Week Long Tribute To Music Tech

I once read that music has more impact the louder you play it. On that note, I’ll tell you the story of the summer I got addicted to very loud car audio equipment.

I worked 30 hours a week during college and more during the summer. I worked at some computer help desk in Boston, but I spent a great deal of spare time hanging out in a local car-stereo installer’s garage, talking to them about what exact set up I should install. They weren’t the cleanest or best installers, looking back, but they did recommend some kick-ass gear.

Two giant Phoenix Gold amps, I forget the designation, painted white with clear windows for viewing the ICs. One was attached to a three-way system for everything above bass; 5-inch drivers in the door, and the tweeters and mids in the side foot panels, aimed through the dash to bounce off the windshield of my shitty little Acura Integra, lowered and ricey before that shit was played out. (It was also white.)

The car-stereo guys let me cut the wooden mounts which would give the deep speaker in the narrow door frame. I actually remember the amp names now. That was a ZX450 and it was pushing 450 watts through four channels, two to the midbass drivers, and two to the high/mids. I ran the 8-gauge wires myself, too. The other amp was the more interesting story, a ZX500, run in mono for I think close to 1000 watts, driving an 18-inch across, 9-inch deep JL Audio 18W6 (which was discontinued, presumably, because it was insane). The sub was mounted where the spare tire should have been, in a custom-built fiberglass tub, which raised the floor of my trunk so that it would barely hold a suitcase, on top of the sub’s grill and half an inch of MDF fiberboard.

The system was played through an Eclipse CD head unit without MP3 capability (this was 1997 or something) which was made by Fujitsu and was very clean. It had an anti-theft system which consisted of a 1-800 number that tricked thieves into calling it to reactivate once they’d tried to get in a few times, which would instead summon the police to your door if you were calling about a reportedly stolen unit.

The first time I powered it up, the car shook so violently the clip on wide angle rear view mirror fell off, and I had to close my eyes because my eyeballs were itching from the vibration. I could also feel the sub pulling the moving the air in and out of my lungs.

I played lots of Biggie Smalls through it, and some Tupac and Mary J Blige when no one was around, and it was pretty gross. I mean, I didn’t have to ring the doorbell when I visited friends, they could hear it a block away.

It forever changed the way I listen to music, because I am definitely unable to hear music with the same nuance that I did before the car stereo. The car was so loud, so notorious on campus, I am surprised it took so long for the setup to get stolen. But it did.

I fell asleep on my couch with my car outside my parking lot, on the street, and when I woke up to go drive home for Thanksgiving, it was gone. I called my mom to say I would miss dinner, and two days later, the insurance company wrote me a check when the car showed up, stripped, in Newton, Massachusetts. I used that money to move to California and to buy a motorcycle, which would eventually snap my leg in three places.

Somehow, this post turned into a note about how stupid of a 20-something I was.

It occurred to me, yesterday, on a long drive, beating on my steering while like a snare drum and my dead pedal as a bass, how much faster I drive as I listen to music. (Even if now I drive a boring station wagon with a stock stereo.) I’m not a music nut, but who can deny how much better our lives when there is song in it?

Music is arguably the most powerful medium, despite its often subtle delivery. Perhaps its power comes from how it can be enjoyed passively, while enhancing the things you’re focusing on. Things from work, to running, to sex, to sleep, to skiing, driving, or just spending time with friends. Video, words, pictures require your focus, but you stand attention to these things. Audio and music go with along with anything well. A soundtrack.

Over the last few decades, since the birth of recording, technology’s changed how we relate to music. In ways that go beyond the white earbuds. Everything in the last twenty years has changed, from how we discover new songs, to how we buy (or steal) it, to how we carry or trade it, to the very fidelity of the recording (which seems not to matter too much to anyone except audiophiles—a dying breed).

The only thing that hasn’t changed is how the music makes us feel, no matter what the volume.

So, this week’s Gizmodo is dedicated to music and the technology that helps us enjoy it. Let us know what you think of the stories, and let us know if there’s anything we should post.


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Seen, Not Heard: The World’s Most Beautiful Audio Equipment

Somewhere along the way, audiophiles became as obsessed with look as with sound quality. So set aside for a minute your ears and your skepticism: Here are the world’s most beautiful-looking audio devices.

The ClearAudio Statement: At $100,000 the ClearAudio Statement, seen above, is everything that is wrong with the audiophile culture, combined into one four-foot, 770lb, variously suspended, NASA-electronics-adorned turntable (check out a full-length shot here). But it’s a design triumph, coaxing a polished, demure aesthetic out of what should by all means be an ostentatious CNC-machined mess.

Speak-er: Spawned by a playful concept that nobody honestly expected to get made, the Speak-er isn’t fancy, powerful or technologically impressive. It’s a dead-simple desktop speaker in a fantastic shell, which opens up a slew of design possibilities for your office, room, or live-action comic book troupe.

Sonnance Freewheeler: Continuing the simple-but-perfect theme, the Sonnance Freewheeler is a wireless speaker disc, about the size of a car’s wheel and able to run for about 8 hours on a full charge. It’s also $21,000, but that neither here nor there, “here” being “within the range of you to buy” and “there” being “at all worth it, even if it was.” But, pretty!

BeoSound 5: It’s somehow heartening to see so much design go into a remote control. That’s what the BeoSound 5 is: a 1024×768 screen with a brushed aluminum control wheel that serves solely as an interface for the BeoMaster 5, a giant B&O media server.

Montegiro Lusso Turntable: Apparently designed in the Towers of Hanoi tradition, this conical turntable is adorned with enough expensive-sounding features for even the most credulous discerning audiophile. It’s just under $50,000, but really, you can’t put a price on tying a room together, can you?

Sony Sountina: So, it’s a speaker in a glass stick, but it’s also one of the rare speakers that would work in virtually any setting. As a bonus, it can be illuminated in blue, amber or purple light, though I think it looks best without any at all.

V-Moda Vibe Earphones/Headsets: This is one of the few items on this list that people actually buy, and with good reason. They’re capable (though not outstanding) earphones, on which V-Moda has shown extreme attention to design. The corrugated bodies, Mont Blanc-esque pen-tip wire accessories and (sometimes) fabric wire casings make for the most stylish earbphones on the market today.

Harman Kardon Soundsticks: You’ve seen this at Apple Store and Best Buys for years, but they’re due some credit: they bring a stunning transparent aesthetic to mainstream buyers, perfectly complementing a generation of Apple hardware while being generally gorgeous enough to be appealing to the PC crowd too. You’d still be hard-pressed to find a lovelier set of speakers for under $200.

Opera Sonora Speakers: Every once in a while, questionably scientific theories of audiophilia result in extremely handsome products. That’s the story of the Opera Sonora line of speakers. The theory: Bolting little speaker driver on to the back of tonewood—the same stuff used in high-end violins—will provide a rich, warm sound. The result: Speakers that look like they were designed by a reanimated Antonio Stradivari, with a sound—well, not many people have actually heard them yet.

Sony Qualia 010: Priced at over $2500, slapped with a painfully pretentious name and jinxed forever to be rejected by mainstream-averse audiophiles, these futuristic headphones were doomed from the start. But whatever, these are subtly good-looking cans, blending in for day-to-day use but revealing meticulous design and construction on close examination. (Image from Head-fi)


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Radiopaq launches custom tuned earphones to single our your audio

There’s a big difference between giving people choices and giving people a choice, and while Sleek Audio did the smart thing by doing the former, Radiopaq is carelessly banking on the latter to still go over well. Rather than producing a set of earbuds with customizable acoustics to fit whatever genre you find yourself into, Radiopaq’s custom tuned earphones take that personalization away from the end-user. Oh sure, you could plop down for four different sets to handle your classical, jazz, pop and rock records, but that would easily go down as one of the most absurd decisions you’ve ever made. The company proclaims that each set actually can be used to enjoy other genres, noting that each pair is simply optimized for one specific style. Each package will go for £59 ($86), so make sure you choose carefully — does your allegiance lie with The Cranberries or Taylor Swift?

[Via Pocket-lint]

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Radiopaq launches custom tuned earphones to single our your audio originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Apr 2009 06:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ask Engadget: Best tiny MP3 player for exercise enthusiasts?

No need to twist your dial — you really have just stumbled upon this week’s episode of Ask Engadget. You know, the place where you can send in your question to ask at engadget dawt com and hope to see it plastered for the world to have a think on. This week we’ve got one from J.S., so we’ll let him take it from here:

“The new iPod shuffle is so small you can simply clip it onto your shirt while running or working out. However, I’d never buy it because of two reasons: iTunes and the fact that I’d have to get a new pair of headphones that has the Shuffle controls or use the subpar included ones. So, what’s the best small (close to Shuffle-sized) MP3 player for a gym rat like me that doesn’t require iTunes?”

We’ve no doubt that legions of you fitness freaks can chime in here, so next time you take a breather, drop some knowledge in comments below.

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Ask Engadget: Best tiny MP3 player for exercise enthusiasts? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Apr 2009 01:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Oticon’s ConnectLine hearing aid accessories stream your tunes right into your head

Oticon's ConnectLine hearing aid accessories stream your tunes right into your head

While we’ve seen plenty of prototype and conceptual aids that might some day revolutionize the lives of those struggling with hearing loss, it’s rare that we see something real holding just as much potential. That’s what we have here with the ConnectLine wireless streaming system from Oticon (no, gamers, not Otacon). We’ve seen the company tap into the Bluetooth craze before with aids that can be synced with mobile phones, and now it’s taking that a step further, enabling them to be paired with a base station (pictured below) that can connect to your TV, stereo, or even a landline phone to send audio right into its compatible hearing aids. No word on cost, but just think: if ol’ Snake had one of these Otacon might not have had to yell so much.

[Via MedGadget]

Continue reading Oticon’s ConnectLine hearing aid accessories stream your tunes right into your head

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Oticon’s ConnectLine hearing aid accessories stream your tunes right into your head originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Apr 2009 08:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mitsubishi introduces 16-speaker Unisen LCD HDTV line

With Mitsubishi‘s LaserVue lines humming along once more, it’s time for the company to bust out a few more big announcements in the HDTV space. First up is the new Unisen line, comprised of the 151 Series (40-, 46- and 52-inches), the 153 Series (40-, 46- and 52-inches) and the high-end Diamond 259 Series (46- and 52-inches). Each set in the line comes with a built-in “5.1-channel” 16-speaker audio bar, much like the iSP LT-52149 that we reviewed last fall. Each model also incorporates a new UltraThin Frame design, Smooth 120Hz Film Motion technology, four HDMI 1.3a inputs and a USB media port. The top end crew also includes an iSP calibration microphone, Plush1080p 5G 18-bit digital video processing, a wired IR input and a few swank blue accents to really woo the ladies. The whole family should ship to the United States next month and range from $1,799 to $3,299. Exact pricing is just after the break.

Continue reading Mitsubishi introduces 16-speaker Unisen LCD HDTV line

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Mitsubishi introduces 16-speaker Unisen LCD HDTV line originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Researchers Create Paper-Like Flat, Flexible Speakers

Flexible_speaker

Last year it was flexible displays that made a splash. Now flexible speakers are set to debut.

Engineers at the University of Warwick have created a flat, flexible speaker that is lightweight and just 0.25 millimeters thick. And they say it could be commercially available by the end of the year.

The flexible speakers are almost paper-like but pack in a punch and can deliver audio that is powerful enough for public spaces, cars and homes.

"This is a truly innovative technology," said Steve Couchman, CEO of Warwick Audio Technologies, a spin off company from University of Warwick in a statement. "Its size and flexibility means it can be used in areas where space is at a premium."

Flexible_speakers2 Conventional speakers take an electric signal and generate a varying magnetic field that is used to vibrate a mechanical cone.  The vibrations produce the requisite sound.

The flat, flexible speaker technology takes a flexible laminate, which when excited with an electrical signal vibrates to produce the sound. The flexible laminate is made of a number of thin, conducting and insulating materials.

The arrangement also allows for highly directional and accurate sound, say the researchers. The speakers would be ideal in public places such as passenger
terminals since the sound quality does not deteriorate as much as
conventional speakers, claims Couchman.

The flat speakers are relatively inexpensive to manufacture, say the
researchers, and can be printed with design or concealed inside
ceilings.

The technology was first developed by Duncan Billson and David Hitchens, professors at the University of Warwick with early trials using just two sheets of tin foil and an insulating layer of baking paper to product the sound.

The researchers say their company is currently negotiating with commercial
partners to introduce the product.

See also:
Flexible Displays Closer to Reality

Photos: University of Warwick

Helms SoundBuddy II K999B iPod sound system has the look (and little else)

In the vast, treacherous world of me-too iPod sound systems, Helms’ SoundBuddy II K999B Mini 2.1 Digital Audio System does a commendable job of standing out. What it doesn’t do so well, however, is sound good. Unfortunately for it, the music side of things is pretty darn important when it comes to deciding on an audio setup. iLounge recently got ahold of this here unit, and while the styling was definitely unique and highly lauded, some of the design aspects — including the actual docking apparatus and the speaker location — were understandably questioned. Furthermore, critics found the sound quality to be borderline laughable given the steep $140 price of entry, leading to a conclusion that the hands-on images in the read link are probably as close as you (or your wallet) should ever get to this one.

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Helms SoundBuddy II K999B iPod sound system has the look (and little else) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Mar 2009 08:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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