Tim, me too. I had to go back to LA early Sunday. As I have said earlier I'm a Clippers season ticket holder and the Clips open their playoff run tonight against the Spurs. I am having too much fun all at the same time. I will have something that surprised me about amplification shortly. My plan is to familiarize myself across all genres with the McIntosh then switch to the Bryston 28B's and give a little time to Pass Labs. Then I will do Passive bi-amping using the Brystons over McIntosh and McIntosh over Brystons. If anyone wants me to try something like a piece of music, high volume, low volume please speak up.
Gary
Gary,
Here are some pieces to try:
- Richard Strauss, "Also Sprach Zarathustra", for the bass drum thwacks and the organ, in the intro. But don't stop listening there as it segues into some gorgeous, lyrical music after.
- That old warhorse, the 1812 Overture, for the bells and canons.
- Carmina Burana (the Ozawa/Boston version). Just before the finale ("O Fortuna"), there is a thick orchestral/choral texture, and an orchestral bell that floats above it, independent of all the "noise". It's great to hear that bell.
- You may not be into Spanish vocals, but try Laura Fygi's "The Latin Touch". It's on XRCD, and sounds really good.
- Also on XRCD, "Esther". The diction, albeit German, in the first track, "Kinderspiele", is superb.
- "Suerte" by Abed Arie and Pedro Aledo (Spanish/Arabic) has a lot of flamenco (handclaps and heels). Really nicely done.
I gather the speaker is great at normal/high volume, but how does it do on quiet solo piano? Try something like Murray Perahia playing Schubert's "Ständchen" (the famous serenade). His interpretation is phenomenal. I heard him play it live, as an encore. It alone was worth the price of entry.
I could probably go on endlessly......