Analog Interconnects Archives - The Absolute Sound https://www.theabsolutesound.com/category/awards/best-cables-power/best-analog-interconnects/ High-performance Audio and Music Reviews Thu, 06 Mar 2025 21:41:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 2023 Golden Ear: Siltech Classic Legend 880 Cables https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/2023-golden-ear-siltech-classic-legend-880-cables/ Tue, 26 Mar 2024 11:53:15 +0000 https://www.theabsolutesound.com/?post_type=articles&p=54963 880i interconnect, $15,765 for a 4.5-meter pair 880L speaker cable, […]

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880i interconnect, $15,765 for a 4.5-meter pair

880L speaker cable, $9270 for a 2.5-meter pair

The Dutch company Siltech has always maintained that silver is the best conductor of a musical signal and has spent four decades conducting metallurgic research to advance the performance of all its products. Siltech’s Classic Legend Series of cables represents the “sweet spot” in terms of performance/cost for the manufacturer, between the entry-level Explorer Series that employs high-purity copper conductors and the Royal Crown Series where all models use monocrystal silver wire (a 2.5-meter pair of the Royal Crown speaker cables can cost more than $100k). All Classic Legend cables use a silver-gold alloy of the company’s design—the gold atoms will displace contaminants in the silver crystal matrix and fill resulting voids in the structure—in a twisted coaxial twin-core configuration. Siltech has found that this improves both the performance and longevity of the product and shortens the required break-in time. For insulation/shielding, there’s a triple-layer construction using Teflon and the thermoplastic polymer PEEK. Spade and banana terminations are rhodium-plated; the pins of the XLR interconnect are gold-plated. With these wires in your system, the noise floor drops substantially, and dynamics and detail improve dramatically. The cables add no colorations of their own to musical sounds. (not reviewed)

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Best Interconnects: $10,000 and Up https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/best-interconnects-10000-and-up/ Tue, 10 Oct 2023 17:50:15 +0000 https://www.theabsolutesound.com/?post_type=articles&p=53476 The post Best Interconnects: $10,000 and Up appeared first on The Absolute Sound.

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Best Interconnects: $5,000 to $10,000 https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/best-interconnects-5000-to-10000/ Tue, 22 Aug 2023 16:31:54 +0000 https://www.theabsolutesound.com/?post_type=articles&p=53075 The post Best Interconnects: $5,000 to $10,000 appeared first on The Absolute Sound.

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2022 Golden Ear: Empirical Design Cables https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/2022-golden-ear-empirical-design-cables/ Fri, 30 Dec 2022 22:28:50 +0000 https://www.theabsolutesound.com/?post_type=articles&p=50411 Empirical Design Cables Prices Vary Empirical Design is probably the […]

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Empirical Design Cables

Prices Vary

Empirical Design is probably the most under-the-radar, over-the-top-performing high-end cable company in existence. It’s been my reference for nearly 20 years, along the way winning two previous Golden Ear Awards. But those were back in the aughts. It’s worth noting that, through constant incremental evolution, these cables and power cords have retained what originally set them apart: top-notch parts-quality, straightforward topologies, hand-built construction, and a price roughly one-tenth that of cables of comparable merit. Recently, two events reminded of these cables’ unique attributes. First, the sonics of a review component were transformed—no exaggeration—by the insertion of a $240 Empirical Design power cord. Second, some fancy-pants speaker cable recommended by the speaker’s manufacturer was shown up by the far more neutral ED wire. At prices in the hundreds rather than the thousands, these cables are a no-brainer investment for most systems.

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2022 Golden Ear: AudioQuest Dragon Interconnect https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/2022-golden-ear-audioquest-dragon-interconnect/ Fri, 30 Sep 2022 20:18:13 +0000 https://www.theabsolutesound.com/?post_type=articles&p=48794 AudioQuest Dragon Interconnects $11,900, 1m balanced Although AudioQuest has been […]

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AudioQuest Dragon Interconnects

$11,900, 1m balanced

Although AudioQuest has been developing proprietary cable materials and techniques for 42 years, the company embarked on the new “Mythical Creatures” series of interconnects with a fresh mind. Rather than create a more advanced implementation of its existing technologies, AudioQuest approached its new reference series by starting from first principles. It would call on proven technologies but not be bound by them. The result is a fascinating amalgam of fresh thinking and AudioQuest’s proven designs.

Dragon does everything you’d expect from a top-level interconnect at this price, but it also goes above and beyond the cliches of greater transparency, smoother textures, and a bigger soundstage. Judged simply by the traditional criteria for evaluating cables, Dragon excelled in all the audiophile parameters. But this interconnect did things I’ve never heard from a cable—or more precisely, Dragon allowed my system to reveal previously hidden qualities. For example, the midrange was simply luscious, liquid, and stunningly present and vivid. Vocals were completely untethered to the speakers and projected against an absolutely silent background. This had the effect of increasing the sense of presence and fostering the startling impression of the vocalist being in the room. Another aspect of Dragon that is unique is that it conveys a greater density of timbre and more richly saturated tone color. I felt that the sound, from the lowest bass to the top treble, simply had greater body and weight. Instruments not only had more dimensionality and color, but also the sense that there was more energy behind them. The most significant advance in interconnects I’ve encountered in 33 years of reviewing. 

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2018 Golden Ear Awards: Kirk Midtskog https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/2018-golden-ear-awards-kirk-midtskog/ https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/2018-golden-ear-awards-kirk-midtskog/#respond Wed, 26 Dec 2018 15:15:35 +0000 http://localhost/tas_dev/articles/2018-golden-ear-awards-kirk-midtskog YG Acoustics Sonja 2.2 loudspeaker $76,800/pr. I reviewed the original […]

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YG Acoustics Sonja 2.2 loudspeaker
$76,800/pr.
I reviewed the original Sonja 1.2 in 2015 and gave it a GEA last year. As good as the 1.2 still is, the current 2.2 improves upon that speaker in dynamic ease, bass weight, soundstage continuousness, and resolution of fine detail. The main technical improvement comes from a brand-new kind of tweeter that combines a soft-dome membrane with a very lightweight, strong, and acoustically transparent supporting “air frame.” The result is a remarkably articulate tweeter capable of withstanding G-forces similar to those of good metal domes but without the oft-associated telltale metallic ringing. The bass module cabinet, binding-post arrangement, and crossover have also been updated, including a YG-made “ViceCoil” inductor for greater accuracy and efficiency in the low end. The 2.2’s inter-driver and dynamic coherency are exemplary, as are its resolution of fine details and transparency to sources. It recreates a very large, focused soundscape, and its overall presentation allows musicians’ artistic expressiveness to come through—to thrilling effect on good recordings. As a sealed-enclosure design, the bass extends deeply but does not “bass load” the room like some ported speakers of similar size do—an advantage in small to medium-sized rooms. An easy GEA this year.

Shunyata Research Sigma signal cables
$4000/1m interconnect; $7500/2m speaker cable
Shunyata has developed some fantastic new signal cables. Sigma carries over some features from previous designs: OCC OFE101-grade copper conductors, a virtual hollow tube wire configuration (VTX), and a passive circuit (ZiTron) that cancels out an electromagnetic field that can build up in the dielectric. Sigma adds the following, mostly proprietary new features: Kinetic Phase Inversion Process (KPIP), a treatment that essentially eliminates the need for break-in and determines a cable’s optimal signal direction, sonic welding to eliminate distortion-inducing solder; a Transverse Axial Polarizer (TAP) unit on the interconnect to filter out glare-causing longitudinal electromagnetic waves; and HARP, a unit on the speaker cable to reduce what is known in physics as “current drift.” HARP, in particular, is remarkably effective at improving overall system performance. Build-quality is excellent as is sonic performance, allowing the deployed system to sound highly resolving of fine details with a large open soundstage and focused images. Dynamic precision, overall coherence, and natural timbre are also strong points. Sigma reduces noise, glare, and apparent time smear to levels that allow more of music’s appeal to come through better than with any similarly priced cables I know of—and by a shockingly wide margin.

Gamut RS3i loudspeaker
$19,990/pr.
The RS3i looks like a really nice stand-mounted monitor—and it is—but it plays with a gusto that shames some floorstanders. It has the most musically free-flowing, dynamically alive presentation of any speaker near its size I have ever heard. For all its expressiveness, it also manages not to sound overblown or fatiguing. The RS3i has plenty of tonal density and weight in the bass, so it does not come by its musical verve by hyping the presence region or some other aural trick. It won’t satisfy deep-bass hounds or power music lovers, but this speaker can, in its own right, boogie…or weep or soothe or inspire, according to the music program. RS3i strengths also include resolution of fine detail, overall coherency, and an expansive and layered soundscape. Per Gamut, some of the secret sauce lies in its steam-pressed, “static-curve,” real wood, multi-layered cabinet that has hardly any soft damping material inside. The RS3i also has a clever crossover design that takes into account both speakers’ combined output in a typical domestic listening setup, instead of following the more common single-speaker, on-axis, anechoic, one-meter measurements. A wonderful stand-mount.

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Golden Ear Awards 2016: Alan Taffel https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-alan-taffel/ https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-alan-taffel/#respond Tue, 18 Oct 2016 21:05:54 +0000 http://localhost/tas_dev/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-alan-taffel Technics R1 Reference System $53,000 In 2014, Technics returned to […]

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Technics R1 Reference System
$53,000
In 2014, Technics returned to home audio, hoping to catapult itself squarely into today’s high end. Exhibit A was a trio of highly advanced products, the R1 Reference Series, meant to be used as a system. Their technology is designed to address some of the most intractable problems in audio, including amplifier-speaker interaction, the degradations inherent in traditional DACs, and solid-state’s difficulty in creating 3-D instrumental images. The result is a system that sounds breathtakingly good. Although it isn’t cheap, very few other systems offer the R1’s level of directness and purity. A triumphant, must-check-out arrival.

Astell&Kern AK380 and AK120 Mk II Digital Audio Players
$3499 and $1699
With the AK380, A&K has created a flagship that transcends the genre of audiophile-quality portable players. Sure it delivers superb sound with 384/32 PCM and native DSD support. But in addition, through a set of optional docks and peripherals, the AK380 can serve as a ripping and streaming digital front end that sends the outputs of its formidable DACs through XLR connections to any high-end system. Combined with ample storage and a large, bright display, the AK380 is the portable player to beat. If the AK380 is too dear for your budget, the AK120 Mk II remains in the A&K lineup. It offers most of the AK380’s features (minus the docks and peripherals) plus great purity and resolution at half the price.

Crystal Cable Next and Wireworld Nano Eclipse Headphone Cables
$750 and $200
For those with high-quality personal audio setups, it’s impossible to overstate how big a difference good aftermarket headphone cables make. At $200, the Wireworld Nano Eclipse is a no-brainer. To a shocking degree, the Eclipse opens up, cleans up,- and tightens up headphone sound, delivering the full merit of its source with detail, pace, great dynamics, and technicolor tones. For those with state-of-the-art personal listening gear, the ultra-thin and light Crystal Cable Next makes a perfect complement. The shimmering strand oozes quality and, as the name implies, crystal-clear sound. The Next allows volumes of timbral, rhythmic, and spatial information to flow through. Decays seem to go on forever and bass notes are as taut as a stretched rubber band. Either of these wires will show you just how much you’ve been missing from your favorite set of headphones.

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Golden Ear Awards 2016: Jacob Heilbrunn https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-jacob-heilbrunn/ https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-jacob-heilbrunn/#respond Thu, 29 Sep 2016 16:54:55 +0000 http://localhost/tas_dev/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-jacob-heilbrunn Transparent Opus Generation 5 $22,000 meter pair (balanced interconnect), $39,000 […]

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Transparent Opus Generation 5
$22,000 meter pair (balanced interconnect), $39,000 8′ speaker cable
Transparent’s reference line of networked interconnects and speaker cables sets a very high bar indeed for sonic performance. It builds upon the earlier Transparent Opus line to offer a seamless midrange and silky highs. Most distinctive about the Generation 5 cables are their cavernous soundstage, in many ways a product of their ability to provide an almost unrivaled bass foundation, and their superbly natural tonality. Other cables may be faster or more detailed, but Transparent offers a mesmerizing blend of virtues that add up to a larger musical whole. Believe it or not, there is a Magnum line that pushes the frontiers one step further, but the Opus Gen 5 should be more than satisfactory for all but the most fastidious audiophiles.

Lyra Etna SL Cartridge
$9999
Lyra cartridges have always excelled at slam, dynamics, and sheer musical excitement. The Etna SL does not move away from those qualities so much as mark a salubrious evolution towards a more refined and agreeable sound. Gone is any lingering sense of zippiness or etch that occasionally reared its head with the Etna’s lineal predecessors. The super-low-output designation (SL), which refers to the fewer coil windings, appears to result in a cartridge that unites an extremely low noise floor with amazing transient precision. The Etna is able to render everything from piano to trumpets with superb fidelity, almost as though it could discern the healthy part of the vinyl. The Etna is a surpassingly winning cartridge, one that is so evenhanded throughout the frequency spectrum that it is always a delight to audition.

dCS Vivaldi 2.0 Digital Source
$41,999 (Transport), $35,999 (DAC), $21,999 (Upsampler), $14,999 (Clock)
The Vivaldi first appeared several years ago and featured excellent soundstaging and dynamics. But the new 2.0 version, which features software and internal hardware changes, truly catapults its performance into the stratosphere. Some of the most notable improvements occur in the treble region, where for the first time digital playback seems to obtain the air that is so palpable on vinyl sources. There is also audibly more detail in the treble and midrange areas, allowing the tonality of individual instruments to emerge in a much more striking fashion. Piano trills are enunciated with a shocking finesse and clarity. The bass lines are also palpably tighter and deeper. Overall, the presentation isn’t simply more dynamic, but also supplies a lot more weight to instruments such as piano or trumpet. With its latest version of the Vivaldi, dCS has hit it out of the park.

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Golden Ear Awards 2016: Anthony H. Cordesman https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-anthony-h-cordesman/ https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-anthony-h-cordesman/#respond Tue, 27 Sep 2016 15:21:20 +0000 http://localhost/tas_dev/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-anthony-h-cordesman Magico S7 Loudspeaker $64,000 An extraordinarily revealing speaker that has […]

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Magico S7 Loudspeaker
$64,000
An extraordinarily revealing speaker that has very neutral timbre, and does not exaggerate or fail to reproduce any aspect of sound quality. Deeply extended but very uncolored bass can seem slightly weak until you realize how far down the low end goes, and how clean and tight it is. Dynamics are truly excellent, although the S7 does need real power to show how good it can be at the most demanding dynamic peaks. The only drawbacks are that this level of quality is anything but cheap, and the S7 offers accuracy, not romance or euphonic coloration. Here, however, its lack of any trace of hardness in the upper octaves makes its accuracy as musical as the recording, the rest of the system, and the listening room allow. A great speaker.

PS Audio BHK Signature 300 Mono Amplifier
$14,998
The PS Audio BHK Signature 300 monoblock amp—and its less expensive partner, the BHK Signature 250 stereo amplifier—are both hybrid designs that use a pair of vacuum tubes in their inputs with a double set of parallel MOSFET outputs. They compete in sound quality with far more expensive designs, and deliver real power. The mono amp is capable of 300 watts into 8 ohms, 600 watts into 4 ohms, and more than 1000 watts into 2 ohms. The BK has a very lifelike and open sound that is voiced in ways that make it sound a bit more “forward” in listening position than the more mid-hall sound of my Pass XA160s. However, both forms of voicing prove truly competitive in musical realism. The PS Audio BHK Signature 300 also has very detailed imaging, excellent soundstage width and depth, superior low-level detail, and equally good peak dynamics. In many ways, the BHK Signature 300 provides the best tube sound with all of the control and power of the best solid-state.

Legacy Aeris with Wavelet DAC/Preamp/Room Correction
$22,975
The Legacy Aeris can now be purchased with a specially adapted version of the same Wavelet electronics used in Legacy’s top-of the-line Legacy V. The Wavelet makes an already excellent speaker a relative bargain in performance-for-price. One key advance is that it provides easy automatic setup for room correction. The Wavelet is also, however, an excellent DAC and analog/digital preamp, and takes a new approach to room correction that provides the cleanest and most musically convincing results I have heard to date. The remote features are excellent and allow some musically realistic tailoring of the bass and upper frequencies to suit a given system or taste. Owners of the earlier Aeris electronics get a discount when trading them in on the Wavelet, and the Wavelet can also be used with other preamps, though they had better be truly exceptional as the Wavelet is a really good preamp on its own.

Transparent Audio XL Cables Generation 5
$11,000 meter pair (balanced interconnect), $17,000 8′ speaker cable
My general view of interconnects and speaker cables has long been that, while investing in high-quality wire is well worth it, the differences in sound and performance are often exaggerated and any major differences tend to be the products of coloration rather than real improvements. The new Generation 5 version of the Transparent Audio XL Cables has changed my mind. The interconnects and speaker cables can be set to match the loads and interactions of specific components, and the end results are clearer and more revealing than both the previous-generation Transparent and virtually all the competition I’ve had the opportunity to audition. Even if you are a cable atheist or agnostic, you should really audition the Generation 5s. No sonic miracles, but the kind of subtle real-world improvements in detail and lifelike musical dynamics that really matter.

PS Audio Firmware and Bridge II Upgrades to DirectStream DAC
$N/A
What? A Golden Ear Award for mere firmware upgrades and an improved computer interface module? Well yes, and it sets a precedent I hope others will follow. PS Audio has offered a series of free downloadable firmware upgrades to the DirectStream DAC that have transformed a very good component into a great one. A slight earlier brightness and hardness is gone, low-level musical detail is cleaner, and the lower midrange is better. The soundstage is more revealing with some improvement in depth and image size when the recording permits. Providing a way to take advantage of the fact that every design can be improved with time, and doing so at zero cost to the owner, does deserve an award. The Bridge II upgrade to earlier models of DirectStream DACs does have a charge, but it is minimal. Moreover, PS Audio indicates the Bridge II can make DirectStream into a Roon-ready storage and streaming unit. This upgrade may well be available by the time you read this.

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Golden Ear Awards 2016: Neil Gader https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-neil-gader/ https://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-neil-gader/#respond Tue, 13 Sep 2016 20:42:13 +0000 http://localhost/tas_dev/articles/golden-ear-awards-2016-neil-gader Elac B5/F5 Loudspeakers $229/$560 The two-hundred-buck small speaker category will […]

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Elac B5/F5 Loudspeakers
$229/$560
The two-hundred-buck small speaker category will never be the same again. Just spend a few minutes listening to Elac’s two-way compact and you’ll understand why so many are singing its praises. Touching the bases in virtually every criteria, the Andrew Jones-designed B5 is robust in the mid and upper bass with little in the way of box/port colorations. However, it’s the speaker’s straight-talking midrange that conveys a thrilling musical truth so compelling that all who encounter the B5 simply shake their heads and murmur, “How much did you say these are?” And the same holds true for the floorstanding F5. With its additional woofers it leverages the key strengths of the B5 then significantly builds on them by adding extension and ambience and flat-out dynamic slam. While not flawless, the B5 and F5 are as faultless as speakers are likely to get at these prices.

REL S/5 Subwoofer
$2500
When I make a mental list of all the attributes I want in a subwoofer, I keep returning to the REL S/5. Equipped with a 12″ woofer mated with a 12″ downward-firing passive radiator, the S/5 is capable of spine-tingling seismic stirrings and majestic musicality. It’s beautifully finished and accented, of reasonable size, and easy to configure to a room with its finely-honed variable crossover and output adjustments. And then there’s its performance envelope, which extends deeply and sometimes terrifyingly into the mid-20Hz range, yet manifests the tuneful dexterity to become one with the music. And it does so seamlessly and invisibly and without coloring the character and transparency of even the most vaunted main speaker system.

dCS Puccini CD/SACD Player
Discontinued
The Puccini occupies a special place in my audio experience. More than any other disc player it allowed me to realize the potential of high-resolution digital, specifically the SACD format. Its low-key design was unreservedly gorgeous, only surpassed by CD/SACD sound quality that didn’t take a back seat to pretty much anything else. In fact, long after I’d returned the Puccini to dCS, I remembered what made its sonic signature so special—a warmth, resolution, and transparency that seemed to redefine what it meant to listen to digital. No, it wasn’t LP playback exactly, nor was it anything like most digital I’d been used to. Rather, the Puccini performed a musical dance that was a virtual hybrid of the two formats. Now superseded by the Rossini player, it’s still one of the best single-box units out there. If you are a listener who is well invested in the SACD format, this is one of the two or three players I’d hate to be without.

Audience Ohno Cables
Interconnect, $199/1m (+$82 per meter); speaker, $209/1m (+$20 per meter)
What’s a scrawny little cable doing in TAS’ hoity-toity Golden Ear Awards? Very simple: Once you get past the initial shock at Ohno’s teeny profile you’ll be as surprised as I was by its imperturbable balance and midrange tonal weight, which seem so contradictory to its skinny contours. The Ohnos are also quiet, quick, and extended with well-focused and dimensional imaging. Sure there are plenty of heavy serpentine designs out there, but it’s refreshing to use a cable that integrates so easily in a small room or desktop setup. Maybe, just maybe, the best performance-per-dollar cable that I’ve heard in some time.

Wilson Audio Sabrina Loudspeaker
$15,900
More than any other Wilson speaker I’ve encountered in recent years, Sabrina seems to generate unequivocal praise from all who listen—critics included—garnering accolades that normally accrue to flagship designs. This is quite an accomplishment for a speaker that represents the smallest and least expensive floorstander in the Wilson line. In my view the plaudits are well deserved. Sabrina continues to make a powerful connection with me. It’s communicative in the way I like my speakers to be, with a commanding and linear top-to-bottom energy. It conveys a ripe almost voluptuous sound that allows the listener to sink into its warm embrace. It’s a Wilson, of course, so it’s animated by remarkable dynamic headroom, low-level resolution, and a sense that it willfully wants to drive music forward rather than let it passively lay back. It also artfully combines low-level cues with the most delicate bass dynamics, a region where most loudspeakers loose grip and control. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: Sabrina is, pound for pound, the best Wilson Audio loudspeaker available today.

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