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    The Computer Audiophile

    Munich High End 2023 Wrap Up

     

     

    Audio: Listen to this article.

     

     

     

    High End Munich is officially in the books for 2023. As many manufacturers, distributors, and friends are disassembling and packing up audio gear, I'm back at my hotel processing what I've heard over the last four days. I have a few dozen photos and some rough iPhone recordings of the events, but I have no notes about what I experienced. I like to do things differently. I didn't methodically walk the show floor in a linear fashion and I don't remember many of the specifications and technologies manufacturers talk about. Over four days I looked for opportunities to listen to music, not through the lens of a forensic technician, but as a human being with emotions and vulnerability that can be tapped into by musical masterpieces played on the world's best audio systems. 

     

    Selecting my three favorite rooms for this year's High End Munich wrap up was really easy. These three rooms spoke to me in a way that none of the others did, and it wasn't even a close contest. Keep in mind however, that I was in several rooms with fantastic hardware, but I often couldn't get into the music because it was so unfamiliar to me or was like listening to sound effects and test tones. That's not anyone fault, some of us just have different expectations when listening to music. In one case, a manufacturer enabled me to select my own music, but as soon aa play was pushed, the room next door decide that thumping techno beats at 110 dB was what everyone on the entire floor needed to hear. Timing is everything in life.

     


    Best of Show

     

    My award for best of show easily goes to the Ibex Audio room featuring APL HiFi, Kroma Atelier, VAC, Artesania Audio, and Ikigai Audio. This room created had emotional musical impact than any other room I can ever remember at any audio show. The sound wasn't just good for an audio show, it was unequivocally fantastic, no matter the venue. As soon as I hit play on Lady Blackbird's Five Feet Tall, I immediately felt the emotion in her singing and in my chest. It was like this system created an emotional human connection between the music and the listener. 

     

    APL.jpgEric Clapton's Bell Bottom Blues from The Lady in the Balcony album was presented so well on this system that I, and the person sitting next to me, felt like we were sitting in the Cowdry House English estate where the album as recorded. The music was presented as a complete picture into the venue, without a single element standing out from the cohesive whole.

     

    As I played Shostakovich Symphony No. 1 or Mussorgsky A Nigh on the Bare Mountain, the entire symphony orchestra washed over me at times and at other times lone string sections tugged at my heart strings as part of the emotional rollercoaster of the orchestra pieces. It's rare to experience pieces of music like this and to feel the emotional impact of them at an audio show. Usually something gets between the listener and the music. Not in this case, there was no boundary or anything to separate me from the music. I could feel it emotionally as much as I could hear it audibly. 

     

    Finishing my listening session in this room, I really went for it. I played a track that can only be played at the very end of a listening session. Similar to how bands never wanted Rage Against The Machine as their opening, it's tough to follow The Raconteurs' title track from the Consoler of the Lonely album. Especially when I have control of the volume. 

     

    I cranked it up and let the kick drum hit me in the chest. Jack White's dirty guitar sounded like it was coming straight from his amp, rather than through a high end audio system. It was in my face, just as it should be! My feet were tapping and my head was bobbing during this track, and I could see some others in the room were also getting into it in their own way. This isn't a typical audiophile standard at audio shows, but I think even the traditionalists enjoyed it. 

     

    A big tip of the cap to everyone involved in this room. Yes, the manufacturers whose components were used played a large role, but rooms like this don't come together without a team effort by many unnamed folks. Well done. 

     

    Best of Show.jpg

     

     


    A Most Honerable Mention

     

    The two other rooms that deserve honorable mention also had great sound in their own ways. On Friday morning I stopped into the Constellation room for a fresh listen. I was underwhelmed by the system when I visited on Thursday, but Id heard some minor adjustments were made and the speakers now had more than 10 hours on them. This was a system so similar to my own, that I felt right at home. Constellation, dCS, Transparent, and Wilson Audio were all in this room and are all in my room. The acoustic environment was much more difficult at the show than in my tightly controlled listening space, but I still loved the sound. My familiarity with every part of this system from source to speakers certainly helped, as did Constellation's willingness to play a couple requests. After a couple Lady Blackbird tracks from her Black Acid Soul album, I was right at home. I could hear through any slight room issues or outside crowd noise, and connect right with the performance. The only minor "distraction" was Constellation's new Statement amplifier on static display behind the listening position. I wanted to look more at that amp and I wanted to put it into the system! I eagerly await the first public demonstration of the Statement.

     

    Constellation.jpg

     

     

    I've never, or at least that I can remember, given an honorable mention to a cable company. It doesn't make any sense why I wouldn't give this credit where credit is due, or why I even remember such a thing, but to my knowledge, I've never done it. This year is different. AudioQuest totally nailed it at High End Munich 2023. AQ cabling and power delivery combined with the debut of the Rockport Orion speakers was a magical combination. I must also mention a splendid system setup and light but properly done room acoustics package were absolutely key. 

     

    I listened in this room for a couple tracks, then asked the gentleman if I could request a song. He politely demurred by asking what type of music I'd like to hear. When I asked for Lady Blackbird, his eyes lit up, he gave me a fist bump, and started in with a great story about recently seeing her in concert. I knew he and I were about to at least enjoy some music together, and possibly be wowed by the sound quality. 

     

    Right from the open notes of the Blackbird's track Fix It, I was sucked into the music. I don't now if the room emptied behind my front row position, or if people also enjoyed it as much as me, because I was all-in. This is what I came to the show to experience. Sound as pure as the driven snow, with spatial cues and texture, combined with an emotional performance and spectacular soundstage, captivated me. The sound of this system was amazingly pure, with a three dimensional floating soundstage. If the show would've ended on Friday, I believe this room would've been my best off show winner.  

     

    AQ.jpg

     


    Wrap Up

     

    That wraps my High End Munich show experience for 2023, but certainly does't wrap what I experienced outside the halls Munich's MOC event center. On Friday evening I received the world's first demonstration of lossless high resolution immersive streaming. That's a HUGE deal and deserved of its own forthcoming article. In addition, tomorrow morning I'm headed to the town of Herford, Germany to see the T+A factory to visit with the wonderful people and see how the terrific products are made. I only hope I can fit all the goodness into one article :~)

     

    Last but never least, I must thank several members of the Audiophile Style community for stopping me to say hello. The pleasure was all mine. Visiting with you guys was my real highlight of the High End Munich show for 2023. Without you guys this site wouldn't exist. I'm inspired by your passion for our wonderful hobby, your willingness to give your time to help others, and your unmatched kindness when we meet in person. I'm already looking forward to 2024.  

     


     




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    Another room with Marten speakers at an even higher level has been the one of MSB. In that room I could have stayed for a long time. Everything sounded so pure and crystal clear. Probably the Pink Faun server and the big PS Audio Power Plant helped quite a bit to achieve this highly detailed presentation in such a relaxed way and with such ease. Also in the room the other listeners seemed to be captured by the music so that the noise level had been very low ... amost a meditative experience ;-) ... There clearly cannot have been any weak links in this chain.

     

    IMG_1951.jpg

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    Yet another room where speakers came with diamond tweeters had been the one of innuous. In fact, at earlier high end shows I had always been highly impressed by these or similar Estelon speakers. Not this time however despite the Innuous Statement being at work. Somehow, the room was not only cool by temperature but also lacking sonic energy in the room. Interestingly, they had at least three white PSI Audio AVAA C20 active bass traps placed in their room (see white box in the corner behind the left speaker). Was this maybe the source of the lack of sonic energy??? Would be very interesting to hear impressions from others visiting that room. On paper, these active bass traps seem to be a great and quite unique possibility to solve bass problems in ones listening room. This had been the first time I had experienced them at work. Also it would be great to hear maybe from users of them about their impressions.

     

    IMG_1959.jpg

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    5 hours ago, mForMusic said:

    I wish the manufacturers at the show would have played more symphonic music as I find it's the hardest to reproduce convincingly.

     

    I do too, but they don't, for the exact reason you mentioned. It's no coincidence that the default music selection by exhibitors are sparsely instrumented moody songs, rather than a dense symphony or rock song. The former is much easier for the system and the room to reproduce.

     

    Thankfully some, though not enough, will let you select or request a piece of your choice.

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    3 hours ago, fds said:

    Yet another room where speakers came with diamond tweeters had been the one of innuous. In fact, at earlier high end shows I had always been highly impressed by these or similar Estelon speakers. Not this time however despite the Innuous Statement being at work. Somehow, the room was not only cool by temperature but also lacking sonic energy in the room. Interestingly, they had at least three white PSI Audio AVAA C20 active bass traps placed in their room (see white box in the corner behind the left speaker). Was this maybe the source of the lack of sonic energy??? Would be very interesting to hear impressions from others visiting that room. On paper, these active bass traps seem to be a great and quite unique possibility to solve bass problems in ones listening room. This had been the first time I had experienced them at work. Also it would be great to hear maybe from users of them about their impressions.

    Agree,

    I had high expectations but after entering the room I could not bear it longer than 30 seconds and left.

    It was completely boring, uninspiring, for me the complete contrary to the Silbatone/WE or the Alsyvox room where I could sit, relax and enjoy the music. The question is why this room was so bad.

     

    Matt

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    13 hours ago, mForMusic said:

    I wish the manufacturers at the show would have played more symphonic music as I find it's the hardest to reproduce convincingly.

     

    Yes, because it requires high integrity of the chain to achieve the necessary accuracy; this is music where it can go from a single, plaintive solo instrument to an all in, "every cannon firing", grand crescendo - in a matter of minutes. If you have to "ride the volume control" for it not to sound 'bad', then the system has issues - I note in some of the videos from Munich that the volumes are very low, unrealistically so, and so the babble of the people in the room is dominating - this is not what live music of this type is like ...

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    9 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    The one thing that makes classical pieces really hard at shows is the ambient noise level. It can be similar to listening to classical music in the car. The wide dynamic range forces the listener to turn the volume up and down constantly. I got lucky in a few rooms this year. 

    I think we may be mixing "classical" with just some seriously good "analogue" music. Something short and sweet.  Strings, wood, voice and air. 

    Would be grossly unfair to subject a crowd to some overlong Mahler dirge (or others) but if, say, the presenters put on James Levine's Overture to Figaro,1997, conducting the Met...people could be, if time is an issue, in and out in 4 minutes or less.  

    This piece is fun, fast and completely exciting.  Clearly in the  emotional musical range of (forgive the totally gross comparison) of Queen"s "We Will Rock You".

    No one, if listening to the state of the art systems that Munich clearly offers, would not just jump up and down at the end of this bit of musical mischief.  Problem solved.  Musical, truly analogue and a bit of 18th century rock and roll.

    Seriously, crank it up music...!

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    On 5/24/2023 at 7:28 AM, fds said:

    Next, I stumbled across the Linkwitz LX521 speaker system (https://linkwitz.store/de/) which appeared to me to have excellent timing. This seems to be a clever concept. Each speaker comes with five drivers

    ...actually 6 drivers (rear tweeter invisible from listening position)

    On 5/24/2023 at 7:28 AM, fds said:

    a pair is above 20kEUR

    ...the speaker pair itself is 13.9k (+VAT within EU). The other price is the system price with cascaded ASPs (analog signal processors), 10-ch amplification and multiway speaker cables.

     

    The LX521 system strives for correct rendering of the recording, including a deep and realistic sound stage illusion and a wide "sweet area", where the sound stage will not collapse when wandering around in the listening room.

     

    On an after-hours event on Saturday, we had again the chance to verify that claim, with the Italian recording engineer listening to the event he recorded himself.

     

    Beyond that, if adaption to individual preferences is looked for (I want more/less bass, mids, highs, I want tube sound, I want convolving), you may do this with the upstream signal in the digital or analog domain.

     

    Best Regards,

    Frank

     

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    On 5/27/2023 at 8:12 AM, mav52 said:

     

    Holy smokes.  😳, the price for audio these days. Well at least someone is buying these high end pieces to support the industry.

    Well, here is an interesting take of some of the most expensive products demonstrated at and near Munich. 

     

    Hits (And Misses…) Munich High End – 2023 - Gy8

     

    I guess according to Mr. Gregory, we all NEED a 250K DAC to hear digital the way it is meant to be heard. 

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    I need a $250,000 DAC like a hole in the head.

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    1 hour ago, JoeWhip said:

    I need a $250,000 DAC like a hole in the head.

    You NEED ONE according to Gregory. Lol. No other will do. 

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    Gregory can buy me the whole set up and send it over for a review. 

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    8 hours ago, Priaptor said:

    Well, here is an interesting take of some of the most expensive products demonstrated at and near Munich. 

     

    Hits (And Misses…) Munich High End – 2023 - Gy8

     

    I guess according to Mr. Gregory, we all NEED a 250K DAC to hear digital the way it is meant to be heard. 

     

    Quite amusing for me to read; reminds me of the way I have reacted over the years to OTT, uber expensive rigs, which make a mess of the music :D - the higher they climb, the harder they fall ... but when such a rig gets it right, then all is forgiven :).

     

    The off show demo that nailed, for him, provoked him to say

     

    Quote

    But it is also a compelling demonstration of what is possible – and the yawning gulf between the best systems working at their best and the rest.

     

    Yes. The potential of audio replay is always available, for those who want to explore "what's out there" - but the super duper outlay of money is not necessary ... ^_^.

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    Frank

     

    They say, there are just two kinds of people in the world, those who divide the world into two kinds of people and those who don’t - I'll back the don'ts, anytime ...

     

    http://artofaudioconjuring.blogspot.com.au
     

    from my perch there are 2 types of people. Those who love dogs and those who don’t. I don’t trust the latter 

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    31 minutes ago, Priaptor said:

    from my perch there are 2 types of people. Those who love dogs and those who don’t. I don’t trust the latter 

     

    Well, I go with both cats and dogs ... if I have a 'prejudice', it's towards the ordinary - no extra big, or extra small, or unusual looking; looking back, they've have "turned up on the doorstep", so to speak - I like it that way, :).

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    On 5/29/2023 at 5:50 PM, Priaptor said:

    Well, here is an interesting take of some of the most expensive products demonstrated at and near Munich. 

     

    Hits (And Misses…) Munich High End – 2023 - Gy8

     

    Many thanks for sharing this write up with us. Unfortunately, I had missed to visit the CH room, where the Wilson Audio Alexx V Speakers had been set up so carefully. Also I did miss to listen to WADAX digital playback systems. Both CH and WADAX will go on my ToVisit list for next years show. Also many of the things described I found to match my own impressions. Before going to the show, I had been quite happy to see so many rooms in which Wilson Audio speakers had been used. However, when visiting those rooms, most of them did not impress me. In contrast, at shows before the C19 pandemic, it had been pairs of Sasha DAWs and Alexia IIs that had left most memorable moments. Most surprising was probably the presentation of the big Wilson Chronosonic in the big room shared with other Wilson Audio systems set up. There we had even witnessed moments in which they could not even figure out how to get the CD playback started for several minutes ... in German the expression for your feelings in such moments is "Fremdschämen" ... At least the Alexx V in the Constellation Audio room, I had found to be very enjoyable on Saturday as already mentioned above. Probably, Wilson Audio has already passed the threshold where it is felt to be necessary to impress at shows as there appearantly is a big community fully aware of their potential capabilities.

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    On 5/29/2023 at 6:50 PM, Priaptor said:

    Well, here is an interesting take of some of the most expensive products demonstrated at and near Munich. 

     

    Hits (And Misses…) Munich High End – 2023 - Gy8

     

    I guess according to Mr. Gregory, we all NEED a 250K DAC to hear digital the way it is meant to be heard. 

     

    You have to take this with a grain of salt as Mr. Gregory's wife is working for Wadax and CH Precision.......

     

    Matt

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    1 hour ago, matthias said:

     

    You have to take this with a grain of salt as Mr. Gregory's wife is working for Wadax and CH Precision.......

     

    Matt

    I take everything with a grain of salt. 

     

    Whether it be a reviewer with some kind of manufacturer arrangement, a distributor/dealer touting their product or an end-user who owns the equipment they are touting.  Gregory's touting of a particular system which occurred offsite in a purposefully designed extremely expensive room compared to those other rooms AT THE SHOW with the limitations of show conditions, is a testament to how one can manipulate. Show conditions themselves, where the people next to you are talking, snorting, the music is a hit or miss, sitting in a seat that is available rather than optimal and of course the room itself that even if one hears something that sounds great it is usually just luck. Then you have clan and group think mentality so many are guilty of, I will leave THE brand names out, cheerleading blindly.  

     

    I'm of the Neil from the movie Heat mentality: "Don't let yourself get attached to anything you are not willing to walk out on in 30 seconds"

     

    Gregory's bias, if there is one which I am sure there is, is not much different than any other most of us live with. 

     

    The truth is, that modern day equipment is all so good, that properly set up, in a good room where the speakers size are properly matched size for that room, with very few exceptions, any of us could be very happy with.  

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