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    The Computer Audiophile

    Naim Audio Mu-so Review

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    Imagine this: You place an audio playback system in your living room and enjoy the hell out of your favorite music with your family and friends. This is something I could only imagine, but for many people this is something they remember. Back in the day people placed a stereo console in their living rooms and partook in all the fun that goes along with listening to music with others. Sadly, over the years these “beautiful” pieces of audio furniture were replaced by separate components and soon relegated to man caves. The wonderful hobby of listening to music moved from a shared experience to a companionless commitment. Even worse than a room in the basement, where there’s a chance the guys could hang out for a while and listen to a couple tracks before being summoned upstairs to join the rest of the party, is the solitary loneliness of listening to music through headphones. The shared experience of listening to music has been obliterated by keep-it-to-yourself audio and the antisocial pseudo-communal experience of sharing yourself with others online, but only from the comfort of your empty house. I am way over on the introvert side on the introvert / extrovert continuum, but I still enjoy sharing the things I love with friends and family … while the friends and family are physically in the room, not simply reachable via Internet Protocol from an iPad in an isolated nook of my living room. In addition to sharing the music I love with others, the ability to share high quality sound with others is also important. Without an easily accessible and conveniently placed high end audio system in a common living space, this sharing of good sound just isn’t going to happen. Sure, my three year old daughter comes down to my listening room now and then, but imagine if I could bring all the music and all the quality to her on a daily basis. That would be priceless. While the dream of doing this is priceless, the reality of doing this here and it’s made possible my England’s Naim Audio. Having the Naim Mu-so in my house has enabled me to bring my favorite (and my daughter’s favorite) music, in high quality, to her and has enabled me to share the fine qualities of a high end component with friends who had no idea such a product exists. I don’t know how many times I’ve told friends that a Bose iPod dock isn’t the height of living, but now I can casually let them experience the joys of high quality music and fine craftsmanship while getting together to create new shared experiences we’ll remember for a lifetime.[PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]

     

     

     

     

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    The Mu-so

     

    In the last several years there have been all kinds of somewhat similar products that while cool, just didn’t do it for me. Or, maybe I was simply blind to what was in front of me and it took me longer than most to realize what a critical role this category of product can play in the lives of high quality music aficionados. Either way, the Naim Audio Mu-so is here and it’s high quality in both sight and sound.

     

    The technical specifics of the Mu-so are very good, but are much less interesting to me than its end game, producing music for people’s enjoyment. Briefly, the Mu-so has six custom drivers setup as a pair of three way loudspeakers. Each physical drive unit is powered by its own 75 watt digital amplifier. The entire system is controlled by a 32 bit digital signal processor, making this active loudspeaker system completely optimized for high end playback. One of my favorite technical features that intersects with aesthetics is the Naim engineered internal antenna. I don’t know how many products I’ve had in my system that feature the ultimate in ugliness, the old faithful of WiFi devices since the late 1990s, the rubbery plastic wireless antenna. The Mu-so does not “feature” this antithesis of high quality. The Mu-so’s built-in antenna not only can’t be seen, but it works terrific. The wireless worked so well during this review period that it blew well past Naim’s stated specs for high resolution file support. According to Naim, the Mu-so only supports sample rates up through 48 kHz when sent to the unit via 802.11 b/g (2.4 GHz) WiFi. Yes, you read that correctly, the Mu-so only features 802.11 b/g wireless, not 802.11n or 802.11ac. I guess good engineers can eek out every ounce of performance from even an old WiFi standard. When streaming music to the Mu-so I monitored WiFi traffic to and from the unit. My monitor showed the Mu-so maxing-out the 802.11g WiFi capabilities at 54 Mbps, but playback remained problem-free. Back to streaming higher resolutions than the stated Naim maximum of 48 kHz. The maximum sample rate supported by the Mu-so is 24/192, so I figured I would cut right to the chase and stream 24/192 via WiFi. To my surprise 24/192 files played back without a hiccup. These high resolution files even played gapless! That’s better than some high end components can do wired, let alone wireless. Is my situation an anomaly? I’m unsure. A search of Google did indicate some users experiencing week WiFi issues with he Mu-so, but I’m sure a Google search of any wireless product would reveal the same. When it comes to WiFi, there’s no substitute for trying the product in one’s own environment. Those lucky enough to have wired Ethernet near a Mu-so can simply plug the unit in and never worry about any WiFi issues.

     

    The Mu-so supports a surprising number of input methods and services including UPnP, AirPlay, Bluetooth (aptX), USB (for USB drives or portable players), Tidal, Spotify Connect, Internet radio, optical (TosLink), and even good ole analog. Bringing all of this together is Naim’s very well designed iOS / Android application. Selection of the input or source service is done with a simply tap of the finger on a specific icon. The app is one of the only apps that I’d recommend people stick with, even if they are using UPnP. I usually tell people to just use JRiver with JRemote if they want to stream UPnP. However, the Naim app is very good and worthy of people’s time to get used to it. Sure there are some things that JRemote can do that the Naim app can’t, such as edit metadata embedded in the file or display tag values for dynamic range, but for the most part most people will probably be very happy with Naim’s app. Well done Naim. My one complaint about the app is its inability to preset some podcast channels for easy access. To listen to The Adam Carolla Show I had to browse into Podcasts by Genre > Comedy > the search for Adam Carolla to find KFIR’s ACS channel. It would be so much better if I could set KFIR as a preset like I can with other Internet radio channels within the Naim app, but this in’t the case right now. It would also be nice if Naim could embed full Spotify browsing and playback within the app for Spotify Connect, but Spotify has allowed almost nobody to do this. Selecting the Spotify icon within the Nam app simply brings up a page that says, launch the Spotify app. once something is playing, the Naim app can control it a bit through forward and back and volume buttons, but it’s too limited for practical use with tens of millions of tracks available. Fortunately, this wont’ be an issue for most audiophiles because they likely don’t stream Spotify’s lossy offerings anyway.

     

     

    Using the Mu-so

     

    I briefly touched on some of the technical aspects above, but what really thrills me about the device is my experience listening to the Mu-so. To me, the Mu-so is all about good aesthetic design, good sound quality, and good Tidal integration within the Naim iOS app. There was no way I was getting a component into our living room unless it visually appealed to everyone in the house. By everyone, I mean my wife. To us, the Mu-so passed the looks test and it’s pleasant to view every day. The switchable front grills are nice as is the ability to raise and lower the intensity of the lighting underneath the unit.

     

    Sound reproduction through the Mu-so is better than 99% of the devices in this category. I didn’t say 100% because I haven’t heard them all, but I can make an educated guess based on what I’ve heard and what I know is available. One can’t expect the Mu-so to replace a full HiFi system, but they also can’t expect a full HiFi system to replace the Mu-so in a civilian living room. What one can expect is for the Mu-so to easily outperform products like the ubiquitous Sonos and likely all the other devices sitting next to the Mu-so in the Apple Store. Many dealers I’ve talk to over the years have always said they wish they had something to offer customers that worked like a Sonos but offered something more high end in all categories namely sound quality. The Naim Mu-so is definitely the product to replace Sonos in homes where people care about sound quality. During the review period I sent everything in the direction of the Mu-so, from Metallica to Menudo (wait, what? Did I just write that) to Leonard Cohen to Iggy Azalea to Prince to Nicki Minaj to Peter, Paul and Mary, because that’s how I listen to music when using a device like the Mu-so. I don’t sit in my kitchen listening for the back hall ambiance of a Keith Johnson Reference Recording while I prepare something for my daughter to eat. Rather, walk around the house or sit in a room listening to whatever moves me at the moment or whatever is going to get my daughter to dance and recite lyrics. Since she was two year old my daughter has been really in to the band Journey. For example, today she came to me and asked me to play Journey and wanted to skip the first track, going right into her hat trick of favorites, Don’t Stop Believin’, Wheel In The Sky, and Faithfully. And yes, she sings the words, dances, and plays the air drums during Faithfully. This is what it’s all about. Exposing my daughter to great music and high quality sound and to watch her be a toddler dancing like nobody is watching. What’s more, I can do this every day of the week because I’ve brought the experience to her rather than wait for her to come down to my listening room. The Mu-so enables me to accomplish all of this while checking off the required boxes of aesthetics, sound quality and great app with Tidal integration.

     

    Note: The settings within the app allow the user to dis/enable the Loudness function. I preferred listening with Loudness disabled as I thought it added a bit too much bass.

     

    Speaking of the app and Tidal integration, the Mu-so to me is all about accessibility. Accessibility in that it’s easy to use the app and stream tens of millions of lossless quality tracks with the tap of a finger and it integrates with how I live, playing music at home and while mobile with Tidal in both scenarios. How so? Naim’s Tidal integration enables the user to create or add to a Tidal playlist within the Naim app, and have that Tidal playlist appear wherever one uses Tidal. On my iPhone and within Roon the Tidal playlists are the same as they are in the Naim app. It’s great when technology follows what the user wants rather than when technology makes the user act a certain way that is the opposite of anyone except a software developer. The Naim Tidal integration is a bit like Roon in that it displays some of the information surrounding an artist or specific release. For example browsing the Artist St. Paul and the Broken Bones, one can tap on a paragraph of text that explains a bit about the band. Within the text one can tap artists names such as James Brown and be taken directly to the James Brown Tidal page. Browsing this band’s album named Half the City enables the user to view information about the album such as a write-up and guitarist, bassist, producer, and mastering engineer. None of the aforementioned metadata is hyperlinked like it is in Roon, but Roon is the exception to the rule when it comes to music discovery in this manner. As expected by now, the Naim Tidal integration displays all of one’s favorite artists, albums and tracks, in addition to all the Tidal selections for What’s New, Tidal Rising, and Tidal Discovery. Granted the Tidal-selected music in these areas has changed since new management took over, but nonetheless this is still available for one’s perusal within the Naim app, as is the age old method of simply searching for what one wants (it’s very fast by the way).

     

     

    Wrap Up

     

    The reason all of us entered into this hobby was because of the music and how it made is feel emotionally. We didn’t start purchasing sterile HiFi gear only to find out we could play something called music through said gear. Music brings out emotion like few other things in this world. What can make the emotional experience even better for many of us is getting closer to the performers and the actual sound of the recordings through great HiFi components. In addition, the ability to share both our favorite recordings and high quality reproduction with our friends and family is hard to put a price on. The Naim Mu-so enables us to overcome many barriers to bringing music back into our every day lives. The Mu-so’s high end build quality, aesthetic appearance, comparatively small size, high sound quality, and well made remote application make it the perfect piece to place almost anywhere in one’s home or office. When tens of millions of tracks are available in high quality at our fingertips we are guaranteed to enjoy this wonderful hobby even more and share what we’ve known forever with our loved ones. Great music is one thing, but add in the element of high quality playback and the listeners can be transported to places only limited by the imagination. The Mu-so has enabled me to share more music and high quality sound with my daughter, in a short period of time, than any piece of HiFi gear I’ve used in her three years on this planet. That fact alone makes the Mu-so worth its weight in gold. As soon as my daughter asks for Pearl Jam in high resolution, the Mu-so will literally be priceless.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Product Information:

     

    • Product - Naim Audio Mu-so
    • Price - $1,499
    • Product Page - Link ex.png
    • User Manual - Link (PDF) ex.png

     

     

     

     

     

    Where To Buy (CA Supporter):

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    It should support over 48kHz, its just not recommended for reliability. Have you actually tried higher or just repeating what Naim say?

    Just what Naim said. I don't have an UPnP server so not entirely sure how I'd test this right now. You're right though, unless the system just refuses to play the file, if the network was clean and got the file there I'd suspect it would play it.

     

    There is an optical input which supports up to 24/96.

    DOH! Yes, you're right and I actually tested this before moving the muso away from my computer. Optical works fine with the MBP and plays just fine at 24/96. What I meant to write is that it does not have a USB DAC input which was how I originally intended to use the muso.

     

    You are correct its 10/100 only ... but there is no need for Gigabit speeds for streaming audio and (I believe) Naim use 10/100 because they feel it is less noisy on the rest of the electronics.

    My theory (and I find this true with real time speech/voice CODECs and the like) is the higher the speed there is less latency, there is a lot lower measurable jitter, there is less congestion at the switch, and the "cleaner" and more predictable the network and application behaves. It also depends on how many other things are on the wired network but I've seen a considerable difference in the responsiveness and behavior of many applications simply going from 100 to 1000 even when the application itself didn't require any additional bandwidth.

     

    As far as "less noise" I cannot comment on that as I have no way to measure it. You could very well be right with regard to that and is a good point.

     

    I will confirm it does full duplex. My Netgear switch reports 100/full. I've had no problem streaming anything over the wired connection.

     

    After a week of listening I've decided separates will get you significantly further. Specifically in the highs, the soundstage, and somewhat in the mids (although sitting in the right spot the mids are great and voices lively). If you've got $1500 to spend on a system there are plenty of great pieces of kit to be put together which would do a much better job of tailoring a sound signature you prefer instead of what naim prefers. But, the convenience of this thing has so much value I'm sticking with it. I pretty much just come into my office, hit play, and get music. Doesn't matter on the source as iTunes (AirPlay), Spotify (Connect), USB (for Hi-Res), all just start playing without any hesitation and I can jump between any of them. The mu-so just jumps to the proper input as soon as you send it the audio. Turn it off. Turn it back on, hit play, and it just resumes whatever playlist from whatever source you had going when you turned it off. It really does work incredibly well.

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    So Chris, how does the QB compare? If I were to buy one now which one would you recommed?

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    So - almost two years later, are you still in love with eh Mu-So? I am seriously considering using one in our new home, which is way smaller than our previous home. (Downsizing y'all! :))

     

    I would like to use it as the living room music source and as a sound bar for the television. What say you? :)

     

    -Paul

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    So - almost two years later, are you still in love with eh Mu-So? I am seriously considering using one in our new home, which is way smaller than our previous home. (Downsizing y'all! :))

     

    I would like to use it as the living room music source and as a sound bar for the television. What say you? :)

     

    -Paul

     

    Still have it and am dragging my feet returning. I love it.

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    Still have it and am dragging my feet returning. I love it.

     

    We spent some time with the Mu-so over the weekend, and we definitely love it. Turned out there were a couple (potential) showstoppers with it for us though. We were looking at it to replace a Sono's PlayBar under the television and to provide higher quality music in the TV room. We purposely did not mount the playbar with the TV as we wanted to play with the sound. Instead, we sat the player under the TV on a couple of the Ikea "Kallas" shelving units. These serve as a nice space for any electronics (err... objects d'art ) that we (Karen) decides to put there, and actually look really good. The 65" television floats over most of one shelf.

     

    The absence of large speakers in the room means that we are pleased with the look of the room. But a Playbar, even with the additional sub plugged in behind a couch, just sounds too small and tinny in this space. It strains to fill the space enough to make TV dialog audible, and music just feels dead and uninviting though it.In this space - in our previous home, with very high sloped ceilings and a loft to resonate around in, it sounded great. There is also a 12' wall of bookcases on the other side of the room acting as acoustic treatments as well... :) That can kind of deaden most any sound!

     

    First, we looked at the Mu-so in an Apple store. This is not the best environment but we figured at the cost point, we could take a chance. Plus there is a 14 day return policy. :)

     

    The Apple store did not have the Naim app installed anywhere, and didn't have the Naim on a public network that would allow me to access it. Given that, it was impossible to test streaming any of our music to it. The Apple store guys were shocked we even asked, and told us no-one has ever asked about it before. They apparently sell about 15 of these per month, so I was even more surprised than they were. That wasn't a total showstopper though.

     

    Not being able to ensure we could turn off the front light was. That light was bright, and in a darkened room watching television, it would have been glaring. The manual said one could *dim* the light, but never gave specifics on exactly how dim.

     

    Secondly, the case was gorgeous, but we had thought it was black. The silver would have shown up like a spotlight on the black shelves under the black TV. That was actually "the" showstopper for us.

     

    We went with our #2 choice, which is a Bowers and Wilkens Panorama 2 Soundbar. Sound wise, there is not doubt the Naim was better, but in terms of a visible fit into the target environment, the B&W worked much better. Sound wise, the B&W lacks deep bass and has some soundstage limitations, but if you are in front of the device playing music, it sounds very good indeed. What bass is there is tangible, clean, and precise in our room. It is not muddled at all by whatever property it is that often makes the frequency of a bass signal difficult to hear. (100hz hump type of thing...)

     

    Amazingly, the B&W will take the DSD signal over HDMI from our BRP when we play SACD disks. It also properly decodes multi-channel audio from DVD-A and BluRay audio disks.

     

    Does it sound as good as the full system? Nope. But then, with a list price of $2,200, and a street price of $1200, who would expect it to?

     

    It doesn't have any streaming capability at all, so I hooked up a Sono's Connect to the optical input. That sounds very good, better than streaming Apple Music through the Apple TV. That 48hz conversion the ATV forces does something unpleasant to the music. And of course, with Sonos, we get Apple Music, our local library, internet radio, Spotify, and dozens of other services. No hi-res streaming, though we have hopes of encouraging the BRP to that. :)

     

    All in all, musically, we would have been happier with the Naim Mu-so - there is absolutely no doubt it sounds superior. But the esthetics were what caused us to rule it out. On the other hand, my office has a space that would be just perfect for one, and father's day is coming up soon...

     

    -Paul

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    We spent some time with the Mu-so over the weekend, and we definitely love it. Turned out there were a couple (potential) showstoppers with it for us though. We were looking at it to replace a Sono's PlayBar under the television and to provide higher quality music in the TV room. We purposely did not mount the playbar with the TV as we wanted to play with the sound. Instead, we sat the player under the TV on a couple of the Ikea "Kallas" shelving units. These serve as a nice space for any electronics (err... objects d'art ) that we (Karen) decides to put there, and actually look really good. The 65" television floats over most of one shelf.

     

    The absence of large speakers in the room means that we are pleased with the look of the room. But a Playbar, even with the additional sub plugged in behind a couch, just sounds too small and tinny in this space. It strains to fill the space enough to make TV dialog audible, and music just feels dead and uninviting though it.In this space - in our previous home, with very high sloped ceilings and a loft to resonate around in, it sounded great. There is also a 12' wall of bookcases on the other side of the room acting as acoustic treatments as well... :) That can kind of deaden most any sound!

     

    First, we looked at the Mu-so in an Apple store. This is not the best environment but we figured at the cost point, we could take a chance. Plus there is a 14 day return policy. :)

     

    The Apple store did not have the Naim app installed anywhere, and didn't have the Naim on a public network that would allow me to access it. Given that, it was impossible to test streaming any of our music to it. The Apple store guys were shocked we even asked, and told us no-one has ever asked about it before. They apparently sell about 15 of these per month, so I was even more surprised than they were. That wasn't a total showstopper though.

     

    Not being able to ensure we could turn off the front light was. That light was bright, and in a darkened room watching television, it would have been glaring. The manual said one could *dim* the light, but never gave specifics on exactly how dim.

     

    Secondly, the case was gorgeous, but we had thought it was black. The silver would have shown up like a spotlight on the black shelves under the black TV. That was actually "the" showstopper for us.

     

    We went with our #2 choice, which is a Bowers and Wilkens Panorama 2 Soundbar. Sound wise, there is not doubt the Naim was better, but in terms of a visible fit into the target environment, the B&W worked much better. Sound wise, the B&W lacks deep bass and has some soundstage limitations, but if you are in front of the device playing music, it sounds very good indeed. What bass is there is tangible, clean, and precise in our room. It is not muddled at all by whatever property it is that often makes the frequency of a bass signal difficult to hear. (100hz hump type of thing...)

     

    Amazingly, the B&W will take the DSD signal over HDMI from our BRP when we play SACD disks. It also properly decodes multi-channel audio from DVD-A and BluRay audio disks.

     

    Does it sound as good as the full system? Nope. But then, with a list price of $2,200, and a street price of $1200, who would expect it to?

     

    It doesn't have any streaming capability at all, so I hooked up a Sono's Connect to the optical input. That sounds very good, better than streaming Apple Music through the Apple TV. That 48hz conversion the ATV forces does something unpleasant to the music. And of course, with Sonos, we get Apple Music, our local library, internet radio, Spotify, and dozens of other services. No hi-res streaming, though we have hopes of encouraging the BRP to that. :)

     

    All in all, musically, we would have been happier with the Naim Mu-so - there is absolutely no doubt it sounds superior. But the esthetics were what caused us to rule it out. On the other hand, my office has a space that would be just perfect for one, and father's day is coming up soon...

     

    -Paul

    Thanks so much for the detailed info Paul. This can really help people make purchasing decisions.

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    One year later :) I got one few weeks ago, you pay for the name, styling and some good performance, but overall it’s a very nicely built unit with decent sound in its category and for an office. I use Audirvana Plus from my Mac mini to stream over Ethernet Tidal HiFi (including MQA), and must admit it’s one of the nicest sounding single unit.

     

    Cons:

    - Wifi is only 2.4Ghz b/g, so a definite nono for wireless streaming

    - Eth limited to 10/100Mbps but ok for HiFi streaming

    - Faint noise floor, even when no music playing and volume set to min

     

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