I must admit that in the age of Trump I feel pretty uncomfortable using the word “crowned” in just about any context, but in this case there simply is no other word that suits. A year or so ago I published a post on the value and importance of analog audiophiles finding the best sounding records – the demo discs, in their collection. In that post I advocated for this as a way to hone critical listening skills and to experience the thrill of finding great sounding records that we may not have even known we had.
Searching your collection this way is also a great way to practice tweaking your turntable set up. After making some PRETTY BIG changes to my system recently with a different pair of speakers and a cable upgrade I’ve gone through yet another major round of tonearm tweaking.
I find myself more in awe than ever at how much CONTROL we analogue audiophiles have, potentially, over how our system sounds. Before this speaker upgrade I would have told you I had my TT pretty well set. Not so, it turned out. And the tonearm adjustments I’ve made since making those system changes have literally been the difference between pretty good and FANTASTIC sound.
Anyway, getting back to the coronation. I’ve been dipping my toe into classical music of late, and as I hear more good pressings of great classical performances, I’m finding that the right music with the right performance on the right pressing can deliver some of the most exciting music I’ve ever heard. A great classical record can offer an audiophile listening experience that easily rivals any I’ve had with even the very best rock and jazz records.
Recently I purchased a copy of Bizet’s The Carmen Ballet performed by the Bolshoi Theater Orchestra, conducted by Gennady Rozhdestvensky. After reading about the record on The Skeptical Audiophile and getting a quick preview of the piece on my laptop, I knew it was music I would enjoy the heck out of. So I ordered a copy, crossed my fingers and hoped for a decent copy to arrive.
Well, arrive it did and it was certainly decent, and then some. And then some more! After some fine tuning of the arm height, I can now safely say this is hands down the best sounding record in my collection. And the music and performance is absolutely wonderful. Wow! What a way to showcase my system.
It was one of my finest moments in this hobby by far, one where it all came together – speed, weight, accuracy, tonality, musicality, transparency. I was looking for the problems and try as I might, I just couldn’t find them. For the length of side one I failed to hear anything but incredible music incredibly well recorded and extremely well reproduced.
At this point you might be asking if this has anything to do with you and your records and your system anymore. My hope is that you’ll draft off my enthusiasm here and, after tweaking your turntable, start cleaning and playing the records in your collection.
I also hope you’ll get to a place with your analog system that allows you to start finding the hidden gems that showcase everything your system is capable of, and that rewards everything you’ve put into that system. That’s the reason we audiophiles do what we do, IMO, and it’s what makes all the nuttiness of this hobby ultimately worthwhile.