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Thursday, March 15, 2012

Garrardzilla... waiting to complete hauling my ol' trusty 301 into...





... Raymond's "solid" chassis...

An easy, BUT delicate job, folks... I'm doing my homeworks, yet cannot stand in my shoes waiting to listen to - at last - the completed, full optionals;-) "Garrardzilla"...

So, here are - in the meantime - some shots of "white whale" platter...

The final result will be ready, soon... stay tuned!

Look forward TRULY gorgeous results... the most difficult task is keeping "that" Garrard's feeling, NOT going on unknown paths... like creating a new freak, a Frankenstein: not looking for obtaining a wannabe Micro or a Verdier, actually;-)!

All must be carefully balanced and cared for... new, bespoke plinth, spindle, platter, mat, stainless-steel spings set, intermediate idler-wheel... like in a recipe for a great dish, difficulties and expense and effort must not over-shadow or make it redundant the final result... ALL must "click" together and sound easy and effortless... and, possibly, better - I mean MUCH better - than a stock Garrard 301;-)))

A Garrardzilla.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Goldring/Lenco G-88... a new project






Thanking "LencoHeaven" superb forum and forumers for inspiration... I had a single slate slab plinth made for my pristine Lenco/Goldring G-88, and... opposite to The Rolling Stones, I'll "Paint it White";-)))

In few days I'll enjoy the new "White Whale", to be used with my own bronze massive armbase and Thomas Schick's 12" arm and Lumiere DST, of course...

... how, HOW I love this hobby, pals... always looking forward to discover new nuances in my beloved vinyls.

Thanks to David Hembrow's nice pixes.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Gimme mo' bass!



When you're never tired of low-end and you cannot have enough...

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Frank Zappa (again and again)... but also many, many others



... in Luciano Viti's vision...

A truly superb photographer... have a look to his site...

Telefunken ELA M 251 - the best microphone, ever?



















If trusting to the great, late Dick Rosmini, it was!

Here is the coolest, most recent example for sale on eBay...

Superb!

Hope and trust it will find a good studio... a new home and more good music!

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Candies Dept. - The most sought-after DL-103 ever?





Here is something seldom seen... serial # 101 Denon Columbia DL-103, the DL-103 which made the history of analog audio... highly polished, conical diamond, all completely hand built, also using a completely different bakelite body (vs. the plastic of recent samplers); beside the model "name", this is NOT your usual DL-103, period!

This is a beast, a wolf in sheep skin... sooo rich of harmonics and smooth like silk, yet detailing like a Lumiere (without the hassles...): a truly rare find, whose elastomer aged superbly and surprisingly well, keeping its features.

When did you see one of this, lately:-)?!?! This is even rarer than the white ceramic bodied 80th Anniversary model I had years ago, as this was only for NHK Japanese radio studio turntables and - I'be been told - not available in the audio shops!

Wow!

Richard Leo Johnson's worlds



This guy, Richard Leo Johnson, has the gift.

A pro architectural photographer and a musician... worlds smoothly colliding.

His vision is in the noble heritage of best Americana and its heroes, from John Fahey onward... alternate worlds and persona are created and they're as real as the everyday ones.... Charlie Shoe or Vernon McAlister vs. Blind Joe Death are as true and lively as Richard Leo Johnson or John Fahey.

I met his music some years ago and I jaw-dropped... my friend Daniele was also a recent victim of his music.

I wish you the same...

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

When an image says more than one thousand words...



So true, don't you?

R.I.P. Dept. - Davy Jones passed away...


Fondly remembering The Monkees and those funny, silly deeply carved youth memories of late afternoon screenplay series... Davy was in the quartet... it's like summer is over... when a TV hero we imagined as immortal dies it's like the last swim before leaving seaside on the way back home, end of vacation!

Fondly, sincerely missing him, with condolences to his family and friends.

Thanks... you made me and millions other happy... when world (maybe) was a better place to live.

Years


Bartholomäus Traubeck's visual/musical/poetic creation...

Lovely.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Frank Zappa



In loving memory... as ink rivers were used for him and his music... an hint: how can I imagine something better than Peter Occhiogrosso's FZ bio... a truly must have book!

Here is the deeply missed, late FZ in Giovanni Canitano's vision.

... and, last but not least, a prescription: every month or so give a listen to Chunga's Revenge, The Grand Wazoo, Waka/Jawaka and Hot Rats after dinner.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Diane Arbus, Henry Cartier Bresson plus Bob Dylan and Cynthia Gooding's "Folksinger's Choice", in 1962...




This evening I had the same urge to play a newly purchased disc as I had in 1970, when I bought my very first album... it was February, as well, by chance... forty-two years ago.

I was proud like the French kid with the bottles in that famous H.C. Bresson's picture... humbly, simply proud.

Once it was English prog... now, Bob Dylan's recently reissued radio broadcasting recorded in NYC in 1962... this makes fifty years ago, sharp.

The young, BUT incredibly mature, witty and raw when singin' the Blues and sometimes playing (lovingly said, of course...) a little bozo when chatting with his interviewer, the cool, well informed and witty, as well, Ms. Gooding (here in a famous Diane Arbus' picture).

It's amazingly groovy and impressive hearing Bob quite often thumping here & there the "el cheapo" acoustic guitar here, yet very apt to his musical vision, his mouth harp, his foot stomping on wooden floor, the clunky, noisy, cheap tuning machines squeaking during Bob's tuning and detuning from standard to E open tuning (again, a cool find...) for a couple of blues songs.

The recording is raw but very, VERY communicative... I cannot resist to shot the four sides of the vinyl I almost caressed on my studio way, this evening... enjoying Bob's voice, a palpable presence in my music room, his laughing, his true voice.

The urge, I told you... what can do the love for - and the power of - music is simply swiping away 42 or 50 years!

I own thousands records... and every sought after one is... like the first one.

A miracle.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Zen and the art of pre-stressing Garrard 301's chassis



... I was considering during last successful listenings in my studio: the heavy weight of the bronze Garrardzilla's platter is giving "something" more to the so cleverly conceived stock 301's.

I shared this, both aurally - i.e. sharing the above mentioned feeling with an architect/music lover/audio nut friend - and technically...

Pre-stressed structures are - in architecture - a quite broadly used building technique: bridges, buildings, stadiums...

How does the above apply to "our" humble Garrard 301?

The 12 kilos bronze platter used in the heavy duty, super-smooth giant spindle/bearing both inserted in stock 301's turntable add a brand-new feature to the whole: the added mass gives a "seen" at chassis level "virtual mass" where the filmsy thickness of original Garrard's alu alloy chassis get a stress due to weight.

At molecular level, the centered almost thrice multiplied mass of new spindle and platter give about same results than a turntable whose chassis weights 10/12 kilos with - maybe - a better vibes taming character.

Having access to a laboratory quality gears using, say, photoelastic stress analysis techniques, all the above should be VERY visible and apparent and clear.

The sound, are you asking?!?... don't know, folks... the stressed structure of Garrardzilla sure gives "more" to music... it's clearer, truer, it's... "is".

... and this counts.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

A lute tale







"... playing or listening to the lute brings me an unsurpassed satisfaction. First I did not realize it but now I understand what many people of the young generation are looking for: the same longing for subtlety, purity, simplicity and an enormous rhythmic vitality. I felt so happy having played a simple piece error-free!
It is a sheer joy making lute music sound the way it should.
Much later, when I toured the United States with Carl Dolmetsch, I also played recorder and virginal, but the difference with the lute was immense.
As a lute soloist I discovered the magic that is created when a piece - however simple - is performed well.
The audience was enchanted!
It was as if all the stress and noise of our present time were swiped away..."

The above extract was taken by a longer article written in 1969 by Suzanne Bloch (the daughter of the composer Ernest Bloch)... and... well, it sounds sooooo true and actual and well written.... and right.

The characters: Arnold Dolmetsch, Walter Gerwig, Eugen Muller-Dombois, Hopkinson Smith, Michael Schaffer,
Toyohiko Satoh, Anthony Bailes, Paul O'dette... almost mythical musicians and truly mythical instruments by Matheus Pochl, Wendelin Tieffenbrucker and other museum quality instruments built between 200 and 400 years ago... and still alive and kickin'... they played a role in the tale.

Read... ooooh, PLEASE read this truly illuminating essay by Jo Van Herck...

Consider that Julian Bream, positively guilty of some broadening and renaissance of interest around the lute, back in early fifties, was playing a sort-of "non-existing" instrument, whose single strings tension was several kilos more than the whole strings-set in historic-compliant, now broadly accepted and used, baroque or renaissance lutes around...

In fact, Bream's "lute" was quite guitar-like sounding... all the awesome nuances lute is able got lost... anyway he woke up interest... priceless!

Same - someway - "wrongness" can be found in Konrad Ragossnig and Walter Gerwig's playing, better, sound... too loud, too guitar-like, again... same Bream's approach: their playing is now - respectfully said - almost completely unlistenable, to me!

Then came Schola Cantorum Basiliensis in Basel, Switzerland: it maybe was the true goldmine of this "Lutes and Lutenists' New Deal", the "Subtleties Hochschule":-): under Eugen Muller Dombois' wing grew up the new breed of best lutanists masters: Smith, Satoh, Bailes, Stone and a bunch of other stellar names you'll find in a.m. essay.

BTW, it's very, VERY sad such an absolute master like Eugen M. Dombois has less Web coverage than a soccer player or a baby rocker from some obscure TV reality-show... or - humbly said - myself;-)))!

No life- or even Wiki-facts... no pixes but an old one on a Seon's disc cover... nothing more.

Privacy excess or... plainly said, a shame?!?!

It's an amazingly intriguing topic... I feel so fascinated, same as when I spent two solid days handling "blue-prints" 1:1 size of classic ancient lutes and theorbos at Royal College of Music in London, back in early '90s... looking at the inner secrets of those wooden, light as feathers, incredibly beautiful and rare masterpieces which stood wars, riots, plagues, travels, complicate as ancient Egyptians' royal wooden boats was one of my life highlights, ever.

Or when I stood in awe for hours in early '00s at The Kunsthistorisches Museum on Ringstrasse in Wien, in front of centuries old lutes in glass cages, under controlled humidity conditions... looking at the details, like someone else would have done in front of a Picasso's painting... WOW!

... or, finally (?) when I spent two days at a masterclass, invited - yes, invited - by maestro Hopkinson Smith... I'm a guitar and oud player, yet maestro Smith, after some chatting in Venice and in my hometown, possibly "saw" the light of truest interest in my feverish eyes and... voilà... he changed my musical life!

The care, the love for details, the way he both listens and plays...

Am I a lunatic? Maybe, yet everyone has his obsessions... a man is his obsessions!:-)))

... and I love it ALL... deeply!