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Thursday, March 19, 2026

Ruggiero Ricci’s Radio Bern Vol. 10 🇨🇭

 


From Jürg Schopper’s Triston, a violin recital, truly a labor of love reissue and another ultra-limited edition (300 discs worldwide) devoted to violinist’s violinist Ruggiero Ricci.




I couldn’t be nearer to the mastertape!
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The mono recordings dates 1958 and 1960 and sound is almost painfully lively and realistic, with a superbly wide open soundstage and in-room violin.

Listening to these pezzi di bravura recordings 67 years old is a truly rare and exciting pleasure and Triston’s is truly carving its place on great record labels Pantheon 💫

Thanks to Jürg Schopper for his friendship and generosity.





Perlimpinpin 😉

 


🔈🎶🎶 Perlimpinpin by Scoubidou Research™




The (almost) exact science of ultimate sound!! 🙄 The result of 17 years of quantum research in a vinyl-heated garage, this revolutionary cable is based on a two-tone, inverted helical braided Scoubidou architecture.


👉 Thanks to controlled emotional induction, electrons flow with greater conviction, drastically improving the soundstage (especially on tracks you already love).


👉 Its variable psychoacoustic capability allows it to automatically adapt the sound reproduction according to your mood… or the price you paid.


👉 Ultra-low karmic resistance guarantees virtually no energy loss, except in the case of skepticism in the room.


👉 The renowned audiophile Skin Effect Premium™ pushes unwanted frequencies to the outside of the cable, where they can finally rest in peace.


👉 Its cosmic antenna-like behavior subtly captures harmonics forgotten since the golden age of analog… sometimes even from concerts that never took place.


💎 The connectors, set with precious stones selected for their vibrational alignment, ensure pure transmission, free from any musical negativity.


🚰 And of course, the integrated tap allows you to adjust the music flow:

"Jazz" setting → smooth and silky

"Rock" setting → maximum pressure

"Audiophile" setting → subtle trickle… but extremely expensive


🎧 Result:

A wider, deeper, more… convincing sound.


Or, as the experts say:


"You can finally hear the difference... especially after reading it." 😄

(I'm ashamed...) 🫩


Thanks to Pierre Luciani 🙏

The Goto Pylon 💫

 



Modeling the new horn’s array 

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An Emily Remler’s mastertape 💫

 






Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Kenwood L-D1 (1992)

 


Of course, seeing "that" brand on microwave ovens or pasta makers now breaks the hearts of audio enthusiasts who know its history...

The Kenwood L-D1, a reference-level high-end CD player, introduced in 1992 and engineered in collaboration with the engineers at Accuphase (of which Kenwood was the "parent"), was the flagship of Kenwood's "Audio Purist" series. It was known for its monumental construction (it weighed about 20 kg) and a playback system that emulated the operation of an analog turntable.






Architecture and Mechanics:

The L-D1 used a unique top-loading technology, based on the mechanism developed in-house by Kenwood for the LVD-Z1 model.

Fixed Platter: The CD was inserted label-side down onto a 130 mm turned aluminum rotating platter. Disc Holder: It came with a 100-gram stabilizer that covered the entire surface of the CD to minimize vibrations and correct any warping in the media. Motorized Lid: The top glass could be set to open at three different angles (45°, 60°, or 80°) via a rear selector. The chassis was constructed with die-cast aluminum panels up to 8 mm thick and internal steel sections for complete isolation from any dispersion and vibrations.

Audio Specifications:

The technological heart of the player guaranteed top-level performance according to the official data reported by "The Vintage Knob" and the Kenwood manuals:

D/A Conversion: Dual PDM (Pulse Density Modulation) system with Super C4 circuitry for distortion cancellation. Signal-to-Noise Ratio (S/N): 108 dB. Dynamic Range: >100 dB. Total Harmonic Distortion (THD): 0.001% at 1 kHz. Analog Outputs: Gold-plated solid brass terminals with output impedance of only 0.1 Ohm.

~~~

Thanks to Marco Maggiorelli for remembering such a shiny past.



Homer 😎

 






Having a progressive picnic…

 



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Happy 75th birthday to Bill Frisell 🥂💫🍀🥂

 




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Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Jean Hiraga 💫

 



Jean Hiraga and his 30W Le Classè A 


There's a moment in the history of audio when reality seems to bend, as if a single man could change the fate of an entire continent simply by turning on an amplifier. It's Paris, 1977: the city smokes, vibrates, argues, and a luminous crack opens up in the underground of European hi-fi. Into that crack enters Jean Hiraga, born in 1938, a Japanese man who doesn't seem like an engineer but a character straight out of a Kurosawa film rewritten by Truffaut. He doesn't arrive with a resume, he arrives with an aura. He doesn't bring patterns, he brings a creed. And from that moment on, audio will no longer be a hobby: it will be a religion. 

Hiraga lives like an electric monk, surrounded by glowing tubes that look like votive candles, transformers hand-wound like metal rosaries, Altec 604 speakers that take up more space than a closet, and sheets of paper filled with scribbles only he understands. He doesn't speak much, but when he listens to an amplifier, he seems to read its soul: he understands whether a capacitor is happy, whether a transistor is at peace, whether a circuit is breathing or suffocating. If it doesn't breathe, he throws it away. If it doesn't sing, he rebuilds it. If it doesn't vibrate, he considers it dead. He's a man who doesn't design: he diagnoses. He doesn't build: he heals. He doesn't measure: he feels. In 1979, he presented his 20W Class A, an amplifier so simple it seems like a joke, but instead it's a stroke of genius: twenty watts that feel like two hundred, a circuit that breathes like a living animal, a timbre that doesn't measure well but moves like a first love. 

In 1981, Le Monstre arrived, a tiny, almost ridiculous power amp that nevertheless made listeners leave with the look of someone who'd seen a ghost: few watts, no frills, just the truth. And then came the Lectron JH-50, a tube amp that doesn't play, it levitates; an amplifier that doesn't reproduce, it confesses; a device that turns every speaker into an altar. Meanwhile, in the editorial office of L'Audiophile, Hiraga transformed a magazine into a secular monastery: single-ended triodes, wide-band horns, hand-wound transformers, harmonic distortion as a form of spiritual truth. In an age when everyone is rushing toward fast transistors, useless watts, and laboratory graphs, he preached the opposite: fewer watts, more soul; fewer components, more truth; fewer numbers, more music. And then there was his greatest obsession: the belief that music isn't a physical phenomenon but a human one. That an amplifier doesn't have to be perfect, but alive. That harmonic distortion is not a flaw, but a character. That simplicity is not poverty, but purity. Hiraga doesn't build devices: he builds experiences. He doesn't seek perfection: he seeks life. 




Each of his projects seems to say the same thing: "I don't impress, I excite." And when he retired from the public eye in the 1990s, leaving behind a trail of disciples, DIYers, Class A fanatics, and triode nostalgics, the audio world understood that someone like him would never return. Because Hiraga wasn't a designer: he was a character. A man who transformed electronics into an aesthetic, philosophical, almost gastronomic act. 



A samurai lost in Paris who taught Europe that music isn't measured: it's lived. Even today, when you turn on one of his circuits, you feel something no graphic designer could ever explain. A heartbeat. A breath. A warmth that isn't thermal but human. It's Hiraga's heart, continuing to beat within every watt that doesn't need to shout to be heard. And in that moment you realize you're not listening to an amplifier: you're listening to a man. And that man, after all, has never left.





I was blessed and honored to personally know Jean Hiraga and spend with him several days together, learning a lot, over a 30 years span.


It’s never over, Jeff Buckley 💫

 


Yesterday I watched this movie… I deeply enjoyed the Jeff’s meteor and life… sadly abruptly interrupted by exhaustion and stress… and ill-fated casualties (swimming in a river fully dressed at dusk).




He was such a sweet, nice young soul…


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Monday, March 16, 2026

A wiser approach 💫

 


Music, first and always…







You cannot believe how many blames and negative feedback I got from friends and random Blog readers about my temporary use of those classic Quad ESL & Quad 22/II combo… it’s like, stepping back to human sized and priced audio gears, makes me automatically less authoritative and legitimized to express any musical and technical opinions… simply because my cables aren’t costing like a small car!

Seems that mainstream audiophile is hosted and sacrificed by audio magazines and their (often) false and expensive myths: if you don't follow the trend, you’re out.

This is the current situation... the status quo, which I firmly reject, proclaiming my personal taste, the intellectual honesty behind my choices, and the primacy of my senses over audio industry rules and diktats.



… and I’m soooo happy, relieved, too.



The Shrine

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Sunday, March 15, 2026

Guido Crepax

 




Thanks to my friend Arnaldo for sharing…

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Sir Paul on the run 💫

 



The movie 🤟



Cat Stevens on tape 💫

 





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Songe by Vincent Bèlanger

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(From the liner notes) Songe is a deeply introspective work, composed and performed by Vincent Bélanger, where harp, double bass, violin, soprano, and cello intertwine to create a sonic world both fragile and powerful. The cello, as the master of the dream, leads the listener through emotional landscapes, memories, and inner light.

With 10 years of audiophile experience as Audio Note UK's musical ambassador, Vincent has refined his exploration of sound texture and color to deliver a sensory, almost tactile, listening experience that speaks directly to the soul.

Inspired by French music, Bach, lyrical minimalism, and the romantic tradition, this work moves between the sacred and the intimate, between contemplation and the heart's impulse.




ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

(From PMA Magazine) Recorded at Église Saint-Benoît de Mirabel, Québec, Canada — whose exceptional acoustics became the sixth instrument of the ensemble — Songecaptures the organic dialogue between instruments and space. Every nuance — from the softest resonance of the harp to the deep warmth of the double bass — was shaped to reveal the full dimension of the sound. The recording and mix were led by Léon Fu and Louis Morneau, whose meticulous approach brought life and sonic transparency to each performance. 


Final mastering was realized by Pranas Gudaitis in Vilnius, Lithuania.


The project was developed in collaboration with Jay Lee, audiophile producer and content creator from the renowned YouTube channel Jay’s Iyagi, who contributed his expertise and passion for sound realism throughout the process. Within just a few weeks of its release, audiophiles around the world have praised the recording for its purity, realism, and emotional depth. 


A vinyl edition is planned for mid-2026, to complement the high-resolution digital and CD versions






TRACK LIST

  1. Solitude - Harp solo - 4:19
  2. Pour ma sœur en allé (by André Gagnon) - Ensemble and soprano - 4:58
  3. Songe - Ensemble and soprano - 4:27
  4. Comme un tango - Instrumental - 5:00
  5. Passage ancien - Instrumental - 6:19
  6. Choc - Cello solo - 2:41
  7. Fée - Ensemble and soprano - 5:19
  8. Dialogue - Cello and double bass - 5:06
  9. Nocturne - Instrumental - 5:41
  10. Tout est dit - Ensemble and soprano - 5:16
  11. Cantilène (by André Gagnon) - Ensemble and soprano - 3:11


CREDITS

  • Compositions, orchestrations, and artistic concepts: Vincent Bélanger, except tracks 2 & 11: André Gagnon

  • Arrangements, artistic direction and texts: Vincent Bélanger


MUSICIANS

  • Vincent Bélanger: Cello

  • Annabelle Renzo: Harp

  • Étienne Lafrance: Double bass

  • Véronique Turcotte: Violin

  • Amélie Moise: Soprano (Tracks 2, 3, 7, 10, 11)





Saturday, March 14, 2026

Go, Daniel, go!

 


Priceless!

While listening to my mighty Garrardzilla with The Peak 13” arm and Analogtechnik’s DST IceAge cartridge, I’m reading about Daniel Kim’s recent researching about the fundamental principles of analog sound and the recording aesthetics of the tube era.

Using premium sought-after vintage tube microphones to study tonal balance, harmonic texture, and spatial realism — and applying those findings to the development of DST cartridges.





Neumann CMV563

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Dimmed-lights, it’s Lyrita’s time 💫

 








 



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Friday, March 13, 2026

😳

 



For the second time in seven years, David Gilmour's iconic black Fender Stratocaster has been sold for a record-breaking sum.


The 'Black Strat' was Gilmour's favorite instrument on stage and in the studio through the majority of his Pink Floyd career. The guitar can be heard on classic albums like 'Dark Side of the Moon' (1973), 'Wish You Were Here' (1975), 'Animals' (1977) and 'The Wall' (1979).


On Thursday, the guitar sold in New York for a staggering $14.55 million at Christie's auction as the headlining item from 'The Jim Irsay Collection.' 


Irsay, the late-owner of the Indianapolis Colts, was an avid music fan and collector, who exhibited his collection of music artifacts at museums around the world. A portion of the proceeds of sales from the Irsay Collection will be donated to philanthropic causes, according to the Christie's listing.


Irsay purchased the guitar from a Christie's auction in 2019. That year Gilmour sold a total of 120 instruments at auction to raise funds to help fight climate change. 


The entire collection brought in $21.5 million, with the Black Strat selling for $3,975,000 on its own.


The Black Strat's sales record was eclipsed the following year when Kurt Cobain's rare Martin D-18E sold for $6 million. 


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Chris Spedding’s amp 💫

 


 This is Chris Spedding’s Deluxe Reverb, which he's owned from new since 1970.




 It's been well used and well travelled obviously. It sounds fantastic.


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Jerry Garcia’s “Tiger” auctioned at Christie’s

 



One of the most iconic instruments in rock history changed hands Thursday night as Jerry Garcia’s legendary “Tiger” guitar achieved a price realized of $11.56 million at a Christie’s auction in New York—shattering its pre-auction estimate of $1–2 million and placing the instrument among the most valuable guitars ever sold.


While Tiger is most closely associated with Garcia’s performances throughout the 1980s with the Grateful Dead, the guitar has occasionally returned to the stage in tribute performances since Garcia’s passing. During the touring Jerry Garcia Symphonic Celebration, guitarist Warren Haynes performed on the legendary instrument — including a memorable appearance at Red Rocks Amphitheatre, where Garcia’s tone echoed once again across the Colorado sandstone.






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