Reviving a legend.
Milab is coming back.
A new chapter begins.
Driven by a passion for great sounding microphones.
Not by chance, Milab’s was the Mike song f choice of Kavi Alexander and his Water Lily Records 🏆
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This is Stefano Bertoncello's Blog (ステファノ・ベルトンチェッロ - トゥーグッドイアーズ − ブロガー、オーディオ&ミュージック・コンサルタント) devoted to pacific topics like Music - live and reproduced - i.e. discs, audio, guitars and whatever musical: concerts, workshops, exhibitions, etc. Furthermore: travelling - as a mind-game and real globetrotting - and books, movies, photography... sharing all the above and everything which makes Life better and Earth a better place to stay, enjoying Life, in Peace. Proudly ads-free since 2007! Enjoy.💫
Reviving a legend.
Milab is coming back.
A new chapter begins.
Driven by a passion for great sounding microphones.
Not by chance, Milab’s was the Mike song f choice of Kavi Alexander and his Water Lily Records 🏆
💫
I recently found an original 1st pressing in NM conditions in a second-hand box of ‘80s disco and other trashed discs… what such a masterpiece of folk-rock was doing in such a bad company is a sort-of mystery, yet… happy I grabbed it at the cost of a coffee… and I sure saved it from the oblivion, indeed.
The cover is made of a canvas-like, soft and textured carton and it’s a pleasure to handle.
This record sounds amazing, much, MUCH better than my trusty copy on Mooncrest label.
This disc has been (and still is) a personal fave of mine: Maddy Prior and Martin Carthy’s voices sound so fresh, yet dramatic and music flows effortlessly and never tiring.
A humble little masterpiece from 1971.
This Japanese pressing, a 2-records set 180 grams vinyls, is a masterpiece and a labor of love: premium virgin vinyl, awesome pressing, sound-wise spectacular… this put to shame virtually any audiophile reissue.
If you don’t know this record, you’d better listen to it… the best music played by the best musicians, period.
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Maybe both, with a little magic, too!
I’m publishing this Misho Myronov’s short article about his handmade transformers, the heart of his amazing, unique gears: his phono stage and other amps and preamps are able of truly remarkable musical performances and are in some of the best audio systems worldwide
I’m re-publishing on my blog because - same as per Misho’s strong will - I don’t want his wise words and concepts went lost.
“My reply to a good friend question about Wooden output transformer - just do not want it to be lost 🙂
There is nothing unusual - since the transformer behaves as a “normal” transformer, just designed for a different frequency range.
Cores of different types should be applied where needed, and if needed, no doubt - but if we can avoid to use it - why not? 🙂
As I’ve said, the coil should be designed as any audio frequency range output transformer - it should have the required properties 🙂
There is no self resonances in the audible frequency range (and not even close to it - otherwise it will be terrible design 🙂 and the only real issue that we should consider - we should not feed the signal considerably lower than the lowest transformer frequency in to it - since at the lower frequencies the transformer impedance drops and if unwanted signal is present - it will not be passed, but will saturate the signal with the distortions (higher harmonics will pass) - same as with any amp, do not feed the much lower than designed frequencies in to the output stage - at this frequencies the transformer will be not seen as a load by the tube, but as a short 🙂
Nothing new, actually - but people dealing strictly with audio some time thinking too limited - only in a comfort zone they are used to 🙂
Forget about core - it’s just a trick in order to provide our coil with the higher impedance and lower dcr - any transformer can be done without core - but the coil can become enormous in size, and dcr of the windings will (can) rise much higher that it can be allowed. So, core helps to make the transformer smaller, and realistically workable. The lower frequency is - the higher our needs in core.
The higher frequency is - the lower our need in the same core.
In fact, most popular high silicone steel cores - the ones that has higher of all saturation level - the most important parameter for the high dynamic range output transformer (think hysteresis, think useful dynamic range - the undistorted range, the effective range the core actually work - nothing can beat the silicone steel 🙂 - but back to out topic - frequency range. Silicone steel core is not effective at the higher frequencies. It’s useless at 2 kHz and higher. It not help any more. Transformer designer should think about different approach at those frequencies. And here comes the magic of the audio transformers.
Bad designer gladly using the cores effective at wider frequency ranges - like permalloy, metglass, etc - core helps his bad design to pass higher frequencies, but the main issue - dynamic range - is forgotten.
Oh, well… where are we? Coreless - and I want to be short… each frequency range has its own rules. And own problems. And different instruments to solve it 🙂 and what is good for one range - is enemy for another.
The World is full of the coreless transformers and coils. Many just do not realise it 🙂
Ps(added later):
And of course (it was not mentioned as it was no asked) - the main benefit of the coreless transformer - the lack of ALL the issues associated with the core - core saturation, core distortions, core losses…. You just free of all those garbage!
Ps: but the coil has to be good, very good 🙂 as always!”
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Today, in Venice in 1678, Antonio Vivaldi was born, the "Red Priest" who revolutionized the music of his time. In his violin concertos, he introduced innovative rhythmic and structural solutions, experimenting with forms and techniques that would influence all Baroque music.
A composer who combined virtuosity and inventiveness with formal rigor, he left a lasting mark on musical history (with all due respect to Stravinsky).
Laurie Anderson with Sexmob's 'Let X=X' is due May 8 on Nonesuch Records. The 3-LP / 2-CD set was recorded live during a 2023 tour by Anderson and the jazz band Sexmob—Steven Bernstein and Briggan Krauss on brass, Kenny Wollesen on percussion, Douglas Wieselman on winds and guitar, and Tony Scherr on bass.
The album features 23 songs, including many favorites from throughout Anderson’s career, performed in new arrangements—plus one by Lou Reed and Metallica Metallica, “Junior Dad.” The title track, from Anderson’s landmark 1982 album, 'Big Science,' is out now.
Listening to my Made in England on Polydor label first pressing of this classic Fripp & Eno’s disc makes me doubting the progress exists: after an incredibly pleasant and deep listening session, I switched to the nice HQ Japanese disk, just out of curiosity…
… the CD sounded so lesser vs. the vinyl disc: not in terms of the eternal, boring struggle between analog and digital, but gone was the deep involvement and the lysergic multilayered complexity popping out at every note.
Gone was the dynamics and subtleties and the sense of surprise.
The inter-note silence was a bit anechoic on CD, unnatural and two-dimensional , while the analog disc preserved the intrinsic sense of manual skill and tension involved in tapes looping and sound-on-sound recording.
An epiphany, intriguingly disturbing.
P.S. - also impressive considering my vinyl copy is 50 years old and after several - actually a lifetime - listening, it still plays beautifully and less noisy than many nowadays brand-new “audiophile” reissues!
Stunning!
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When the great bandleader Duke Ellington died in 1974, longtime Chronicle critic Ralph J. Gleason (March 1, 1917 – June 3, 1975) wrote a lengthy appreciation for Rolling Stone. Gleason, who began his career writing about jazz and popular music back in the 1930s, co-founded the countercultural magazine with Jann Wenner in 1967.
Near the end of the piece, Gleason quoted French poet Blaise Cendrars, who once saw the Ellington orchestra perform in Europe: “Such music is not only a new art form but a new reason for living.” Though Gleason, who died in 1975 at age 58, was much older than his colleagues in the rock world of the 1960s and ’70s, he never stopped living through the music of American youth.
Gleason is often noted as one of the first music critics to take rock ’n’ roll seriously. Nearly 50 years after his death, he gets a reverential biography that doubles as a glimpse into the changing tastes of record buyers in the mid-20th century. “The Life and Writings of Ralph J. Gleason” is an academic publication (and priced as such), but music fans who remember the names of the writers who made a difference may want to take a look.
Gleason’s early education took place at Columbia University and in the jazz clubs of New York City, but he became a part of the San Francisco fabric after moving across the country in the mid-1940s. He was on hand for, and often instrumental in, many of the landmark events of his adopted city’s cultural awakening — from the performance poetry of Lawrence Ferlinghetti and the founding of the Monterey Jazz Festival to the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley and the Human Be-In in Golden Gate Park, which kicked off 1967’s Summer of Love.
“His sense for watersheds minor and major was extraordinary,” said activist Michael Rossman. Gleason considered himself an activist of sorts, writing about race relations, rampant consumerism and the inadequacies of partisan politics without ever falling out of earshot of the music.
Reviewing a Miles Davis concert, Gleason wrote that the trumpeter played “the whole line of a ballad through once, slowly, and breathily with infinite tenderness and beauty before blasting it joyously into a thousand shimmering pieces in a wildly swinging second chorus.” (Gleason would later write the liner notes to Davis’ jazz fusion masterpiece, “Bitches Brew.”) When, in the mid-1950s, he favorably compared a rockabilly newcomer named Johnny Cash to the better-known Elvis Presley, Cash pocketed a clipping of the review and carried it with him for years.
Here’s Gleason explaining his theory about why the psychedelic rock of the “San Francisco Sound” became the soundtrack of a generation:
“In a culture of noise — not just the jets roaring overhead and the trucks thundering on the streets, but the cyclic noise of the crashing of institutions and assumptions and conventions, the whole crescendo of a collapsing civilization — the only peace seems to be in the middle of an even greater sound in which a special kind of sonic high is produced and a new kind of one-to-one communication occurs.”
Like most writers, Gleason had his trademark tics, some of which pile up over the course of Armstrong’s narrative. He routinely compared musicians to innovators in other artistic fields — Lenny Bruce, James Baldwin, Shakespeare. He dressed the part he created, in trench coats, tweed jackets and horn-rimmed glasses, smoking a pipe. Later in life he adopted a handlebar mustache.
At Rolling Stone, Gleason was decades older than his fellow contributors. His distaste for radicalism and his nostalgia for the swing bands of his own youth sometimes found them at odds. But they also thought of him as a sage — Wenner, for instance, was one of many future notables who spent countless hours at the Gleason family home on Ashby Avenue in Berkeley.
If there was one piece of wisdom Gleason handed down, it always came down to surrendering to the music. Near the end of the book, Armstrong quotes Jon Landau, the former rock critic who went on to become Bruce Springsteen’s longtime manager. One night, on the phone with Gleason, he mentioned that he was about to head out to a Neil Young show.
“Have a ball,” Gleason said.
“That was Ralph,” Landau recalled. “As long as the subject was music, he was having a ball.”
Source: James Sullivan, The San Francisco Chronicle
A young Mel Collins’ sax and flute, shortly thereafter to enter in King Crimson, give to this elusive and sought-after, well-kept secret disc a quite cool Progressive flavor.
A very, VERY nice one, indeed!
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I’m a collector and lover of South African jazz and I cherish some superb records on Ogun and Steeplechase labels where I learned to appreciate Johnny Dyani’s double-bass and high merits as a composer.
I wasn’t aware of this 1984 disc, recorded and pressed in Sweden, until today and - fortunately - I grabbed it, pronto as it was a new old stock copy sitting unmolested for the last 42 years on a shelf in a shop where nobody knew about the A M A Z I N G musical content!
The music, often dedicated to ZA hero Nelson Mandela, sounds so fresh and lifelike, so distant from the over-polished salon-jazz far too common these days.
The contagious joy pouring from this awesome disc is palpable… no selfish soloists here, but great musicians “born under the heat” swinging and having good time on November 18th, 1983 in the cold Stockholm.
I love South Africa and this music 🇿🇦
… yes, Quartette, not Quartet, as per the cover of my newly found - after a 40+ years search - original, mint conditions, sought-after copy on Audiophile AP-66 label and extremely well-sounding mono red-vinyl: a record I heartfeltly love for it’s energetic sound and optimistic feeling.
A 1959 humble masterpiece, indeed.
I’m enjoying the last double album by one of my heroes: Mr. Frisell.
The music, angular and fractal, cerebral and natural, easy flows from the four sides of the Blue Note’s discs.
The ensemble is highly embellished by the presence and sound of Eyvind Kang’s viola which acts like an human voice, so expressively.
Everything sounds almost telepathic among the musicians and the live recording on most of the tracks is even more impressive.
A nice one
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The Absolute Nothing… no, I’m not disrespectfully offending this one of a kind turntable… it’s - apparently - its brand-name/model.💫
Amazing frames from a video showing this incredible turntable… must dig and know more…