💫
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.💫
Only one in the world!
☺️
100% handmade, Finemet transformers, 1.700 mW per channel stereo amp with Alps RK-50 potentiometer and vintage PCL82.
Volcanic obsidian cabinet (300 kg), massive bronze knob from Agamemnon’s helmet, hard-wired by Albert Einstein’s nephew.
💫
.
Is it what’s only important, nowadays?
World is celebrating highest price-tags and never, ever a word about the musical performances of these amazing, impressively built gears.
Is it a lack of descriptive and argumentative abilities or an intellectual and cultural drift, now more than ever focused on money and the power that this implies and intends?
Status symbols, adult-toys for distracted, annoyed Julio Iglesias’ fans billionaires?
Do these machines play music or are just a show-up of the technical bravery and skills of their makers?
The arduous sentences to posterity.
💫
It’s all here, much better than the obsolete, abused and overused “High Fidelity”…
My system truest raison d’etre is the following:
• Low-Level Reproduction: Unlike many horn-based systems designed for high volumes, Kato's system was optimized for reproducing the finest details at realistic, home-friendly low volumes, allowing subtle nuances such as the musicians' breathing or the touch of their fingers on the instrument to clearly be audible.
Thanking to Hideo Kato-san for the above illuminating definition: I realized, to my surprise - thanks to Quad ESL and Gotorama 2.0 - that I don’t need high SPL to enjoy my music of choice, but I sure need a breathtaking resolution, silence among notes and awesome detailing, which I get a-plenty.
It’s really so simple, but worth insisting: not deafening SPLs or belly shaking low frequencies, but low level resolution; if your system is able to resolve the tape-hiss, the hum of a vintage guitar amp, the ambient noises, the musicians breathing, etc. the music will fully blossom in all its beauty… and won’t be by chance!.
Everything else is BS and musical illiteracy, as only a natural neutrality allows any music to blossom and be nourishment for the soul and the mind.
🖖
… not the Garrard 301 or the (black) Ortofons’, but that modified “soap” butter-color Ortofon cartridge
💫
Yesterday, June 1, 1973, British art rock pioneer and former Soft Machine drummer/singer Robert Wyatt broke his spine after attempting to leave a party by climbing down a drainpipe and falling three stories. It left Wyatt permanently crippled and confined to a wheelchair. Despite his handicap, he began a forty-year solo career that included critically acclaimed albums and a hit single, a cover of The Monkees "I'm A Believer".
A key player during the formative years of British jazz rock, psychedelic rock and progressive rock, Wyatt's own work became increasingly interpretative, collaborative and politicized from the mid 1970s onwards. His solo music has covered a particularly individual musical terrain ranging from covers of pop singles to shifting, amorphous song collections drawing on elements of jazz, folk and nursery rhyme.
Wyatt had been a member of influential Canterbury band The Wilde Flowers and later, after Soft Machine, put together Matching Mole before his accident.
Soft Machine, photo below, toured the US accompanying friends The Jimi Hendrix Experience.
Matching Mole were about to record their third album when, on 1 June 1973, during a birthday party for Gong's Gilli Smyth and June Campbell Cramer (also known as Lady June) at the latter's Maida Vale home, an inebriated Wyatt fell from a fourth-floor window. He was paralyzed from the waist down and has used a wheelchair for mobility ever since. On 4 November that year, Pink Floyd performed two benefit concerts, in one day, at London's Rainbow Theatre, supported by Soft Machine, and compered by John Peel. The concerts raised a reported £10,000 for Wyatt.
Wyatt released his solo album Rock Bottom on 26 July 1974. The album was largely composed prior to Wyatt's accident. The album was met with mostly positive reviews. Two months later Wyatt put out a single, a cover version of "I'm a Believer", which hit number 29 in the UK chart. Both were produced by Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason. There were strong arguments with the producer of Top of the Pops surrounding Wyatt's performance of "I'm a Believer", on the grounds that his use of a wheelchair "was not suitable for family viewing", the producer wanting Wyatt to appear on a normal chair. Wyatt won the day when he and the band all appeared in wheelchairs.
Throughout the rest of the 1970s Wyatt guested with various acts, including Henry Cow (documented on their Concerts album), Hatfield and the North, Carla Bley, Eno, Michael Mantler, and Roxy Music guitarist Phil Manzanera, contributing lead vocals to lead track "Frontera", from Manzanera's 1975 solo debut Diamond Head. Wyatt continued to appear with other artists and release solo albums.
The verb "Wyatting" appeared in some blogs and music magazines to describe the practice of playing unusual tracks, in particular songs from Wyatt's album Dondestan, on a pub jukebox to annoy the other pub goers. Wyatt was quoted in 2006 in The Guardian as saying "I think it's really funny" and "I'm very honoured at the idea of becoming a verb."
Thanks to John Einarson for the above 🖖🙏🖖
Almost an art-installation.
Such a cool, elegant S150 pylon and… look at the impressive Goto SGs’ collection and the vibes taming black rope around the horn instead of the extremely low WAF, utterly unfriendly, sticky yet effective bituminous material usually found.
Very elegant, also if drivers phase alignment could improve overall sound.
Fussy me 😉
💫