I was doing my press beat for Stereo-phile in the hallway of Montreal’s 2019 Audiofest when I glimpsed something that stopped me in my tracks. It was a marketing slogan, across the room on importer/exhibitor Goerner Audio’s floorstanding banner: “Tubes or semiconductors? Magnetosolid technology amplifies emotions.”
Intrigued and with pen and paper in hand, I settled into one of the listening chairs and soaked in the smooth, luscious, musical sound coming from a system with the Grandinote Shinai integrated amplifier at its core—and wondered: tubes or transistors? The line was blurry.
I’d never heard of Grandinote, whose electronics have an unobtrusive, elegant look that sets them apart from the typical fare. The man helming the room— Goerner Audio’s amiable Reinhard Goerner—clued me in. Designed and manufactured in Italy, Grandinote products are exported to 32 countries. The Shinai is a special breed of integrated: a solid-state amplifier that uses a tube-based circuit.
I have since heard Grandinote products demoed at two other shows. At the last of these, Toronto’s 2019 Audiofest, the Grandinote integrated was being fed music files from a Grandinote server, feeding, in turn, the unusual, sensitive, crossover less Grandinote Mach 9 loudspeakers. I wrote,1 “My journalistic objectivity be darned! The Goerner Audio/ Grandinote room produced the sort of sound that melts my heart, ravishes my senses, and reminds me of why great hi-fi is worth the money.”
Max Magri
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Denne historien er fra November 2020-utgaven av Stereophile.
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Louis in London
No jazz-centric visit to New York City is complete without a trek out to Queens. At 46th Street in Sunnyside stands the apartment building where famed cornetist Leon Bismark \"Bix\" Beiderbecke's alcoholism finally killed him in 1931.
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