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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

Tag Archives: Peter Gabriel

Speaker Upgrade – how I decided what was good

08 Tuesday Oct 2024

Posted by mp3monster in Music

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Tags

Acoustic Energy, AE500, audio, Beth Orton, Bowers & Wilkins, Chord, Cosmotron, Elbow, GoGo Penguin, Music, new-music, Peter Gabriel, reviews, Rush, Technology, Tori Amos

With some recent good news from work, I decided to treat myself to a speaker upgrade – Acoustic Energy 500s sat on some IsoAcoustic Aperta stands. While these would be considered audiophile – they’re still at the lower end – we’re not talking audio exotica like B& Nautilus at nearly hundred thousand pounds or the Cosmotron 130 at around the million pound mark.

Bowers & Wilkins – Nautilus Speaker – a snip at £90,000

So how can I decide and justify the expenditure, even if it’s a fraction of the loose change from the back of the sofa from buying these monsters? As friends have said to me in the past, the Samsung speakers on my stereo are just as good. Well there are a raft of things that will prevent speakers from performing well, from positioning, to the quality of their source.

Million Pound Cosmotron speaker
Cosmotrom priced at £1M

The source material is often one of the biggest issues, particularly for rock and pop pushing the envelope with CDs. We saw what has become known as the loudness wars – where the dynamic range of the music was reduced. But music with a wide dynamic range with good speakers is great. A couple characteristics of good speakers is the containment of distortion – so if you have a song that is often quiet with occasional moments of loudness, the speaker drivers (cones) will be able to react properly to another sudden spike in signal occurs the sudden movement in the magnet moving the cone is handled rather than causing the speaker surface straining against its mounts.

Better speakers will result in better control of the cone (the visible bit of the speaker), making the cone’s movements more precisely revealing detail in the music. You’ll go from hearing a cymbal, to being able to tell how the cymbal was struck, a drum is no long a thump, but you’ll start to hear it resonate.

The cone moves backward and forwards to move the air, which affects air inside the speaker, not just outside. We don’t want the speaker casing to behave as a suction cup, preventing air movement and inhibiting the cone’s movement.

Improvements in speaker performance can help you recognize little details. For example, with a vocal performance, you’ll start to hear fine details, such as air drawn over the microphone as the singer inhales. You can also hear changes as a singer moves close to or away from the microphone, even if they alter their vocal volume.

I was experimenting with a loaned hi-fi kit once, listening to a Jamie Cullum live performance, and a detail that leapt out as I swapped in and out a piece of equipment was what sounded like background ambient noise, such as air conditioning. But suddenly, it became clear I wasn’t picking up ambient noise but the fan that was positioned behind Jamie.

It is always useful to have some good go-to pieces of music for trying out hi-fi. Being familiar with the music and knowing the production values applied means that if there are improvements, you’ll pick them up. So, what are my go-to pieces at the moment?

  • Tori Amos – Me and a Gun — although any part of Little Earthquakes is good. This song is an acapella performance, recounting a rape. With just a voice, the miking of the vocal is very close, and you can hear the inhalation and the rawness of the performance.
  • Beth Orton – Weather Alive — probably Beth’s best album to date. Here is another incredible voice, but also more delicate than Tori Amos, so the better the HiFi, the purer the performance will sound.
  • GoGo Penguin – Branches Break from Man Made Objects – although just about any of their work will be good. This is a trio of piano, bass, and drums in a jazz/minimalist classical/chill beat crossover. This is a recording that should feel like it’s being performed in a big live sounding room. But you’ll hear each instrument clearly, particularly down to recognizing the loudness, varying attack, and decay of each note played.
  • Rush – Red Sector A from Grace Under Pressure, perhaps not the best-produced album in the world, but before the loudness wars really took hold. Rush were a real bunch of prog rock musos with the late Neil Peart, who many considered to be one of the best ever drummers. This track will test the HiFi in terms of control – the drumming has a huge range of very fine cymbal work, some really deep bass drums, and tom-tom runs that make Phil Collin’s In The Air Tonight sound like child’s play.
  • Elbow – One Day Like This – The Seldom Seen Kid (Live At Abbey Road Studios) — with a high-quality recording (Abbey Road’s special Half Speed Mastered edition), you’ll get a sense of staging and as the song grows scale with the choir. The strings will be natural and nuanced, in the early parts of the performance of the performance you’ll hear how dry Guy’s voice is – not a hint of vibrato or sibilance.
  • Peter Gabriel – the Book Of Love — from Scratch My Back — another performance that should give a sense of staging and breadth with great dynamics and the strings swell and subside. Fronted by Peter’s voice which should weathered and world warn.

The list of music could go on. But, ultimately, it’s a very individual choice.

Final anecdote

Buying Hi-Fi is a law of diminishing returns. As you get better and better, the parts needed are more expensive and produced in fewer numbers, making the R&D more expensive, with costs to be covered by a small number of sales. But still, these esoteric, bank-crushing systems are amazing.

Some years back, I went to a HiFi show; if you’ve never been to such a show then picture this. A corridor of rooms is stripped of the beds and furnishings other than some chairs. Each company has a room and typically sets up its demo kit where the head of the bed would usually be. Everything would be positioned and mounted on professional hi-fi tables, etc, for the absolute best performance. The classic layout for a hotel room means as you walk into the room, you won’t see what is set, so the seconds it takes to walk past what is normally the bathroom is almost a blind test as you can’t see the HiFi, but you’ll be able to hear it.

So here we are, as we start to walk into a room that was pretty busy, so you didn’t see the main space for a minute or so, and we hear a performance of a beautifully played unaccompanied double bass. I could have sworn there was a musician in the room performing – the performance had that warmth, depth, and volume you’d expect. No hint of any recording artifacts. When we got to the main part of the room, we were stunned to see two speakers, big and rather boxy – no audio exotica beauty like Nautilus or Cosmotron — definitely all function, and little thought to form. With them, 3 large pieces of silver HiFisat on big chunky slabs of marble on the floor – what I assume to be a pre-amp and a power amp for each speaker. Plus a source – which might have been a turntable – but honestly, I can’t remember – whatever it was, the sound was breathtakingly natural sounding.

Chord Ultima Monoblock Power Amplifier £35,000 per unit
Chord Monobloc Power Amplifier £350,000 per bloc – you’d need two, plus a pre-amp for a basic arrangement.

I do remember the price tags, and at the time, prices were around 50k a component- so little change out of a quarter of a million. It left me wishing I’d won the national lottery.

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Peter Gabriel I/O

06 Monday Nov 2023

Posted by mp3monster in General, Music, Music Reviews

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Tags

album, IO, Peter Gabriel, review

It’s been about twenty years since we’ve had any new original songs from Peter Gabriel. Now, for the last year, he has been teasing us by releasing a new track every month with two mixes called The Bright Side and The Dark Side. which sort of makes sense, given you could see I/O as a rather abstract representation of Ying and Yang.

With a track, each month has created an interesting experience, as it has given us time to absorb each track, rather than a big audio feast of an album, where the singles leap out at you, and then you start to appreciate the other tracks. If there is a downside, it is probably the fact it is no longer easy to say – these tracks are the singles. But to be honest I don’t think it matters to Peter Gabriel. There may be fan favorites, but that’s it certainly as far as it goes since Us.

However, even knowing which tracks are becoming fan favorites has been tough as Peter toured the album, and depending upon where you are in the world, you’ll have only heard some of the new songs, even though the core of the live show has been I/O.

The musical core of the band remains largely unchanged, with David Rhodes and Tony Levin with Manu Katche back on drums for most of the tracks. John Metcalfe is back, having also contributed so wonderfully with New Blood and the tours over the last ten years where Gabriel has used orchestral arrangement.

With this team, we have a real mix of style and sounds. From the very reflective Playing For Time, which opens with the muted horn reminiscent of tracks like Father Son on Ovo. Then there are tracks that are rhythm-heavy, like The Court, that would have fit in on the Up album.

As with all the two-letter-titled albums, there is a loose theme to the album. For I/O that is input and output, whether that is input from observation as suggested by Panopticom to the title track about how to absorb and contribute to the environment.

What the album shows and the tour demonstrated is that unlike some of his peers, Peter’s voice has changed, but the songs fit what sounds like a more weathered voice. The older songs, which may have been pitched higher, still have the energy and dynamics but perhaps pitched a little differently. So none of the challenges faced like Jim Kerr, who leans more of backing vocalists live, or Sting and Bono, who you can hear have to really work to hit some of the notes.

Peter has continued the idea that each song gets its own artwork associated with it, which came to prominence on the Us album (you can see more with Art From US). Some videos of this work can be seen here.

Artwork for IO
I/O
Panopticom (artist Davif Spriggs)
The Court
Playing For Time
Olive Tree (artist Barthélémy Toguo)
Love Can Heal (Artist Antony Micallef)
This Is Home (artist David Moreno)
And Still (Artist Megan Rooney)
Road To Joy (Artist Ai Weiwei)
Four Kinds of Horses (artist Cornelia Parker)

Along with the artwork, there have been some amazing videos. This is not big news, and the use of technology – particularly the application of some Generative AI. Check out these:

Some images from the videos …

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Peter Gabriel – New Blood Tour

08 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by mp3monster in Music, Photography

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Tags

concert, New Blood, Peter Gabriel, tour

The New Blood tour is following on the back of his Scratch My Back album – A different take on the covers album, by working the covers as orchestral pieces.

So the tour means a large Orchestra rather than his regular touring band. The concert has much in common with a traditional orchestral performance with the first half being the new album end to end. After the interval we’re treated with some great reworkings of his own songs. Some obvious choices and others not so.

With a large orchestra Peter can’t provide the usual style of performance he lays on with zorb balls, Sedgeways, massive moving floors. That’s not to say this was not a class Gabriel visual feast. No, we get curtains made from massive U2 style displays, visuals behind the orchestra; several camera crews filming, often right in the middle of the musicians so the stage side screens get you into the heart of the action.

So a beautiful and stunning concert. I have posted some photos on our flickr account. What is cool is that the guy (Stefan Goodchild) who produced some the visuals has found my pictures ans some by a few others (possibly more professional than mine) and put them together into a collection to show his work which can be found here.

If you read the journal, the artist will be making some video clips of the work available. We would highly recommend checking them out, along with the blog.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/mp3monster/sets/72157623594005837/

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Scratching My Back ….

22 Friday Jan 2010

Posted by mp3monster in Music

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Tags

cd, DVD, Music, Peter Gabriel

Finally the special edition of Peter Gabriel’s new album has a release date. Having heard extracts of the album it sounds very interesting …

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