We were expecting the unexpected. It started with the delay of Ypsilon Electronics’SET 100 monoblock amplifiers, all 230 kg of them, which made it to Singapore just two days before the show. Andy Hassapis at Ypsilon Electronics was one worried man when he had all of 10 days to have the amplifiers ready and shipped to the showroom in time for the show. He himself arrived in Singapore on the first day of the show and came straight from the airport, disheveled hair, crumpled clothes, bloodshot eyes, still maintaining his Grecian good looks but screaming “insufficient burn-in time boys”! He smiled ruefully when someone offered him a stiff whisky.
Thankfully our SoundLAB electrostatics complete with the latest updates & hot-rod were actually the first of many new arrivals exclusively for the show because we wanted to ensure the very latest updates from our partners. The crates were indeed monstrous and it was the job of four men to lift each crate and to unpack them. Real beauties they are both sonically and aesthetically.
True to his Swiss watch making roots and his creative genius in turntable design, Micha Huber arrived in Singapore precisely 5 days ahead of the show as promised with his patented Thales Tonarm in tow and complete with his own reference LPs for demo. He also lugged along a few phono cartridges (EMT & Benz Ruby 3) just in case of an emergency and we were relieved he did as we would later discover. The massive
Pythagoras turntable (patented), crafted from laboratory grade steel & Norwegian granite among others, arrived two days before him and his brother Emanuel - ready to be expertly assembled, tested and tuned. Svein Oddvar Osen of Audiostone arrived 24 hours after the Huber brothers looking alive and fresh despite not having slept for the last 48 hours – if they didn't invent Clark Kent this man would have been the man of steel!The vivacious Vovox cables of Switzerland arrived 10 days before the show and we were ecstatic because we know them to be musical cables. Folks, Vovox is one of the first cables we have ever auditioned that handily dispenses with all the witchcraft and voodoo of lesser pretenders at any cost. We are prepared to pit them against the (astronomically priced) frauds out there. Our one regret was the lack of time to run them in because after two weeks or more they simply vanished from the audio chain. You heard it here first.
We were eagerly expecting delivery of the fully loaded Nova Physics Group 32 BIT/215KHZ Memory Player, which Mark Porzilli & Lauufer Teknik pulled out all stops to have the first of the latest production version delivered to us. Sadly a day before the show the freight company informed us of a delay and the Memory Player wouldn't make it in time for the F1 Show. Murphy was already letting us know he would be attending.
September 24th Day One of Final Preparation, Murphy's Visit & The Beauties of Joo Chiat Road
Most of our other equipment were stored away on the second level showrooms to create space for a more conducive environment. The Huber brothers, yours truly and a few others begin the final set-up procedure and tuning of the showroom after we stripped away the professional room treatments to achieve a more neutral sounding room. Don't get us wrong we know room treatment is indispensable in certain rooms and because our showrooms were acoustically (wanted to use the crappy term "proprietary" most reviewers/manufacturers use but...) treated during our recent renovation.
Most of our other equipment were stored away on the second level showrooms to create space for a more conducive environment. The Huber brothers, yours truly and a few others begin the final set-up procedure and tuning of the showroom after we stripped away the professional room treatments to achieve a more neutral sounding room. Don't get us wrong we know room treatment is indispensable in certain rooms and because our showrooms were acoustically (wanted to use the crappy term "proprietary" most reviewers/manufacturers use but...) treated during our recent renovation.
At 11.45 in the am Kuehne & Nagel called to say that because of incomplete documents they couldn't move the Pythagoras flight cases out of custom. Fine we replied and had the papers ready before they could hang up the phone. That done we were then informed that all of their trucks were out for the day and night delivery is possible but with an up charge. Up charge no problem but what time? After 6pm they say. No, we wouldn't be able to complete assembly, testing and tuning in time. “We will rent a truck and drive down to pick it ourselves!” commanded our mighty Micha. Onward and upward boys! And so it was that we managed to locate both truck and driver and to the airport we went.
When the gargantuan 230 kg flight cases finally arrived at TRR's showroom we moved them to position before unpacking the works of art within. The set-up of the Pythagoras and Thales took approximately 2 hours before we could finally tune the system. Despite the air-conditioning at full throttle it was hard and thirsty work. Oy! Who forgot to order beers, OJ and coffee?
When the gargantuan 230 kg flight cases finally arrived at TRR's showroom we moved them to position before unpacking the works of art within. The set-up of the Pythagoras and Thales took approximately 2 hours before we could finally tune the system. Despite the air-conditioning at full throttle it was hard and thirsty work. Oy! Who forgot to order beers, OJ and coffee?
Before we knew it the sun had set for the day and dinnertime had way passed us by and so it was to be a short stroll down to jolly Joo Chiat Road for supper. For the Europeans this was their first exposure to the colourful spectacle of Singapore's infamous pub/karaoke strip. The boys were a little intrigued and one or two even had proposals made and some! September 25th Day Two of Final Preparation & Murphy's Second Visit
We'd been so pre-occupied with the logistics and planning for the show we forgot to book our own F1 tickets. So the first of many mad tickets scrambles had begun. In the process of calibrating the arm, VTA, stylus force etc for the Thales tonearm, Micha Huber's digital cartridge gauge faltered and finally failed. Out came The Revelation Room's in-house digital gauge and that decided to join in solidarity with the Micha's gauge. “Don't worry, our trusty old manual Shure stylus force gauge will save us” said I. No less truer words were uttered for the Shure no longer resided in the TRR Analog Kit Box! Too, where's our reference soldering iron? Murphy certainly was smiling down upon us. Mad rush for these items with less than 24 hours before our friends came over for the show.
Having gone separate ways to fulfill our individual responsibilities we returned with our soldering irons, Clearaudio digital stylus gauge and some really cold Singhas & Tsingtaos, the latter for those who had the thirstier responsibilities.
We'd been so pre-occupied with the logistics and planning for the show we forgot to book our own F1 tickets. So the first of many mad tickets scrambles had begun. In the process of calibrating the arm, VTA, stylus force etc for the Thales tonearm, Micha Huber's digital cartridge gauge faltered and finally failed. Out came The Revelation Room's in-house digital gauge and that decided to join in solidarity with the Micha's gauge. “Don't worry, our trusty old manual Shure stylus force gauge will save us” said I. No less truer words were uttered for the Shure no longer resided in the TRR Analog Kit Box! Too, where's our reference soldering iron? Murphy certainly was smiling down upon us. Mad rush for these items with less than 24 hours before our friends came over for the show.
Having gone separate ways to fulfill our individual responsibilities we returned with our soldering irons, Clearaudio digital stylus gauge and some really cold Singhas & Tsingtaos, the latter for those who had the thirstier responsibilities.
Micha started laughing and commented that at least we have a plasma display for his presentation during the show days. “Eh, what display for what?!” went I. Murphy by then was standing next to us and smirking. Plasma ordered and arrived within 3 hours and the delivery guy wants to know where to place it for the presentation. Right there on the floor by the wall he is told but someone forgot that it is quite a strain on neck when one has to view from a standing position. Or all our guests could just sit on the floor. Who forgot the stand for the plasma?
By the late afternoon, Micha was banging away on his notebook for the final preparation and translation of his presentation. I was on the phone with a friend (one of Singapore's most renown composer) asking for his help to phrase a one-line definition of Pythagoras' Theorem of Musical Frequencies. This was important because it is exactly how Micha has based the design of his tonearm and turntable – pure engineering based on established mathematics. He doesn't believe in inapt engineering and then building solutions to correct the fundamental mistakes. Simply put no band-aid approach is acceptable or desirable.
I was thinking out loud when
I suggested that it might be a good idea for an elegant velvet cover to unveil the turntable just before the show proper – to add a dash of the dramatic. Cyril, our most indispensable engineer, friend and beer provider, not in any order, and the man behind the incredible precision forging of Pythagoras' bearings, set to work and literally within hours procured the right materials, hacked, sawed & stitched together a beautiful velvet veil - with the help of the Huber brothers of course.
Finally we sat down to select the LPs we most wanted to play during the show and it may come as a surprise to many that our selection, from classical to rock, had not a single “audiophile” favourite amongst them. They were selected for their musical pleasure and creative genius. We decided that we would stick with our choice and it was our turn to be surprised as it turned out because not a single soul noticed or requested for the “audiophile” faves though they were prominently displayed. Testimony to the emotional impact of the music brought to its majestic glory by this audio system.
September 26th Show Day – The Full Dress Rehearsal
This was an absolutely fun day and one of many during this event we would later come to realise. All of us turned up dressed in the specially tailored polo tees, which Svein Osen very thoughtfully custom tailored for us in Norway exclusively for the show. We were very relaxed and friends with very discerning ears arrived with wreathes of flowers, gifts and well wishes.
We enjoyed an early lunch along with some ice-cold beers, juices and coffee. It was one of those occasions when everyone was too relax and familiar with each other to make small talk so we all got down to what this event was all about – the incredible audio system. They finally had a chance to hear the most beautiful and organic music that an audio system of this caliber is capable of reproducing. Shocked silence. Teary eyes. Nodding of heads. Blabbering gibberish. Animated adjectives.
The music went on for hours till almost midnight before everyone realised that we missed dinner and had to take our reluctant leave of the showroom and headed out to our respective homes, favourite eateries still open for custom and Singapore's famed Orchard Towers to observe, ahem, nocturnal life forms.
This was an absolutely fun day and one of many during this event we would later come to realise. All of us turned up dressed in the specially tailored polo tees, which Svein Osen very thoughtfully custom tailored for us in Norway exclusively for the show. We were very relaxed and friends with very discerning ears arrived with wreathes of flowers, gifts and well wishes.
September 27th Show Day - The VIP & EO Show
The day started great. The caterers from Purple Sage, Singapore's premier caterers, arrived early to set up the kitchen, bistro tables, flowers, chilling the champagne etc for the brunch. It was a beautiful job – thanks Tony.
Micha, Svein, Andy et al arrived decked out in their coolest suits and jackets looking really more like a Milan fashion parade rather than an exotic high-end audio show!
A final test run of the notebook and plasma display for Micha's presentation and of course the audio system given a proper warm-up.
The day started great. The caterers from Purple Sage, Singapore's premier caterers, arrived early to set up the kitchen, bistro tables, flowers, chilling the champagne etc for the brunch. It was a beautiful job – thanks Tony.
Micha, Svein, Andy et al arrived decked out in their coolest suits and jackets looking really more like a Milan fashion parade rather than an exotic high-end audio show!
A final test run of the notebook and plasma display for Micha's presentation and of course the audio system given a proper warm-up.
Our guests started streaming in 10.30am with others coming in at different times. I made introductions and short descriptions of the audio components and the people behind these works of art.
It was rather informal with a relaxed atmosphere and people were sipping champagne served by roving uniformed butlers amid the buzz of understated excitement. Then a very anxious gentleman finally requested that we start the music because he was beyond himself with anticipation. And so it was captivating music for the next hour before we had to make a short announcement that there was scrumptious and exotic fusion fare being served and accompanied by more delicious bubbly.
This was followed by Micha Huber's enlightening presentation explaining how he arrived at the final production version of the Thales tonearm & Pythagoras turntable.
Many of us were left spellbound by his creative genius supported by his logical and successful solutions to analog replay's limitations which many vastly experienced designers before him had attempted to address but failed. And he achieved this while still designing and prototyping complicated precision Swiss watch movements. All this at a ripe old age of 28 years - makes me wonder what I did with my 35. Okay so maybe 45, whatever, who is counting anyway?!
Through it all the SoundLAB electrostatics were flawless in its beautiful rendering of music even at extreme volume levels with an impressive bass down to the low twenties – most have never heard fast bass until now and that's not an oxymoron! Music portrayed by the SoundLAB possesses a liquidity that flows and ebbs with an ease and precision that emotionally engages with its colours, timbres and exciting dynamic slam. Makes other loudspeakers sound wanting.
Few are the amplifiers available that are able to drive the wonderful SoundLAB transducers without clipping. Many have their weaknesses exposed by its neutrality and transparency. Many just plain sound inadequate in the process of driving the speakers. Even fewer are capable of driving them to their full potential. Rare are the ones that are as transparent and neutral as the SoundLABs allowing the emotion of music to flow with all the slam, dynamic impact and finesse approximating the real event. The mind-boggling neutrality and melodious musicality of the Ypsilon Electronics SET 100 monoblock amplifiers are indeed rare in our experience. These 85 kg a piece monoblock challenge the envelope of what is possible in audio amplifiers in an elegantly designed single-ended Class A device that is patented.
This was followed by Micha Huber's enlightening presentation explaining how he arrived at the final production version of the Thales tonearm & Pythagoras turntable.
Through it all the SoundLAB electrostatics were flawless in its beautiful rendering of music even at extreme volume levels with an impressive bass down to the low twenties – most have never heard fast bass until now and that's not an oxymoron! Music portrayed by the SoundLAB possesses a liquidity that flows and ebbs with an ease and precision that emotionally engages with its colours, timbres and exciting dynamic slam. Makes other loudspeakers sound wanting.
Few are the amplifiers available that are able to drive the wonderful SoundLAB transducers without clipping. Many have their weaknesses exposed by its neutrality and transparency. Many just plain sound inadequate in the process of driving the speakers. Even fewer are capable of driving them to their full potential. Rare are the ones that are as transparent and neutral as the SoundLABs allowing the emotion of music to flow with all the slam, dynamic impact and finesse approximating the real event. The mind-boggling neutrality and melodious musicality of the Ypsilon Electronics SET 100 monoblock amplifiers are indeed rare in our experience. These 85 kg a piece monoblock challenge the envelope of what is possible in audio amplifiers in an elegantly designed single-ended Class A device that is patented.
Unlike other offerings of similar investment or more – you know, those whose names sound like radio stations or rocks or wires - the SET 100s do not resort to pseudo Class A biasing techniques, unnecessarily complicated power supplies, multistage circuitry nor do they pretend to. A circuit so simple taken to its nth degree of amplifier engineering supported by extremely costly amorphous metal in its magnetics along with other exotic passive parts either exclusively customized or made in-house. No they do not put out a grillion watts or half that in amperes to light-up the neighbourhood - just a simple and ample 140 watts each channel with every one of them in true Class A.
Music flowed continuously till it was time to head on out for the night's qualifying rounds of F1 races and our own mad rush for any available tickets. Yes, this time it was our fault and Murphy need not take the blame because in the midst of all the preparations for our show we completely forgot to book our own tickets.
September 28th Show Day - The Music Lovers
We were still hoping to snag an F1 Walkabout ticket or two but if all else fails there are still friends to celebrate with a beer or an aperitif or two or three…We knew today would be another fun day and being the last day we dropped a gear and felt laid back and relaxed. For today we were going to have separate sessions for interestingly mixed groups of music lovers and audiophiles – the second session involving a specially invited group of sophisticated listeners and friends from Singapore's local audio forum, Echoloft.
Today was local Singapore fare like lamb curry, roast duck (siu aap), roast pork, assortment of noodles, rice etc. Too, we had a nice selection of Asian Beers like Tsingtao, LEO, Chang, Singha, San Miguel, and Kingfisher among others. My sister who makes the absolutely most delicious Chocolate Ganache cake made from real Belgian dark chocolate and Philadelphia Cream Cheese Carrot cake provided dessert as she did the day before.
All in all it was a repeat of yesterday's schedule with Micha anchoring the presentation to a rapt and appreciative audience. The difference was today the guys were firing away questions because being audiophiles they knew that this is probably their only chance for a very long time before they get to meet with such a brilliant personality. Indeed.
Today was local Singapore fare like lamb curry, roast duck (siu aap), roast pork, assortment of noodles, rice etc. Too, we had a nice selection of Asian Beers like Tsingtao, LEO, Chang, Singha, San Miguel, and Kingfisher among others. My sister who makes the absolutely most delicious Chocolate Ganache cake made from real Belgian dark chocolate and Philadelphia Cream Cheese Carrot cake provided dessert as she did the day before.
All in all it was a repeat of yesterday's schedule with Micha anchoring the presentation to a rapt and appreciative audience. The difference was today the guys were firing away questions because being audiophiles they knew that this is probably their only chance for a very long time before they get to meet with such a brilliant personality. Indeed.
Even with a cartridge wire coming loose and requiring a new solder joint everyone had fun exchanging ideas on audio technology, choice of LPs to play, which pressings are great, early pressings, test pressings and helping themselves to the spread. By the time the last group arrived it was close to 4.45pm and all too soon the day drew to a close and when the last soul reluctantly left it was almost 7.15 pm. Our boys rushed off to immerse themselves in the fiesta like mood and catch a glimpse of the Finals of Singapore's inaugural F1 Night Race. Andy of Ypsilon Electronics didn't have the luxury of time to stay because of business commitments and left immediately for the airport for his flight back to Athens.Post Show Round Up
Monday morning was bright and sunny. The Huber brothers and I enjoyed a nice and slow leisurely day to savour some incredibly beautiful music together as music lovers.
Cyril, who had to leave for the airport in the late evening, hopped over at noon gently nursing a mild hangover after soaking in the carnival like atmosphere of the post F1 street party. By noon we decided to get some fresh air and headed for the East Coast beach for a dip in the nice cool waters. We lazed with chilled Sangria and delectable seafood baskets at the Irish pub by the beach. Cyril left for his flight and in the evening we headed to Geylang Serai to take in the sights and smells of the local Malay festivities of Ramadan in preparation for Hari Raya Puasa the day after. The boys managed a couple of lovely Malay outfits and even bought one for their mother. Hell, we even had special Thales caps custom made!
The following day it was time to do the customary touristy bit. We made a quick token trip to Adelphi, home to many well-known audio shops in Singapore. Then it was a short walk to Chinatown for an eagerly anticipated lunch since we were famished. A bit of shop and browse after that and who can leave Singapore without taking a fume enriched walk along Singapore's iconic Orchard Road? Emanuel even had a chance to meet with one of Singapore's most famous tattoo artist and my good friend, Richard, son of the one and only iconic Johnny Two Thumb. After that we headed back to the hotel to pick up the Huber brothers’luggage and a quick trip back to the showroom to say goodbye and off to the airport.Till the next show......, Sali, Sali, Sali!
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