The Fifth Element

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The Fifth Element #50

In a moment, I will resume my ongoing quest to put together a music lover's stereo system for about half the cost of my last such effort (see my columns in the Octoberhttp://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/1005fifth">October; and Decemberhttp://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/1205fifth">December; 2005 issues): $3750 rather than $7500. But first I want to urge everyone who hasn't already done so to check out the">http://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/208fifth/index3.html">the results of the Five Great Art Songs of the Rock Era write-in competition announced in my February 2008 column. The winning entries are great—really thought-provoking. Indeed, some of the lists, plus an unaccountably belated recollection, prompted me to put together my own alternate list. This list doesn't invalidate or replace my original one, but it benefited from the energy all the entrants (thanks, everyone) put into theirs. Here goes:


The Fifth Element #49

We continue the search for the successor to Fried's Q loudspeaker of yore. Renaissance Audio is the former Morel USA, so they have a long track record in both OEM driver manufacture and making complete loudspeakers. As I mentioned in my June">http://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/608fifth/index1.html">June column, their MLP-403.5 loudspeaker is a two-cubic-foot, sealed-box three-way with a dome midrange driver, at the near-improbable price of $1090/pair (footnote 1).


The Fifth Element #47

US composer Morten Lauridsen's Lux Aeterna is one of the indisputable masterpieces of the 20th century. John Atkinson has recorded the male vocal group Cantus's performances of Lauridsen's O Magnum Mysterium (on Comfort">http://www.stereophile.com/musicrecordings/1105cantus">Comfort and Joy: Volume One, Cantus CTS-1204) and Ave Maria Dulcissima (on Cantushttp://www.stereophile.com/news/121007cantus">Cantus;, Cantus CTS-1207). (And great recordings they are—one engineer chum thinks JA's Cantus recording of OMM is the single best-engineered choral recording he's ever heard.)


The Fifth Element #45

I want to start this year's gift recommendations by briefly revisiting the results of my Musical Cultural Literacy for Americans write-in competition, which ran in the April issue. All 12 winning entries of 12 selections each are posted">http://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/407fifth/index3.html">posted online (footnote 1).


The Fifth Element #44

Ars-Sonum is a Spanish audio company that, as far as I can tell, makes only one product—but it's a doozy (footnote 1). The Filarmonía SE is a tube integrated amplifier that is, in many ways, an homage to Dynaco's iconic Stereo 70 power amplifier of 1959, but the Filarmonía is by no means a slavish copy. Get down to specifics, and it's actually more of a clean-sheet-of-paper design.


The Fifth Element #43

My "Musical Cultural Literacy for Americans" write-in competition seems to have been a smashing success. I received 65 entries, and only a very few missed the mark. A few more were obvious, so-so, or lacking in passion. Many were good. But a score or more were of enviably high quality. Choosing the top 12 was tough. At the end, who won a prize and who did not was entirely my own subjective decision. The winning entries are posted in full on Stereophile's website as an appendixhttp://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/407fifth/index3.html">append…; to my April">http://www.stereophile.com/thefifthelement/407fifth">April column. Here are the points I made online in announcing the results:


The Fifth Element #42

The recording project I've mentioned before in this column, that of documenting the historical and significant pipe organs of Rhode Island, is finally (!) in the can. (Except that today, of course, we no longer use cans. Or tape, for that matter.) It has been a learning and growing experience for us all—more than a dozen remote-location recording dates, spread over eight months.


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