John Atkinson
"I have heard the future of audio...and it is digital."
Two recent listening experiences of mine echoed the overblown praise Jon Landau lavished upon Bruce Springsteen after he heard <I>The Wild, the Innocent & the E-Street Shuffle</I>. But all hype aside, Landau was right: Springsteen <I>was</I> the future of rock'n'roll—or at least what passed for the future of traditional rock in those pre-MTV, pre-techno, pre-house, pre-gangsta, pre-rap, pre-hip-hop, pre-grunge, pre-Mariah Carey, pre-Garth Brooks, pre-sampling, pre-digital days. And I believe that, Landau-like, I too will be right. I have heard the future of audio, and it is digital—digital technology has finally surpassed the sound quality of analog.
Holiday Reading
I recently scoured my shelves and came up with the following list of must-read books for stereophiles, all of which are in print and should be available from specialist bookshops or from the suppliers mentioned in the text. Books marked with an asterisk (*), though too technical for the general reader, will be found rewarding by those who have a good grasp of mathematics and who want to delve deep. Reading the books in the first "general" section of the list will enable readers to understand just about everything that appears in <I>Stereophile</I>, but all the books listed contain between their covers untold treasures.
The Day the Music Died
<I>"Phonograph, </I>n<I>. An irritating toy that restores life to dead noises."—</I>Ambrose Bierce (in <I>The Devils's Dictionary</I>, Dover, 1958)
Of Gravity, Clocks, and Audio Dragons
PSB Stratus Gold loudspeaker
Music & Fractals
<I>"Why do rhythms and melodies, which are composed of sound, resemble the feelings; while this is not the case for tastes, colors, or smells?"</I>---Aristotle
The Stereophile Test CD
Sounding Off!
"Hoom! Hoom-hoom! <I>HOOM!</I>"
Accentuate the Positive?
<I>"You'll wonder where the yellow went, when you brush your teeth with Pepsodent."</I>