Florida 2019: The Audio Company, VAC, Von Schweikert, Esoteric, Kronos, Critical Mass Systems, and The Michael Fremer Show





Yikes…I was six minutes late to the room. Keith from The Audio Company had mentioned a seminar late in the day on Saturday and it sounded interesting but I was too busy covering other rooms and got tied up on the elevator.  So I snuck into a side seat up front near the right channel speaker which was a gorgeous ruby red Ultra 55 from Von Schweikert Audio.  On the other side of the audience was an animated Michael Fremer talking about special pressings he was about to play on the Kronos turntable.  As Flounder would say, this is going to be great!  Michael is always entertaining and I had already visited this room twice and knew it was very musical.

Micheal cued up Masterpieces by Duke Ellington which I know well since I have it at home on the 200-gram Analogue Productions 33 rpm pressing.  It sounded great.  But beyond the reference level sound, we had a disc jockey of the highest caliber, Mr. Analog himself!  Fremer has an entertaining ability to convey the history of a record, it’s provenance with respect to sound, and an infectious enthusiasm for the music.  Having this comedy-trained analog guru was really a public service, in the best way possible.  The room was very full.

Fremer later recalled introducing the Ellington cut:

I explained that it was one of Columbia Records’ first tape recorded releases and one of its early LPs. It allowed Ellington to record the sophisticated suites he was performing in concert but that couldn’t be recorded so finally people who couldn’t go to a concert could hear it.  Unfortunately few then had long playing turntables so the release came and went.  It wasn’t rediscovered until Michael Cuscuna found it on a shelf at Sony tape vault.  He thought it was 78s collected to tape for LP compilation until he played it! Then [it was] released as CD but didn’t do much.  I found original at record fair and thought it was 78s until I played [it]!!! I convinced Chad to reissue it.  It was his best seller for some time and maybe still, outselling Tea For the Tillerman.   I said it’s one of the best recordings ever regardless of age! I stand by that.

That’s a heckuva fascinating story but in a room full of jaded audiophiles, how do you pull them even further in for the next story from Fremer?  Well, you simply wow them with a highly dynamic, natural, detailed sound that the Ultra 55s were completely ready for.  You throw a wide and deep soundstage.  You fill a massive ballroom that was a centerpiece of the show.  And you use a reference class turntable and cartridge to pull out every bit of musical information on Michael’s often special and sometimes one-of-a-kind pressings.

Fremer continued with a wide array of quality recordings.  Over several sessions, visitors heard a collection of great tracks.  Michael recalled these in particular:

I played different things st different sessions…but compared AP and Electric Recording Company Coltrane, played OP and reissue of Dylan’s Gospel, 2nd side UK Abbey Road, unreleased Who’s Next, Baba O’Reilly 45rpm from Chad and 78rpm of Pictures At an Exhibition cut by Bernie Grundman for Classic Record’s…unreleased. Night in Tunisia Art Blakey Blue Note Music Matters lacquer…some “live” some 96/24 transfers. Nojima Plays Liszt Reference OP 33 AAA vs. 45rpm double from 176/24 ( 99.9% preferred AAA). Yuko Mabuchi on Yarlung.

I hope my photos turned out well enough for the reader to show how solid and polished the Valve Amplification Company gear looked through a clear top plate.  This is build quality of the highest order and, in my humble opinion, industrial art.  It reminded me of the stellar manufacturing quality I saw in person at the VAC factory.  At this price point, you expect something luxurious and you certainly receive it.  Fortunately, the more modest gear at the opposite end of the room also looked as solid, if not quite as shiny.  The whole system list reads like an audiophile went shopping after winning a lottery:

  • Von Schweikert Ultra 55 loudspeakers, $90,000
  • Von Schweikert V12XS Shockwave Subwoofer, $11,500
  • VAC Statement 450iQ Mono Power Amplifier, $120,000 per pair
  • VAC Statement Phono Stage, $80,000
  • VAC Statement Line Stage, $75,000
  • Esoteric Grandioso P1 Transport, $38,000
  • Esoteric Grandioso D1 Monoblock DAC, $19,000 each
  • Esoteric Grandioso G1 Master Clock, $26,000
  • Esoteric N1 Streamer/Renderer/DAC, $20,000
  • Kronos Pro Turntable, $51,000
  • Airtight Opus One Cartridge, $16,000
  • Critical Mass Maxxum Rack, $6,250 per component space ($75K total as configured at the show)
  • Critical Mass Maxxum Amplifier Stand, $6,250 (system used two for $12,500)

The pay-off from this system was genuine pleasure.  When Michael played Mood Indigo, the piano was nice and crisp and the sax as breathy in realism as I have heard.  The sax had gobs of presence and was (cliche alert!) “in the room.”  Bass was taut with nice note decays.  Hard to believe this was such an old recording and, for much of its life, kind of forgotten.  We owe Michael Cuscuna big-time for unearthing this gem and also Chad Kassem for another stellar QRP release.

At the opposite end of the ballroom, the Audio Company team had the Endeavor E-5 speakers ($40k) and E-3 speakers ($10k) set up with VAC electronics.  The gear included the Renaissance V preamp with phono ($12,990), Signature 200 iQ power amp in mono at $14,500 each, an Esoteric K1 CD/SACD player at $27,000, a Clearaudio Innovation Wood turntable ($16,500) with an Airtight PC-1 Supreme cartridge.  The foundation for the gear was solid with Critical Mass Maxxum 4-high rack for $31,250 and an amp stand at $6,250.  This also sounded amazing on both digital and analog.  The system picked up the tone of a classical guitar work perfectly.

This was just a knockout showing by The Audio Company.  The Ultra 55s are not small but sure sound bigger than they are.  Well done Damon and Leif!  The VAC is gorgeous sounding luxury-fi, well done Kevin!  And Michael Fremer, I hope you do these story-driven seminars early and often.  And many thanks to Keith, Jim and Gordon of The Audio Company for putting all this complex gear together in the best possible way.

This room was a true standout at the Florida show.  I cannot wait to see what the team does for Axpona!








About Lee Scoggins 118 Articles
A native of Atlanta, Georgia, Lee got interested in audio listening to his Dad’s system in the late 70s and he started making cassettes from LPs. By the early 80s he got swept up in the CD wave that was launching which led to a love of discs from Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs. Later while working on Wall Street in the 90s, Lee started working on blues, jazz and classical sessions for Chesky Records and learned record engineering by apprenticeship. Lee was involved in the first high resolution recordings which eventually became the DVD-Audio format. Lee now does recordings of small orchestras and string quartets in the Atlanta area. Lee's current system consists of Audio Research Reference electronics and Wilson Audio speakers.

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