I first auditioned a pair of Wilson Benesch speakers about a decade ago at a Dallas dealer. I had come in primarily to listen to a tube amp I fancied, but the sight of the large floorstanders got me curious.
I had read positive reviews on the company’s products. Seeing them up close was intriguing, as the woodwork – in this case, a gorgeous cherry – was beautiful. What I remember was that I came away impressed by their sound, too, especially the detailed high frequencies.
The British brand, however, disappeared on these shores. Last year at the Rocky Mountain Audio Fest, Wilson Benesch returned with a new U.S. distributor, Aaudio Imports of Parker, Colorado. Indeed, it was hard to miss the A.C.T. One Evolution P1 ($40,300 USD), an update of the company’s most famous speaker, as the demo pair in Denver was done up in Bugatti blue.
This year, Aaudio Imports sought to top that memorable display by bringing out Wilson Benesch’s flagship, the Cardinal ($114,500/pair USD), for its domestic debut. The state-of-the-art model lacked the racetrack paint job of its smaller brother, but still drew attention with its six-foot-tall, eight-inch-wide shape that sported an aluminum baffle, carbon-fibre cabinet and wood trim.
Each 400-pound speaker houses nine drivers, all proprietary: a one-inch Semisphere tweeter, a seven-inch Tactic II midrange, a seven-inch Tactic II lower midrange, four seven-inch Tactic II woofers and two seven-inch Tactic II passive radiators. Sensitivity is 90 dB.
The frequency response of the Cardinal is listed at 25Hz-35kHz. You might think that would suffice for a statement loudspeaker, but Aaudio Imports added a pair of Torus infrasonic generators ($12,500 each USD). These ultra-low-frequency units looked like the wheel and tire of a 1972 Corvette sitting horizontally on the floor next to the base of each Cardinal.
Aaudio Imports had one of the larger rooms at RMAF. The Cardinals were positioned 15 feet from the back wall and were also about five feet from the side walls. The speakers were part of a system that featured electronics from Ypsilon, including the Hyperion mono blocks ($93,000 USD), PST-100 Mk. II valve preamp ($37,000 USD), VPS-100 valve phono stage ($26,000 USD) and the MC26L step-up transformer ($6,200 USD).
Turntable was the Thales TTT Compact II ($14,500 USD), outfitted with a Statement zero-tracking-angle tonearm ($21,500 USD) and an Ikeda Kai MC cartridge ($8,500 USD). Wire was by Stage III, and featured its Medusa speaker cables ($18,500 USD), Gorgon interconnects ($7,600 USD), Analord Master phono cable ($5,300 USD) and a mix of Proteus ($12,000 USD), Leviathan ($14,500 USD) and Kraken ($8,400 USD) AC cables. Power conditioning was via HB Cable Design’s PowerSlave Marble unit ($13,500 USD).
My audition started with “Cotton Fields” by Harry Belafonte, from the Living Stereo pressing of Live at Carnegie Hall. The Cardinals captured the power of the singer’s voice and also did a spectacular job of recreating the recording’s audience sound and reverberation.
Next up was Dean Martin’s “My Melancholy Baby” from Dream With Dean. Here, the Cardinal’s also excelled in the midrange, with Martin’s voice sounding like real flesh vibrating in front of a microphone and Barney Kessel’s guitar fills darting in and out.
To see how the Cardinals handled rock, I requested Stevie Ray Vaughan’s “Pride and Joy.” Again, the highlight was listening to Vaughan’s syrupy vocal and the roar of his Fender Stratocaster.
On all the tracks, including the one featuring Double Trouble, the system’s bass – despite having so many drivers in play – did not call attention to itself. It appears Wilson Benesch designed the Cardinal to have a very fast, clean midrange and detailed upper frequencies, and tuned the bass to go deep but not add thickness. Some low-end lovers might prefer more weight – even with a pair of Torus subs, which also place speed over slam – but that would be hard to find in a speaker that is this nimble.
It’s good to have another manufacturer with a unique approach back in the U.S. high-end audio market. I look forward to hearing how close Wilson Benesch’s less-expensive models come to its interesting flagship.
The pricing here is truly laughable -it’ll be available for 1/5-to-1/10th the price in no time flat -representing its true value.
Can’t imagine anyone being anything but humored by the pricing madness that has overwhelmed the industry. This grand illusion will be short-lived -the economy has been in the dumps for years (electricity prices near equally absurd), yet these manufacturer’s continue to live in a bubble -and bubble’s are known to …
pj
If you say so. But there are no reasons to believe that your wishes are an accurate reflection of reality.
I wish Bentleys were cheaper. In fact, I do not believe that their pricing actually reflects their value. Ditto anything from Koenigsegg. Clearly, these auto brands are gouging a market and not “serious” in their general expectations of market success. And shortly, their prices will adequately reflect their value when those brands realize their errors and my crystalline logic.
Or … not. Because their pricing is actually a reflection of process, of low-volume costing of parts, of an extremely narrow market targeting.
Said another way, my cheapness doesn’t actually reflect anything other than my cheapness. YMMV.
I love the name Aaudio. I guess they wanted to be first in the phone book?