was withdrawn from its shell and consigned to its whirring

drawer mechanism. Messages darted again over the screens,

followed by music that materialized throughout the room, a

large gentle beast trembling the wooden floor, stalking along

the walls, palpating the window panes.

In the Company of the Beast

I am listening as I write this to the latest release on the Water

Lily Acoustics label, entitled Fascinoma, a virtuoso vehicle

for trumpeter Jon Hassell in collaboration with Ry Cooder,

Ronu Majumdar on flute, and Jacky Terrasson on piano. A

point of special interest is that before developing his Fourth

World style, Hassel worked with Stockhausen and thereby

acquired the technique and aesthetics of electro-acoustic

composition. He now routinely incorporates loops and sam-

ples into his music as an accompanying ground bass.

On track 3, the entry of the synthesized percussion loops

explodes into the room with the intensity of a seismic tremor

over which Hassel floats the gossamer threads of his muted

trumpet tone like an impressionistic Milky Way serenely arch-

ing over a landscape in turmoil. The bass energy in this

recording is remarkable, but it demands a great deal of the

system to faithfully reproduce this together with the accom-

panying delicate and discrete strands of musical information.

If the system can cope, the assembled illuminati weave a

tapestry of surpassing richness within the ample acoustic of the

stone chapel in Santa Barbara, California, in which Kavi

Alexander has made so many remarkable recordings. So wide

is the dynamic range of this recording that the demand for the

system not to sound strained at climaxes becomes paramount.

The recording chain used by this label is unsurpassed in

rendering instrumental timbres naturally, and this will require

commensurate performance from the reproduction chain. If

there is any tonal imbalance in the system, this recording will

quickly expose it. With the Linn system, there was no such

problem, and the cavernous acoustic was rendered with tac-

tile presence while the music was woven in its supportive

embrace. But this degree of performance did not materialize

overnight, and before we achieved this resolution we were to

undertake the voyage of discovery that I have set down here.

Because there are so many aspects to the installation of

such a comprehensive surround-sound system, this review

will extend into the next issue, wherein we shall evaluate the

performance in other respects, most notably film sound.

The Quest Begins

Characterizing Linn’s advance man as the Alchemist is more

than just a writer’s device. Linn is an atypical audio company

that will purposely not regale you with design parameters and

specifications. Their typical response when asked about any

aspect of their products’ performance is “enough.” They will

perform the magic that brings the mythical beast of entertain-

ment to your home. That is not your concern. The Linn dealer

will play the role of Alchemist for every purchaser of a Linn

system. You need only sit back and be awed.

In keeping with that company philosophy, the Linn

AV5103/Tukan system delivered to me came without manuals

that would disclose its innermost workings. Linn did not feel

that I needed to know how this particular trick was per-

formed or how that rabbit got in the hat. But magazine writ-

ers (and editors) are compelled to pull back the curtain of

magic and witness the act itself. For this article, we will sit

back and watch the show. In the next issue,

though, we want to work the controls.

The sound of the Linn system has mutated

through three distinct phases to date: When

first set up, the sound was, in my room, a bliz-

zard of razor blades – a room problem, for my walls are plas-

tered. There is very little diffusion, and a handclap produces

a ring at the top of the room, near the ceiling. This has not pre-

vented the room from working well with most speakers, espe-

cially the Quad 63s with their tightly focussed treble radiation

patterns. The Linn tweeters are, I suspect, more generous in

the breadth of their polar dispersion patterns.

Purists of sound arcana always begin by aligning sound

radiators to achieve a solid mono image within the room,

and so did we. This process was aided in great part by “party

mode” – a multiple mono mode invoked by the surround

options button. Switching then into stereo mode revealed a

surprisingly deep stage. The bass frequencies, though, were

too much of a good thing, even when the controller

crossover sending the main signal to the Tukans was config-

ured as “small,” resulting in a low-frequency roll off begin-

ning at 60 Hz. This bass heaviness had a rubbery quality, a

looseness or slight slowness of response that added a drag-

ging beat to the music.

I suspect that this first set-up had located the drivers

within existing room modes. The AV5103 controller, for its

high price, has a limited bass-management system, but it

may be possible for Linn to add more options for tailoring

this range within the installer menus, which are normally

invisible to the user. It appears that the only bass manage-

ment provided is the turnover point for the main speakers, a

selection between ”small” and “large.” This is not a major

limitation in a closed system such as the Linn. Bear in mind

also that the system had at this point been working for only

one day, and all the speaker suspensions were unused!

Our next step was to tilt the cabinets slightly backward.

Now transients acquired substance as the midrange frequen-

cies aligned better with the treble. Next the speakers were

turned out to fire parallel along the long axis of the room,

then toed in toward the center just enough to attenuate the

side-wall reflections. In this position, the room ceased to

negatively dominate the treble presentation, and now it was

possible to relax into the sound. The predominant charac-

teristic of the sound at this second stage was clarity, reflect-

ing correct time alignment of the principal stereo pair with-

in the room acoustic.

Integration of the subwoofer was impeded by the heavy

bass response, which may at this stage have resulted from a

low-frequency mode of the room. Whatever the cause, the sub

had to be integrated with this anomaly, resulting in a dragging

bass with a slow decay.

At this point the Alchemist felt the results were more

than acceptable for running in the system before his second

visit a month later. There’s more to this saga, but that must

wait until the third phase, set-up for film sound, which

brought about a new level of performance with both music

and film recordings.

For now, the sound had acquired a clear and muscular

characteristic. Everything was imbued with a dynamic sound;

orchestras filled the room with massive wavefronts, while

Massive Attack turned the room into a massive vibrator at low

frequencies. Piano benefited especially, reminding me yet

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Sony G90 manual Company of the Beast, Quest Begins