Alumine Five of Stenheim
Stenheim is a relatively late entrant to the high-end speaker field. It was founded in 2010 by a collective of mainly ex-Goldmund engineers, and its products have inherited an unmistakable aesthetic and, to a lesser extent, sonic DNA, although it was a significantly evolved character that was to emerge in the shape of the debut model, the compact, two-way Alumine Two. It’s a developmental divergence that has continued and, if anything, accelerated with the emergence of each subsequent product. The latest Stenheim speakers, developed under the auspices of new owner Jean-Pascal Panchard, definitely have their own, unambiguous identity, both visually and musically.
I’ve been seriously looking forward to the arrival of the Alumine Five. Previous experience with the brand has included impressive exposure to the various versions of the enormous and enormously impressive Ultime Reference models, as well as a brief but highly rewarding flirtation with the stand-mounted Alumine Two in my own system. The possibility of combining the sense of musical articulation, enthusiasm and communication I experienced from the Alumine Two, with more than a hint of the clarity, scale and authority so effortlessly delivered by the Reference models, all in a package that, if not exactly affordable, at least isn’t completely out of the question, makes the Alumine Five a distinctly interesting proposition.
Yet, confronted with the Alumine Five in the flesh, there’s little to hint at the extraordinary promise lurking within. Resolutely rectangular in true Stenheim style, the Five’s aluminum cabinet, with its plate-to-plate construction, stands just 48" tall, 15" deep and presents a broad 11" face to the world, dimensions based on golden-ratio numbers. The front baffle is split by a physical break between the upper midrange-treble enclosure and the lower bass cabinet, independently ported by the laminated full-width slots above and below, a physical separation that is mirrored by the contrasting inlaid strips that help visually break up the one-piece side panels. The regular lines, smooth surfaces, flawless matte finish and lack of visible fixings could easily result in a bland, almost featureless appearance. But those trim strips and the offset midrange and treble drivers do just enough to give the Five a subtle hint of individual style without resorting to the sort of gauche and ostentatious flourishes that so often pass as design.
The result is a refreshingly clean, classical appearance that will blend seamlessly with a range of different decors. Despite the lack of grilles (although they are available as an option, does anybody really spend this kind of money on a speaker and then compromise the performance by fitting covers?), the beautifully profiled baffle and absence of visible fixings makes for a genuinely neat, finished appearance that matches the superb surface finish on the cabinet. The end result just looks right, in a way that makes you wonder why you’d want grilles anyway.
The first hint of its potent sonic capabilities comes when you try to pick it up. Each comparatively compact cabinet tips the scales at 220 pounds. That’s a grunt-inducing, two-man lift. Now, take a look at the figures for bandwidth and sensitivity, and an in-room response that digs down as far as 28Hz combined with 94dB efficiency should raise your eyebrows, especially given the compact cabinet dimensions. Which brings us to the first experiential disconnect: boxes this size shouldn’t produce this much bass or do it so easily. Nor should they weigh so much -- although therein lies the clue to this particular conundrum. When it comes to bass extension, it’s not the external dimensions of the box that matter, but its internal volume. Just like the Crystal Cable Minissimo, a thin-wall cabinet makes for a much larger internal volume than the external dimensions might suggest -- especially if we apply the expectations of more conventional wood-based construction. Throw in the sheer weight of the aluminum panels and the combination of mass and physical dimensions would subconsciously suggest massively thick walls -- and a correspondingly limited internal volume. Instead, what we have here is a deceptively large volume, which, combined with the inertia of the heavy cabinet and the mechanical stability provided by the material, makes for an effective mechanical reference for driver movement, meaning that more of the energy your amplifier sticks into the speaker comes out as sound and (at least in theory) it will be more precisely rendered.
So far, not very much that’s new. It’s not like Stenheim (or Magico, or YG Acoustics) has exclusivity when it comes to aluminum cabinets. But what does make Stenheim different is the unique material they use in damping their cabinet panels. Of course, the separate enclosures and the internal baffles they demand make for an inherently heavily braced structure, but look inside a dismantled Alumine Five and you’ll find strategically placed pads stuck to the cabinet walls. These three-layer, self-adhesive pads combine a heavy damping layer (adjacent to the cabinet wall itself) with added foam and impervious layers, allowing the low-volume pads to influence both the mechanical behavior of the cabinet itself and the enclosed volume. It’s an interesting solution because it manages to overcome the weakness so often audible in simple, braced aluminum cabinets (the all-too-recognizable resonant signature of the material itself) while maximizing the benefits (large volume and rigidity) by obviating the need to stuff the internal space full of wadding or long-haired wool. In fact, if the Stenheims were stood behind a sonically transparent curtain, you’d be hard-pressed to recognize the music as emanating from an aluminum cabinet at all. The absence of the bleached, grainy or lean colorations, the lack of sterile, mechanistic reproduction, is one big half of the Stenheim story, living, breathing proof that it’s not what you use but how you use it that counts.
The other half is down to the drive units, and after the cabinets, those come as quite a surprise, both the lineup and the chosen materials. In stark contrast to the use of the latest, precision CNC techniques, complex damping pads and finishing options, the Alumine Five's drivers are as traditional as they come, with a coated silk-dome tweeter and pulp or laminated paper midrange and bass drivers. The cone drivers use textile double-roll surrounds and massive magnets more normally found in pro-audio applications, and while Stenheim doesn’t build its own drivers, the company works closely with its chosen supplier (PHL, definitely not one of the usual suspects) to specify the electrical parameters, mechanical characteristics and precise details of the surface coating.
The use of such lightweight cone materials and large motors aids the system efficiency, while a hybrid second-order/Linkwitz-Riley crossover, the result of extended listening and evolution, ensures phase coherence and excellent out-of-band attenuation and makes for easy non-reactive load characteristics, despite the three-way topology. The other aspect of the driver lineup that might be considered slightly unusual is the use of a large-diameter (6 1/2") midrange unit -- although less so since Vandersteen’s patent on the approach lapsed some years ago, resulting in a rash of companies suddenly exploring the possibilities of the topology.
Perhaps more important, in the case of the Alumine Five, it means that you are getting the tweeter and midrange drivers from the Ultime Reference series speakers, teamed here with a pair of 10" woofers but without the benefit of a super tweeter. Even so, Stenheim quotes bandwidth out to 35kHz, which should suffice for most purposes. The review speakers arrived with the optional second set of terminals installed, allowing for biwiring or, more significantly, biamping, an upgrade opportunity that makes this an option you should take. If, in the meantime, you are single-wiring the speakers, make sure you factor in a set of jumpers that match your speaker cables: the Alumine Five's overall sense of musical coherence makes the benefits especially obvious. Likewise, good wiring practice is essential, both in terms of cable dressing and diagonal connection (red to midrange/treble, black to bass, with jumpers arranged accordingly).
Aside from the speaker's substantial weight, the parallel sides and flat surfaces of the four-square cabinet make setting up the Fives an absolute joy. Precise, repeatable, angular adjustments are easily achieved, while changes in attitude are just as straightforward, helped by the beautifully profiled stainless-steel spiked feet and deeply cupped footers. Both the cones and their locking rings have nice, large ports to take the supplied pry bars, but it’s worth greasing the threads before installation. One other thing to watch out for: the spikes are seriously (refreshingly) sharp -- sharp enough to penetrate a thick rug and score the floor below, so be careful where you stand the speakers once the feet are installed. Final positioning disposed the speakers on a broad front with minimal toe-in. When it came to dialing in their considerable musical energy, the most critical factor proved to be height off the ground, with tiny adjustments of the spikes making profound differences to the weight and pace of the presentation. Likewise, equal weighting of the four spikes was crucial to a proper sense of grounded weight and dynamic authority.
........................................................
Price: $60,000 per pair.
Warranty: Five years parts and labor.
(Source: The Audio Beat)
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在我心目中永遠最偉大的藝術家陶山老師
還記得7年前我開始抱著吉他唱cover
收到老師留言發給我的信 真的很不可思議
那時候我在馬來西亞還有三年的高中要唸
不過我知道我只要努力考上台灣的大學 我就能來和老師做音樂了
熬了三年終於能來台灣做音樂了 很開心的是老師沒有忘記我
見到他並完成的第一首歌 在2013年就是你夠了沒
接下來的故事 就要銜接到老師的故事了
我對這些作品都有滿滿的使命感和愛
我嘗試去比賽上節目不為了什麼只為了能讓它們被聽見
但未發行始終無法讓歌曲傳得更遠
從萬分的不願意割捨 到時間久了釋懷也許真的該把它們賣了吧
這是在我心裡這些年來 作為一個音樂人不能捍衛自己作品的遺憾
今年奇蹟發生了
在電腦裡放了4年的歌 終於有它們的歸處
9月20日 你夠了沒 用原demo名字 無色憂傷正式發行
www.SKRpresents.com 上線了!
(English below) 網站上不單有昨天分享的免費卡拉帶,也有陶山老師精心寫的博客,希望可以和大家貢獻他的音樂世界:
在我專職做音樂的這15年裡,我最怕的一件事就是音樂會變成只是工作,我怕我會失去當初那個愛上音樂的男孩 - 在車庫和朋友練團,一起寫歌,學著如何錄音,最棒之處就是聽著我們剛剛創作出來的音樂,感受到音樂帶給我的魔力。這個魔力也是我後來專職做音樂工作後一直努力想保護的,是我對音樂最純粹的愛與熱情。
每一次寫歌,每一次錄vocal,每一次編曲,製作或混音,每一個case,我都要能感受到這個魔力!愛上這個歌曲,愛上這個我們一起創造的音樂;有時候如果我已經愛上了一首歌,它變成我的寶貝,然後合作對象想要改變它,或是我覺得這個case會變成只是工作而失去魔力,我就會讓他們知道我的理由然後推掉這個工作;非常不好合作,非常藝術家我知道,但是這是我唯一能保護我對音樂的愛的方法。
所以在我沒有接工作的時候,我最好的充電方法就是在網路上搜尋我有感覺的聲音,燃起我創作靈感的聲音,有時候是他們翻唱我的曲子,有時候是朋友發現介紹給我...... 只要我聽到感動我的聲音,我就會主動聯絡他們,問他們願不願意和我一起做一些好玩的音樂。 就這樣我用這種方法玩音樂已經超過五年了,一開始我很不聰明,我會和這些很棒的歌手們做出很多首歌曲,但是全部都只留在我們的電腦裡沒有發出;我們試過自己拍過MV,上傳在網路上,但是因為沒有正式發行管道發行歌曲,這些音樂沒有辦法得到任何收入,也不可能一直投錢,我們發現找不到平衡,也還找不到長遠的作法就先停止了。
就這樣週、月、年過去,有些歌手會拿著我們創作的作品去找經紀或唱片的機會,或是我們在雙方的同意下把歌曲賣給其他人;有些歌曲仍然被困在我的電腦裡;有些歌曲發行了,成績也不錯....... 但在我心裡我知道,我還沒找到一個完美對待這些歌曲的方式,我的夢想裡完美的狀態是我們能自在的創作有魔力的音樂,在它還有魔力的時候分享與發行它。
SKR這個點子就在這樣許多不完美的嘗試中開始了,我繼續找著我有感覺的聲音,在最自由最有熱情的時候做出我們都喜歡的音樂,就像小時候做音樂一樣,沒有合約,沒有束縛,一起做音樂只因為我們喜歡一起做音樂的感覺,哪天我們合作沒有感覺了,就握手道別祝福彼此走向新的旅程。
而非常幸運的,在去年年底,在Union-Square(前KK Farm)的幫忙下SKR的發行管道終於正式成立了。 有了正式的發行管道,之前被困在我的電腦裡的音樂現在都可以發行了,之後我們在熱情下做出的音樂也都可以馬上發行,發行的收入再合理地分配給所有幫助這個音樂和影像完成的朋友們;如果市場迴響好,大家一起得利;若市場迴響不如預期也沒關係,因為我們享受了這整個創作的過程,對我來說這是最好的酬勞!
再來就是我另外一個瘋狂的點子, 因為SKR是我音樂上的遊樂場,一個我可以實驗性玩的地方。 所以我,再次藝術家式的,直覺的,強烈的決定要分享歌曲裡的我彈的樂器的分軌檔案; 對我來說,我想分享一首歌形成的過程,我也想知道有什麼創意的方法能從我分享的這些檔案裡延伸出去; 也許最簡單的唱一首cover,也許DJ能很酷地拿走我的吉他混進另一首歌裡,也許不會彈樂器卻有豐富創作能量的人能用我的音樂寫出一首全新的旋律,也許樂團能拿著這些stems表演live,有或者有人對編曲很有興趣,那他也許可以從我的編曲裡得到他想要的資訊..... 我不知道,我不知道未來的世界音樂會是什麼樣子, 但是我永遠記得那個愛上音樂帶給他神奇魔力的小男孩; 在音樂上分享我現在所知道的,如果這些分享能帶給任何一個現在對音樂有興趣的人幫助,那SKR就已經成功了!
www.SKRpresents.com is now live!
Visit the website for some freebie instrumentals and stems, as well as having the opportunity to read Skot's blog; so much behind the scenes, advices, anecdotes... here's a sample of what's on!
(Skot原文如下)
For the past 15 years that I’ve been making music professionally, the thing that I’m most scared of is this: that making music will feel like work. I’m afraid I’ll lose the innocence and passion that I had when I was a boy. Playing in a band with my best friends, writing songs together, learning how to record, and the best part of all, listening back to the music we created. This magical feeling I get when making music is the most important part, and I always need to protect it. I want to feel this magic feeling every time I write a song, work with an artist, do an arrangement, or produce or mix a song. If an artist wants to drastically change a song that I’ve already fallen in love with, or the client wants me to work in a way where it will feel like work, I’ll reject the case. I know I’m very difficult to work with, and a bit of an artist myself, but this is the only way I can keep my love for making music.
When I’m not doing paid jobs, the best way for me to recharge is to find new and exciting voices to work with. Sometimes I discover people when they cover my songs, and send it to me, sometimes friends will recommend great singers they’ve discovered, etc. I always reach out to singers that move me, and ask if they want to come over and make music together. I’ve been doing this for over 5 years now. And in the beginning, I wasn’t smart about it. I’d make SO many songs with these amazing singers I found online, but the songs would end up just sitting on my computer with no way out. So then we started shooting our own music videos and releasing them on YouTube. But we had no way of ‘officially’ releasing these songs. So we had no money coming in, and we couldn’t continue making music videos for all the songs still stuck in my computer. Days turned to weeks, turned to years, and everyone had to move on. The singers would sign with a manager, or a record company, or maybe we’d agree to sell the songs to someone else, etc. Some of these trapped songs have come out already, some of these songs were even hits, but still.. I wanted a way to create a song with an amazing singer, shoot an MV and be able to release it right away. That’s been my dream for a while now.
That’s how SKR started. I want to keep finding new talent to work with, and make music that inspires me, that keeps me awake at night, like how I used feel growing up. And I want the music to be pure. No money, no contracts, no commitments. Just make music because I love the feeling of making music. And people can come and go as they please. And I’m so lucky that the end of last year, we officially launched SKR with the help of Union Square (formerly Kkfarm). So I have an official way of releasing those old songs that have been stuck in my computer. And if there’s any income, we can divide it among everyone that helped bring the song out of my computer and into the world. When a singer and I make a new song, we can shoot an MV right away and release it while we all still feel the fire from what we created. If the market likes what we’re doing, then everyone who helped out on this song will benefit. If the song totally flops, we’ll still be happy that we created something we’re proud of and had the ability to put it out. There’s no regrets. Because the process of creating music is the best payment we can ever receive.
Which brings me to my craziest idea. SKR is a musical playground for me. Somewhere where we can try things that haven’t been done before. I don’t know exactly why, but I have a very strong feeling to release the instrumentals and the stems of the songs I’ve done for SKR. I don’t know what will happen when I do this. But I’m really looking forward and curious to see what will be created from this. Maybe a DJ will remix some of my guitar tracks into something super cool. Maybe it will give a chance to people who can write great melodies, but don’t play an instrument. They can sing their own melodies over my instrumentals. Singers who love to cover songs, but don’t play an instrument, can download these instrumentals and easily do a cover now. Even bands can download the stems to perform any of these songs live. Or maybe it will help people who are interested in learning how to do arrangements hear more clearly how I put these tracks together. I don’t know. I don’t know what will happen to the music industry in the future either. But I always remember that magical feeling I had as a kid, falling in love with making music. And if these instrumentals or stems can inspire someone else musically, then SKR is already a success.
benefit of listening to music 在 SKRpresents 陶山音樂 Facebook 的最佳解答
www.SKRpresents.com 上線了!
(English below) 網站上不單有昨天分享的免費卡拉帶,也有陶山老師精心寫的博客,希望可以和大家貢獻他的音樂世界:
在我專職做音樂的這15年裡,我最怕的一件事就是音樂會變成只是工作,我怕我會失去當初那個愛上音樂的男孩 - 在車庫和朋友練團,一起寫歌,學著如何錄音,最棒之處就是聽著我們剛剛創作出來的音樂,感受到音樂帶給我的魔力。這個魔力也是我後來專職做音樂工作後一直努力想保護的,是我對音樂最純粹的愛與熱情。
每一次寫歌,每一次錄vocal,每一次編曲,製作或混音,每一個case,我都要能感受到這個魔力!愛上這個歌曲,愛上這個我們一起創造的音樂;有時候如果我已經愛上了一首歌,它變成我的寶貝,然後合作對象想要改變它,或是我覺得這個case會變成只是工作而失去魔力,我就會讓他們知道我的理由然後推掉這個工作;非常不好合作,非常藝術家我知道,但是這是我唯一能保護我對音樂的愛的方法。
所以在我沒有接工作的時候,我最好的充電方法就是在網路上搜尋我有感覺的聲音,燃起我創作靈感的聲音,有時候是他們翻唱我的曲子,有時候是朋友發現介紹給我...... 只要我聽到感動我的聲音,我就會主動聯絡他們,問他們願不願意和我一起做一些好玩的音樂。 就這樣我用這種方法玩音樂已經超過五年了,一開始我很不聰明,我會和這些很棒的歌手們做出很多首歌曲,但是全部都只留在我們的電腦裡沒有發出;我們試過自己拍過MV,上傳在網路上,但是因為沒有正式發行管道發行歌曲,這些音樂沒有辦法得到任何收入,也不可能一直投錢,我們發現找不到平衡,也還找不到長遠的作法就先停止了。
就這樣週、月、年過去,有些歌手會拿著我們創作的作品去找經紀或唱片的機會,或是我們在雙方的同意下把歌曲賣給其他人;有些歌曲仍然被困在我的電腦裡;有些歌曲發行了,成績也不錯....... 但在我心裡我知道,我還沒找到一個完美對待這些歌曲的方式,我的夢想裡完美的狀態是我們能自在的創作有魔力的音樂,在它還有魔力的時候分享與發行它。
SKR這個點子就在這樣許多不完美的嘗試中開始了,我繼續找著我有感覺的聲音,在最自由最有熱情的時候做出我們都喜歡的音樂,就像小時候做音樂一樣,沒有合約,沒有束縛,一起做音樂只因為我們喜歡一起做音樂的感覺,哪天我們合作沒有感覺了,就握手道別祝福彼此走向新的旅程。
而非常幸運的,在去年年底,在Union-Square(前KK Farm)的幫忙下SKR的發行管道終於正式成立了。 有了正式的發行管道,之前被困在我的電腦裡的音樂現在都可以發行了,之後我們在熱情下做出的音樂也都可以馬上發行,發行的收入再合理地分配給所有幫助這個音樂和影像完成的朋友們;如果市場迴響好,大家一起得利;若市場迴響不如預期也沒關係,因為我們享受了這整個創作的過程,對我來說這是最好的酬勞!
再來就是我另外一個瘋狂的點子, 因為SKR是我音樂上的遊樂場,一個我可以實驗性玩的地方。 所以我,再次藝術家式的,直覺的,強烈的決定要分享歌曲裡的我彈的樂器的分軌檔案; 對我來說,我想分享一首歌形成的過程,我也想知道有什麼創意的方法能從我分享的這些檔案裡延伸出去; 也許最簡單的唱一首cover,也許DJ能很酷地拿走我的吉他混進另一首歌裡,也許不會彈樂器卻有豐富創作能量的人能用我的音樂寫出一首全新的旋律,也許樂團能拿著這些stems表演live,有或者有人對編曲很有興趣,那他也許可以從我的編曲裡得到他想要的資訊..... 我不知道,我不知道未來的世界音樂會是什麼樣子, 但是我永遠記得那個愛上音樂帶給他神奇魔力的小男孩; 在音樂上分享我現在所知道的,如果這些分享能帶給任何一個現在對音樂有興趣的人幫助,那SKR就已經成功了!
www.SKRpresents.com is now live!
Visit the website for some freebie instrumentals and stems, as well as having the opportunity to read Skot's blog; so much behind the scenes, advices, anecdotes... here's a sample of what's on!
(Skot原文如下)
For the past 15 years that I’ve been making music professionally, the thing that I’m most scared of is this: that making music will feel like work. I’m afraid I’ll lose the innocence and passion that I had when I was a boy. Playing in a band with my best friends, writing songs together, learning how to record, and the best part of all, listening back to the music we created. This magical feeling I get when making music is the most important part, and I always need to protect it. I want to feel this magic feeling every time I write a song, work with an artist, do an arrangement, or produce or mix a song. If an artist wants to drastically change a song that I’ve already fallen in love with, or the client wants me to work in a way where it will feel like work, I’ll reject the case. I know I’m very difficult to work with, and a bit of an artist myself, but this is the only way I can keep my love for making music.
When I’m not doing paid jobs, the best way for me to recharge is to find new and exciting voices to work with. Sometimes I discover people when they cover my songs, and send it to me, sometimes friends will recommend great singers they’ve discovered, etc. I always reach out to singers that move me, and ask if they want to come over and make music together. I’ve been doing this for over 5 years now. And in the beginning, I wasn’t smart about it. I’d make SO many songs with these amazing singers I found online, but the songs would end up just sitting on my computer with no way out. So then we started shooting our own music videos and releasing them on YouTube. But we had no way of ‘officially’ releasing these songs. So we had no money coming in, and we couldn’t continue making music videos for all the songs still stuck in my computer. Days turned to weeks, turned to years, and everyone had to move on. The singers would sign with a manager, or a record company, or maybe we’d agree to sell the songs to someone else, etc. Some of these trapped songs have come out already, some of these songs were even hits, but still.. I wanted a way to create a song with an amazing singer, shoot an MV and be able to release it right away. That’s been my dream for a while now.
That’s how SKR started. I want to keep finding new talent to work with, and make music that inspires me, that keeps me awake at night, like how I used feel growing up. And I want the music to be pure. No money, no contracts, no commitments. Just make music because I love the feeling of making music. And people can come and go as they please. And I’m so lucky that the end of last year, we officially launched SKR with the help of Union Square (formerly Kkfarm). So I have an official way of releasing those old songs that have been stuck in my computer. And if there’s any income, we can divide it among everyone that helped bring the song out of my computer and into the world. When a singer and I make a new song, we can shoot an MV right away and release it while we all still feel the fire from what we created. If the market likes what we’re doing, then everyone who helped out on this song will benefit. If the song totally flops, we’ll still be happy that we created something we’re proud of and had the ability to put it out. There’s no regrets. Because the process of creating music is the best payment we can ever receive.
Which brings me to my craziest idea. SKR is a musical playground for me. Somewhere where we can try things that haven’t been done before. I don’t know exactly why, but I have a very strong feeling to release the instrumentals and the stems of the songs I’ve done for SKR. I don’t know what will happen when I do this. But I’m really looking forward and curious to see what will be created from this. Maybe a DJ will remix some of my guitar tracks into something super cool. Maybe it will give a chance to people who can write great melodies, but don’t play an instrument. They can sing their own melodies over my instrumentals. Singers who love to cover songs, but don’t play an instrument, can download these instrumentals and easily do a cover now. Even bands can download the stems to perform any of these songs live. Or maybe it will help people who are interested in learning how to do arrangements hear more clearly how I put these tracks together. I don’t know. I don’t know what will happen to the music industry in the future either. But I always remember that magical feeling I had as a kid, falling in love with making music. And if these instrumentals or stems can inspire someone else musically, then SKR is already a success.
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