Marco Gilardetti wrote: Tue Jul 02, 2024 4:09 am
I also own a Stanton 681EEE, another peculiar cartridge being possibly the last ever produced of the
moving iron class, and as such delivering a sound that I would possibly define as "hystorical" - not for everyone.
The 681 series was once the chief rival to Shure's V15 series, the two rival top of the line models.
I found that the 681 had a more neutral sound that did not pair well with cheap speakers. The V15s were warmer and glossier, more in your face. I often compared the differences to those between Henry Kloss, New England style (AR, Advent, KLH, etc) acoustic suspension speakers and JBLs--there is no right/wrong when comes down to personal preferences.
The styli on Stantons also allowed for back-queuing, and the much maligned squirrel hair brush was actually extremely useful for stabilising tracking with
difficult records and for keeping dust off the stylus. I once did a listening test with a audiophile who ridiculed the brush, saying it greatly degraded the sound. I swapped out styli, one with brush and one without. He never got things better than chance guessing.
The V15 was a more versatile cartridge in pairing with tone arms, much more forgiving. The 681 needs an old school high mass tone arm to be heard at its best. It did nicely in the old S-curve SME arms.
Marco Gilardetti wrote: Tue Jul 02, 2024 4:09 am
But unfortunately we all know that the sound of LPs varies wildly, and there are some that seem to have been mastered/cut by engineers who were possibly born with no ears.
Oh, yes ... yes, indeed.
Then there is also the multi-stranded chain from master, to first platings, to secondary masters, to secondary platings for stampers, to your actual record in the pressing run for its stamper. The further your record is away from the original master in first stamper platings, secondary masters, actual stampers, and pressings counts, the worse it will sound. Beginning in the 1970s, Canada became notorious for pressing records badly with companies trying to squeeze every last penny's worth of life out of the production chain, using stampers until they were almost flat. I have a Traffic
John Barleycorn Must Die album of that period which I keep as an example. Nothing will track it despite its being perfectly flat. The tonearms will just wander around the record. American records were slightly better. Record stores of the period did brisk business in European and Japanese imports.
Also, if you do not have a vacuum record cleaning machine, I can recommend them highly. Mine is an Okki Nokki which I inherited from a friend who passed away--his wife showed up at the door with it a while after his death. I had been sceptical for about these machines, but my scepticism soon died. For one thing they demonstrated that not all Canadian-made records were awful--many of them just sounded that way. My wife had a Carly Simon record which she was extremely familiar with. I was putting records away one day, heading downstairs to the record library room. She was sitting reading. She asked me if I would put the Carly Simon record on for her. I took it off the shelf and examined it. It was clean-looking, but I decided to clean it before playing it, anyway. I put it on. Part way through, my wife, who is not an audiophile of any kind, suddenly looked startled, put her book down, and said, "That's Paul McCartney singing background vocals." Previously, one could only hear that there were background vocals. After cleaning, fine detail became much clearer. Often the cleaning machine will have no effect whatsoever with records that are excellent pressings or are truly terrible. But when there is an effect it is both profound and subtle.