Our RMAF 2010 plans – We are no longer in room 9030

Yeah, we quite unexpectedly lost our 9030 room where we have been for the 6 years of RMAF.

So, after a good deal of contemplation, we are now on floor 5, in the Atrium section of the hotel, in room 557. The 100% Audio Note room is also moving to floor 5 — rm 501, at the end of the hall..

557 is a much smaller room than the suite we had before, and we are really looking forward to filling it with very, very high-quality music at what can’t help but be a more reasonable [ 🙂 ] price point.

If you look at who is on our old 9th floor, and who is on our new 5th floor home, I think we will fit in here much better. Many rooms here on the 5th, looking at who is there this year, have actually produced decent sound in the past [well, we will see, won’t we? Shows… Lots of good people selling bad equipment. *sigh*].

Room 557: Audio Federation – Audio Note – Marten – Emm Labs – Nordost – HRS – Jorma Design

Audio Note Ongaku integrated amplifier
Marten ‘Coltrane’ loudspeakers
Emm Labs XDS1 CD/SACD Player
Nordost ODIN interconnects and power cords
Jorma Design ‘PRIME’ speaker cable
Harmonic Resolution Systems (HRS) M3 isolation platforms, SXR 1V amplifier stands, and Nimbus/Couplers

Room 501: Audio Note – Audio Federation

Audio Note ‘Jinro’ integrated amplifier (baby copper Ongaku)
Audio Note AN/E LX Signature loudspeakers (w/ high efficiency hemp drivers (HE) and outboard crossovers)
Audio Note CD4.1x CD Player
Audio Note SOGON speaker cables, SOOTTO interconnects and SOGON power cords

RMAF 2010 Show Report

No, silly, this isn’t the report. The show isn’t for another month yet… 🙂

The show report is going to be a little different this year. Yes, one reason is that we have not got a new server for Spintricity yet and so the report is going to be here on the blog. But a larger reason is that the report itself is going to be quite a bit different.

When we started out, we were the first to write long show reports and then the first to include several hundred then 1000s of photos. Now Audiogon, Stereophile, Positive Feedback, Stereotimes, Stereomojo, sometimes sixmoons, and last year AVSForum and Audio Circle post upwards of 1000 photos in their show reports.

That is quite a few reports now, and, although only Audiogon, like us, tries to cover every single room, there are quite a lot of photos now for people to kind of see kinda sorta what was there at the show.

What they do not do is talk about the sound. Whether they are incapable, afraid [of their advertisers], shills, or just ideologically opposed to it [see Steve Roclin’s perennial comments on Enjoy the Music] by and large [a phrase I added to make this nicer sounding] what comes out of these show reports is either sound bites for advertising copy or drivel.

So in this show report for RMAF 2010, you can ‘expect the same level of disdain for superficial media analysis and unfettered devotion to exploring’ the details of the sound and impact it has on the music being played – as always.

But more so.

[I plagiarized the quoted section from a small sports blog. Seems like they got quite a bit of poop to cut through as well].

Without all those photos, and the 140 – 200 hours of post processing they consumed, there will be time to write a few detailed comments. The show report will focus on the ‘high-end’ rooms, which is where Audio Federation’s interests are and where the reporting community makes their most egregious mistakes. [Oh, I am being so much more polite than I might otherwise be. I just came here after reading Romy’s ‘critique’ of yet another idiot review of the Lamm ML3. I differ from Romy in that I do not despise the people involved, but I do indeed despise the shallow level of discourse that passes for detailed analysis of the sound of high-end audio equipment these days. And I am oh so tempted to use some of the same flowery language :-)].

So…. it is my expectation that in several years we will NOT see 9 clones of THIS style of show report.

For one, some of these people get several months to listen to and analyze then describe a particular sound – and they have a lot of trouble with even that [for reasons that may involve anemic work ethics and just not really giving a damn to all sorts of other nefarious and dastardly nasty interpretations of the world which do not really belong in politics, much less our little happy hobby].

For two, talking about the sound is risky. Manufacturers and distributors are not any smarter, on average, than anyone else, and perhaps [very much seem to] have more than their fair share of paranoid schizophrenics. Very few know how to set up a room, or understand what they are selling well enough to know what it works well with, or really care about the sound in their room [so they think WE should not care either. Sorry. We do]. So once in a blue moon they get pissed. But on average, it is really the owners of similar systems that get pissed. And this is just sad. The junk systems people are sold these days by unscrupulous dealers… shows should make this a lot harder to get away with as people get to hear systems that don’t… actually… suck. [or ‘Suck Less’ anyway, if for you the glass is not ‘half empty’, but completely bone dry and has been sitting in the Sahara desert for several hundred years].

The greatest risk is that other reports start doing this, and make up shit in ever larger volumes – and that they have someone who knows HOW to write, albeit not WHAT to write [nor how to listen]. There is one very famous reviewer [not at any of the pubs above] who just makes up stuff. It sounds real but if you heard the system he is writing about you would realize that what he wrote has nothing to do with the sound in that room [I mean, every room has positives and negatives, right? and someone who can hear and who wants to lie would naturally want to focus on the system’s strengths and ignore the often severe weaknesses. That way they could lie and more or less get away with it by saying those weaknesses were not aspects of the sound that they personally care about, or that they were not as egregious as I, say, make them out to be.]

Well, we’ll see. Hope there is something at the show actually worth spending some time listening to. Hmmmmm….

Introducing the Toronto Audio Video Entertainment Show

[Methinks this is scheduled for a date really close to the likely date for RMAF 2011 – and that this will be a problem for many consumers and exhibitors. But otherwise, it is awesome that we all are getting another major show on this side of the pond]

Toronto, Ontario – September 15, 2011- Get ready for the most anticipated consumer electronics event in Canada! After almost a decade of absence, Toronto will host a brand new consumer audio video and electronics show. The event, organized by and experienced team, promises to promote and revitalize the consumer electronics industry and is expected to draw thousands of visitors.

The Toronto Audio Video Entertainment Show, dubbed TAVES, has come to life after two years of development and market study, thanks to the collaboration of Canada HiFi magazine, Salon Son & Image and AuDiYo Inc. The first annual show will be held at the luxurious Le Meridien King Edward hotel from September 30th to October 2nd , 2011 just in time for the biggest shopping season. The King Edward hotel is a prestigious heritage building located in the heart of downtown Toronto and offers larger than average exhibit rooms with excellent sound acoustics.

The TAVES will showcase state-of-the-art consumer audio video products and technologies from mainstream and enthusiast brands. Consumers will be able to listen to and compare a large number of two-channel music systems as well as experience full-scale home theater setups. Products on display will range from entry-level components to the ultra high-end and everything in between. In addition, a number of exhibitors will present the visitors with the opportunity to purchase various media products from rare music discs, vinyl albums and Blu-ray discs. On Saturday evening visitors and exhibitors will be invited to listen to a number of live music performances by Canadian professional artists.

The show exhibition space will consist of a combination of larger than average hotel guestrooms, large parlours and a grand ballroom. Beds and other furniture will be removed from the rooms to accommodate audio and video setups.

To ensure a large number of visitors, the TAVES will be promoted extensively through various media outlets including local newspapers, magazines, radio stations, Internet forums, Facebook, Tweeter and several webzines in Canada and the United States.

You are cordially invited to join us for the 2011 Toronto Audio Video Entertainment Show.

For more information, please contact one of the organizers below or visit www.taveshow.com.

Suave Kajko
President
skajko@taveshow.com
416-767-2495

Simon Au
Vice-president sales
sau@taveshow.com
416-704-0105

Michel Plante
Vice-president marketing
mplante@taveshow.com
450-441-5989

Canada HiFi is a privately owned magazine, published bi-monthly since 2004, and available in more than 300 locations across Canada as well as a digital edition on line.
Salon Son & Image is a privately owned company responsible for organizing the annual Montreal Hi-Fi show since 1985.
AuDiYo inc. is a privately owned audio component and accessory distribution company based on Richmond Hill since 2004.