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Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES
#3
I stopped by at CES today and spent a few minutes listening to the Phantoms. My impressions:

#1: They are beautiful. Like few other high-end audio items, these are really beautiful objects. But, thanks to the shape and brilliant white and chrome color scheme, they won't suit every interior. Like some other European speakers (some of which I have owned), these are better suited to a more modern and minimalist aesthetic. That's not a criticism, merely an observation.

#2: They sound very good. I heard them both with music and in a home theater set up, but not with familiar program material. As everyone has said, the sound is very full, with truly impressive bass (wow, the woofer covers really dance around in a very visible way!). On the one hand, there are several speakers that sound better at the $4k price point. But, of course, those speakers require amplifiers, DACs, and cabling. Once you start trying to compare system cost, well, the whole thought experiment begins to fall apart. Once you imagine an integrated/DAC (perhaps something from Peachtree or Hegel) plus pair of speakers (PSB? GoldenEar?), you're talking about something that seems altogether different from a pair of Phantoms, likely to appeal to very different listeners.

#3: It's a luxury lifestyle product. Now, before you all get upset, I don't mean that as an insult. But this product really isn't for traditional high-end audio customers. To put it plainly, it's more like the original B&W Zeppelin or Sonos than it is like Joseph Audio or DeVore (to name two great sounding speaker demos I heard at CES). And that is probably a good thing, because it should open up the hobby and industry to new customers (altho very well-heeled customers -- how many non-audiophiles consider spending $4k for speakers plus $700 for stands?).

#4: Integration and UX is hard to demo. Even after talking to the very helpful staffers at the demo, I must admit I don't really understand how all the pieces fit together -- Phantom, Dialog, existing digital sources (NAS, cloud, iTunes), and control interfaces (Spark, Sonos, other existing Android and iOS music apps, etc). Devialet is not to be blamed for this -- it's simply a mess out there, and very hard to predict how it will all integrate in your house and with your existing sources. This really strikes me as the weak link in the value proposition -- who will want to spend $10k to outfit a house with multiple Phantoms without knowing how all the past, present, and future digital music offerings will work together, and whether it will be fun an easy (as opposed to troubleshooting your PC at work)?
Devialet 1000 Pro Core Infinity, Magico M3, Nordost Frey 2 speaker cable, PS Audio P15 Power Plant, Shunyata Alpha EF AC cable, Mac Mini running ROON.
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Messages In This Thread
Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by GuillaumeB - 08-Jan-2015, 14:03
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by Pim - 08-Jan-2015, 18:18
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by flohmann - 09-Jan-2015, 05:22
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by thumb5 - 09-Jan-2015, 09:02
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by Confused - 09-Jan-2015, 09:15
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by Jwg1749 - 09-Jan-2015, 15:02
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by nicoludio - 09-Jan-2015, 09:52
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by flohmann - 09-Jan-2015, 10:08
Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by amabrok - 09-Jan-2015, 12:51
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by rik - 09-Jan-2015, 14:20
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by cansen - 09-Jan-2015, 17:47
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by Confused - 09-Jan-2015, 16:42
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by Confused - 09-Jan-2015, 17:59
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by flohmann - 09-Jan-2015, 19:54
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by f1eng - 10-Jan-2015, 11:16
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by Confused - 10-Jan-2015, 13:05
RE: Jeff Fritz on Phantom @ CES - by flohmann - 10-Jan-2015, 21:23

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