GOOD LIFE

Technology: Turntables That Hit The Right Notes

 

Email To A Friend

Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.

Separate multiple addresses with commas

SPONSORED BY
 

Vinyl has never sounded—or looked—so good. With music enthusiasts reverting to the authenticity of analog, these turntables spruce up the living room while doing justice to the record collection. The Montegiro Lusso looks every bit the work of art, with its silver and black stripes promising superior sound ($48,800; montegiro.de). Da Vinci Audio Labs created the AAS Gabriel, designed using the same process employed to cut the vinyl records it will play. The luxury edition is available in a 24-karat gold-and-white design ($46,600; www.da-vinci-audio.com). But the high note of turntables goes to The Reference II, by the Swiss manufacturer Goldmund. The 350-kilo turntable is delivered in five crates by three factory workers to ensure it is perfectly installed. Between 2008 and 2013 only five machines will be produced each year ($250,000; goldmund.com). With turntables like these, the days of digital music may be numbered.

© 2008

Label

Newsweek Top Stories
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution

Using emotion to convince people to change.

Heaven Can Wait
Heaven Can Wait

A new book promises proof of eternal life.

The World's Biggest Foods
The World's Biggest Foods

Monster edibles from around America.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: andybarss @ 08/28/2008 12:36:10 AM

    Yeah, a quarter-million dollar turntable is really going to make CDs obsolete.

    The author might want to read up on the actual facts about the "authenticity" of vinyl. A lot of people like the distortion and limited synamic range of vinyl, but don't call it authemticity, please. CDs reproduce music much, much more accurately.

  • Posted By: andybarss @ 08/28/2008 12:35:06 AM

    Yeah, a quarter-million dollar turntable is really going to make CDs obsolete.

    The author might want to read up on the actual facts about the "authenticity" of vinyl. A lot of people like the distortion and limited synamic range of vinyl, but don't call it authemticity, please. CDs reproduce music much, much more accurately.

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse

My Take

Customize the NEWSWEEK homepage
to feature your favorite columnists.

Customize Now