A Denon 103R cartridge be good for jazz music?
in particular for the original press years 50's/60's
Thanks
Andrea



andrea_n wrote:Linn Ekos

andrea_n wrote:A Denon 103R cartridge be good for jazz music?
in particular for the original press years 50's/60's
ld wrote:andrea_n wrote:A Denon 103R cartridge be good for jazz music?
in particular for the original press years 50's/60's
Yes. Personally there's something authentic (and good !) sounding about some 50s/60s programme material played using a spherical stylus. After all, that was how it was intended to be played, and how mastering was monitored. DL103 dates from 1962 - current IIRC, and was a broadcast cartridge. Both the 103 & 103r have spherical tips, BTW. IMO, that's not nearly as much of an audible compromise as popular opinion might suggest.
I keep a quality conical/spherical TT setup seperately for the purpose, and some recordings simply sound right on it, to me.


ld wrote:Personally, I don't experience a 'knock into a cocked hat' difference once one gets into this territory. And it's not as though one can run the DL103 and DL304 in the same config to compare. Same arm is impossible, for example. No doubt, they're both very fine, and a bit different, and it's horses for courses as I see it.
But fact remains that a lot of quality programme material was mastered with the intention of being replayed on spherical styli. Monitored that way, even. And, though the difference is subtle, to my ear it's sometimes 'right'. So I keep a TT permanently set up for this. If I could only keep one setup, it would be a tough choice, and some days I might go for the spherical. Wouldn't be a disaster either way. The choice is a nice thing, and I end up playing about 10% or so of my collection that way, probably. Sometimes more, in phases.


steve195527 wrote:... I don't think you can say any material is mastered to suit a certain stylus profiles,most engineers don't consider the equipment the final record will be played on....
ld wrote:It just follows naturally from whatever was contemporary when the vinyl was mastered. What else could that programme material have been monitored on ? And of course mastering engineers care about what it sounds like, and implicitly, what it is to be listened on. And contemporary assumptions applied, they didn't have a time machine !
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