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Rotel RSX-1550 A/V Receiver:
Thunder, the View, the Streets
Lakeview Terrace’s psycho-neighbor scenario depends on quiet menace to build its disturbing dramatic momentum. The receiver’s low-resolution prowess helped with mood-setting crickets and the occasional distant dog bark. Moderate all-channel activity, such as a brief scene in a Los Angeles ghetto, was convincing. The street-noise ambience was unusually realistic, partly due to Dolby TrueHD and a good mix, no doubt. Again, the receiver’s bottom end got high marks for the low synthesized pulses that are a staple of ominous movie soundtracks. No matter how much I tried to distance myself—I’m working, I’m taking notes, this is my job—the movie left me unsettled and emotionally drained. The packaging of Step Up 2: The Streets identifies the soundtrack as Dolby TrueHD, but the receiver’s display identified it as PCM. This probably mattered less than the fact that effective use of surround wasn’t even on the filmmakers’ to-do list. In what should have been emotionally charged dance-floor numbers, the too-compressed music washed over too-low swatches of crowd noise to create a bland sound that turned my system into a TV speaker. There was little attempt to mix club or street ambience into the music. For an example of how this might be done more aggressively and right, see the Eminem vehicle 8 Mile. Overall, the Streets mix was oddly flat, dispassionate, and even more annoying than the hokey plot. It left street-wise choreography and exuberant solo and ensemble dancing as the movie’s only attractive elements. Watch it with the sound off, and you might like it.
On Rye, with Mustard
My copy of Sarah Vaughan’s Golden Hits!!! is a $1 sidewalk LP—a little crackly here and there but mostly in good condition. Even surrounded by intermittently goofy arrangements and stuck in an echo chamber, Sassy remains a joy to listen to, especially for the grace, virtuosity, and feeling she displays on “Autumn in New York.” The 1958 release is nominally stereo. Some tracks really are, but others are in rechanneled stereo. Record companies of the 1950s and ’60s thought this would make perfectly good mono recordings more palatable to the Mad Men–era public, with its newly acquired stereo phonographs. I can listen to early stereo ping-pong mixes, but rechanneled two-channel is just excruciating. There was nothing to do but dive for the Mono button on the receiver’s front panel and flip back and forth between stereo and mono as needed. Not all receivers have this feature, at least in such an accessible form. It’s one of the perks of buying an audiophile receiver. I returned to the digital world for Sony Classical’s soundtrack CD of Defiance, a movie score written by James Newton Howard and graced by a great violin soloist, Joshua Bell. Against a monochromatic background of bleak and brooding strings, Bell injects a human element and plenty of tone color. My eyes wandered to a nearby PC monitor, which was showing vacation pictures of Munich. It’s actually a fairly colorful and jolly place, but the music seemed to bring out the undercurrent of its troubled soul. Spoiled as I am by multichannel SACDs and Blu-ray Dolby TrueHD movie soundtracks, I had to admit that the DPLII treatment of this stereo CD formed an involving, well-defined, and entirely natural soundfield. I’ve always noticed that Rotel products are flattering to CDs that are well recorded and mastered, as in this case. However, given substandard material, they don’t lie. Medium-sized manufacturers like Rotel are often referred to—admiringly, as far as I’m concerned—as the low end of the high end. The RSX-1550 has the refinement (if not the rated power) that I normally associate with good separates. If you want five channels of great sound, HDMI 1.3a connectivity, and a genuinely attractive look, this receiver delivers on all three counts.
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