KEF LS50 Review

The audio ability of a loudspeaker is inversely proportional to its aesthetic beauty, according to one of the universal principles of hi-fi. True, the Holy hi-fi provider has allowed an unique exception to this rule for a few high-end panel speakers, but other from that, it appears to apply to practically everything. So when I

KEF LS50 Review Read More »

KEF Coda 7 Review

In 2014, this loudspeaker appears to be a very drab, uninteresting, and insignificant loudspeaker, but in 1995, it was hailed as the future of inexpensive hi-fi. Why? The Coda 7 was at the forefront of a new generation of speakers that drew a clear line between the ageing budget boxes of the 1980s and the

KEF Coda 7 Review Read More »

JVC JAS-11G Review

Any audiophile will occasionally peruse the pages of a hi-fi magazine – if they aren’t reading them religiously every month, that is. Had you picked up a copy of What Hi-Fi in 1977, the chances are that by the time you’d finished it, you would know that this amplifier was the one to buy, under

JVC JAS-11G Review Read More »

Jelco SA-750D Review

The Jelco Ichikawa Jewel Company, based in Tokyo’s Ikebukuro area, is one of the country’s many small-scale precision engineering firms. It has been producing since 1920, and by the 1970s, it had naturally shifted its focus to turntable parts in response to the hi-fi craze of the period. Over the years, it has done a

Jelco SA-750D Review Read More »

JBE Series 3 Review

It’s all forgotten now, but there was once upon a time when a costly – but not exorbitantly priced – turntable appeared, battled the best of the best, and triumphed. That is, almost. The JBE, you see, was an underground sensation for a brief period around the turn of the 1980s. Despite its high quality,

JBE Series 3 Review Read More »

Jays v-Jays Review

These inexpensive portable Swedish cans are compact and light, with a simple design (59g). Considering their low price, build quality is excellent – easily as good as anything from Sennheiser at or anywhere near their £50 retail price. Their design is also semi-foldable (with two folding joints), making them ideal for portables, whilst they’ll be

Jays v-Jays Review Read More »

Inspire Monarch Review

For audiophiles of a particular generation, the term “direct-drive” conjures up images of a whole generation of cheap, poor Japanese turntables that swamped mass market retailers like Laskys and Comet in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The British hi-fi press did not have much good to say about them at the time. There was

Inspire Monarch Review Read More »