Given Simon's well documented problems with his listening room plus my previous nightmare with Kharmas I was kinda expecting an bit of a jekyll and hyde show if I'm being honest.
First up was Handel's Organ Concerto's Op.4. I held my breath in anticipation of the first few notes wondering would I be bolting for the door. :-) I have to say though within the first 10-20secs, it immediately brought me back to the day when I first heard Ciaran's Kharmas. I was very impressed with the tone, balance and in particular how much weight was behind the sound. Instrument separation was really top class. The leading edge attack and detail of the Kharma/Graaf combo makes my Quad/Jadis feel very muddied and veiled in comparison. Yet there was oceans of musicality there, that really good valve amps deliver in spades.
Time to raise the bar then.......
Next up was my dreaded Italian Oboe Concertos Vol 2, Track 4. Lots of strings and wind instruments in this one, a lot going on at once. This has challenged most systems I've had to date with the exception of the Usher/Gamut combo. To my surprise the Kharma/Graafs kept everything in check. This recording does indeed sail close to the wind at times and occassionally the wind instruments do indeed sear but this was always the nature of this recording.
No hifi meetup these days is complete without some Shelby Lynne. The opening track of course. Again very impressed, probably the best I've heard this track sound.
Tony soon arrived with his Jadis JA30. I've had some reservations about my Jadis JA88s so I was really interested in hearing this one. We tried a variety of recordings from vocals, jazz, orchestral, chamber and swapped in and out the Graafs a few times for comparison. Definitely a different presentation from the two amps. The Jadis had a fuller more solid sound which suited the large orchestral works a bit better and gave a bigger sense of scale and weight but when it came to the smaller arrangments, the instrument separation and leading edge attach of the Graafs came into their own. In this case the Jadis had a more smeared presentation but I dont mean that in a negative way, just relative to the Graafs it had.
A very interesting comparison indeed and really intriguing hearing the strengths of both amps and what they brought to the table. A marriage of the two amps would indeed be heaven but isnt that always the way with a lot of hifi.
Before I left, the Quad 57s were hooked up. 57's/Jadis: should be a perfect match. I'll admit I was slightly underwhelmed at first. The presentation was much darker, not as much sparkle and attack as the Kharmas and the low positioning on the floor took some adjusting to also. But as the minutes passed by and I adjusted, it just sounded lovely to listen to. Not offensive in the slightlest and although I noted the percieved lack of impact compared to the Kharmas, the Quads just kept going and doing its thing without a fuss. Classic Quad ESLs eh?


It brings me to question what's lacking in my system. No doubt the Quad 989's need a service but I've also wondered about the 'dullness' of my Jadis DA88s. The 989's and Devialet did sound sublime when I had that combo for two evenings before I went for the Jadis. I plan *somehow* to get my Jadis down to Tony's place so he can do a comparison with his DA50 for a few days. That will put the issue to bed one way or another.
Anyway, many thanks to Simon for the evening. Really wish I could have stayed longer but I had a long trip back up to Malahide to make and we probably kept his family awake long enough. Thanks to Tony too for the lift to the Dart station.