Art Audio Carissa Stereo Amplifier
Good For The Soul
Review By Todd Warnke
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Former Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart would
have long ago faded off into whatever sunset non-activist judges find
themselves except for his immortal, "I shall not further define it...
but I know it when I see it" remark about pornography. This is
a remark that puts pornography in the same class as hip, cool and soul;
each being an indefinable but readily identifiable essence. Now, of
these last three things I know nothing about hip except what I read, am so
far from cool that a picture of me sits in the dictionary as its antonym,
but soul I feel a mile away. Which is why certain pieces of gear
never get a rise out of me in spite of near-perfect specs while other
gear, even with the odd flaw, can excite me like a teenager the first time
he sees Deep Thro... uh... let's just say I enjoy it immensely.
Anyway, Joe Fratus' stuff from Art Audio has almost always excited me
with its particularly canny mix of specifications and deep soul. Or
rather, of soul that measures pretty damn well. At the Rocky
Mountain Audio Fest in 2004 I had the opportunity to listen
closely to his Carissa amplifier and I was thoroughly impressed by its
amazing power, harmonic detail and deep bass extension. But mostly I
was moved by the way it communicated the human element, the soul of music.
On track after track of my demo material – ranging from Dizzy Gillespie
and Gil Evans to Bach and on to Curtis Mayfield, Muddy Waters and Joni
Mitchell – I was shocked at how present and moving each different style
of music seemed. No, at least in show conditions the Carissa was not
one of those amplifiers that locks in with one or two types of music and
disappoints on the rest. So, after hearing so many soulful sounds I
asked Joe for a review sample, a request he (obviously) agreed to.
The Carissa, regardless of her sonics, looks exceptional. At 14
inches wide by 19 inches deep and 9 inches tall she has the over-square,
deep dimensions of a classically styled amplifier. The chrome-like,
hand-polished stainless steel chassis only adds to that classic profile.
And with the two 845 power tubes - one per channel - placed right up
front, there is no doubt this is a visual throwback. It is a look
that it pulls off so well that looking at the rear apron you expect to see
a screw strip or at least multiple taps for the speakers. However,
the apron is straight forward and modern with a pair of RCA input jacks,
two pair of heavy-duty gold binding posts, the power switch and an IEC
jack. Lastly, on the front panel the version of the Carissa I had in
for review had an old-timey looking wooden rotary knob to control the
add-on, minimalist volume attenuator (a $200 option).
While retro rules the outside, inside the Carissa is all state of the
art... well, as state of the art as a tubed, single-ended power amplifier
can be. And how state-of-the-art can a retro tube unit be?
Rather than to rely on the old charts describing the characteristics of
the 845, a tube whose original purpose was as a transmitter, Mr Fratus
spent – literally – hundreds of hours modeling the power response
and impedance of current issue 845 tubes at a large east coast technical
university. Armed with more exacting and more recent data, Mr.
Fratus then designed a circuit to extend the linearity of the 845 without
losing the powerful and magic mid-bass through mid-range sound that the
tube has become known for in audio circles. The result of this
research is 16 watts per channel, single-ended, pure ‘Class A,'
zero-feedback, transformer-coupled design. Yes, I hear you muttering
to your computer screen, "16 watts, but aren't 845s power
monsters?" To which Mr. Fratus says (or at least he said to me)
that they are, when dropped into circuits based on the old, out of date
specs - but when using those specs they are not a particularly linear
device either. Good point, Joe.
So, after all that lab work Mr. Fratus, quite rightly, is not willing
to spill all his circuit secrets willy-nilly, especially to a weak-headed
reviewer, but the rest of the tube set is out in the open so I know I can
describe it correctly – a pair of NOS 12BH7As and a single NOS
6DJ8. I also know that voltage regulation is handled via MOSFETs,
because this is on his website as is the fact that the tubes are
self-biased. As for the rest of the specs, the one that stands out
is the rated frequency range of +/-1dB from 20Hz to 20kHz. Clearly,
with the Carissa Mr. Fratus has not set out to deliver the stereotypical,
purposely-skewed single-ended amplifier. But, as always, it is the
sound and not the intent or specs that matter. So, let's adjourn to
the listening room and, well, listen.
The Sound Of Soul?
Over the course of my listening sessions with the Carissa she was
paired with loudspeakers from Mobile Fidelity (both the OML-1 and OML-2),
Silverline Audio (Panatella III), Triangle (Antal ES) Cabasse (Bahia) and,
of course, my reference Merlin VSM-Ms. Pre-amplification was via my
First Sound Presence Statement, though the built-in attenuator saw quite a
bit of use. Sources were the Cary CD 303-200, Berendsen CDP 1, and
the Blue Circle BC-501 DAC. Cabling was by Cardas, Acoustic Zen,
Audio Magic, Stereovox and Shunyata Research. Lastly, a great many
listening sessions happened while under the influence of children, who can
be remarkably keen listeners. Sure, no four year old has the
vocabulary to describe the differences between a Bosendorfer and the
Fischer-Price piano up in his bedroom, but they sure know if what they are
listening to makes ‘em dance, sing and laugh – which is what it's all
about anyway, at any age.
Getting back to the point, I suppose that if you are going to determine
the soulfulness of an audio component you should begin by listening to the
Genius of Soul, and so I spent a lot of time spinning the absolutely
essential three disk box set, The Birth of Soul [Atlantic 7 82310] by Ray
Charles. Covering the years 1952 to 1959, the set follows the
amazing evolution of Charles from a Nat King Cole and Charles Brown
influenced pop/R&B crooner into the full-blown Brother Ray. On
early tracks, such as Roll With My Baby, the Carissa impressed with
its ability to extract every bit of musical detail from a middling
recording. Take, for example, the soft snare that sits at the back
of the stage. Through lesser gear it sounds like tissue paper –
lacking body, punch and drive, but through the Carissa is had tonal
texture, natural body and a real presence.
Jumping forward three years to when Charles records the Doc Pomus song,
Lonely Avenue, the musical style has evolved and is gutsier, with
both more gospel and more of the profane, in short, more soul –
and the recording is far better as well. On this track, with less
noise and higher fidelity, the Carissa is able to bite deeply into the
inner harmonics of the sax solo, lay bare the anguished growl of Charles'
voice and the echoing reply of the Raylettes with a visceral punch.
The drums and Charles left hand bass have perfect propulsion, and the mono
stage is deep and layered. In short, a nuanced, harmonically rich
and startling real performance.
Moving on to a different type of soul music, I spun my favorite version
of the Arvo Part composition, Fratres. The title, Latin for
"Brothers," is meant to evoke the image of medieval monks
marching to prayers, and the I Fiamminghi recording of the work (conducted
by Rudolf Werthen [Telarc CD-80387] ) has six different settings of this
piece using various combinations of strings, percussion and piano.
The state of the art recording took place in a small Basilica in Belgium
and faithfully records the location as well as the instruments. The
first version opens with percussion playing softly and set way back in the
stage, marking the monks approach from afar. A string section gives
voice to their Gregorian chant while deep basses mark time. As the
monks approach, the volume rises until the monks pass in the night.
Through the Carissa the percussion on this track had both explosive attack
and long delay which allowed me to locate the walls of the Basilica even
as I jumped at the impact of implied foot on stone. The string
section had exquisite tonal clarity and depth of tone and stayed
absolutely spot on as the volume rose and fell. As wonderful as this
sounds, in many ways this recording is custom made for the Carissa as it
highlights everything it does well – great attack coupled with an
accurate and dense harmonic envelope, the ability to follow sounds deep
into the noise floor, and the difficult to articulate but easy to feel
magical skill of making musical tones sound as if humans are intimately
involved in their creation.
So, after giving the Carissa, what for it amounts to a gimme layup, I
tried to trip her up and so turned to my new favorite version of Mahler's
9th Symphony, the SACD recording by the San Francisco Symphony
and Michael Tilson Thomas [San Francisco Symphony 821936-0007-2].
The 1st movement is, perhaps, the finest, most integrated piece
of writing by Mahler, and the San Franciscans pull it off to perfection.
Though the scoring is at times dense, the Carissa has the skill to lay out
each line with harmonic equality, favoring neither instrument nor
frequency range, with the exception of the very slightest emphasis on the
upper bass. This allowed me to transparently follow melody and
accompaniment as it is tossed from horn to violins to harp and to
clarinet. The third movement is a more violent piece of work, and
here the power and dynamic kick of the Carissa drove home the music all
the way through to the crashing end. Staging, with a piece this
massive can only add to the enjoyment and here, again, the Carissa stepped
out of the way and allowed the ambiance of the live recording at Davies
Hall to settle gently over the recording while precisely laying out the
players on a three D platform. And though the stage was not the
widest I've ever heard, it was deep and held together regardless of
dynamic contrasts.
No review up at the Warnke Music and Mountaineering Lodge is complete
until we listen to some Joni Mitchell, and so the Carissa had to prove
herself with one of Mitchell's overlooked masterpieces The Hissing of
Summer Lawns [Asylum 1051-2]. The studio follow-up to Mitchell's
best selling Court and Spark (a live album separated the two), Hissing
takes that album's pop-jazz as a departure point and opens up into her
finest openly experimental album. So where Court ended with Mitchell
taking a straight but joyful turn on the Annie Ross tune, Twisted,
Hissing has her dropping in an ethereal and swinging version of the Johnny
Mandel/Jon Hendricks song, Centerpiece, into the middle of Harry's
House, a bitter tale of a disintegrating marriage which twists the
meaning of the older tune while honoring it as well. Even more
experimental, on The Jungle Line Mitchell uses warrior drummers
from Burundi to anchor the song, pre-dating the World Music movement of
the late ‘80s by a decade or more. And on the closing cut, Shadows
and Light, Mitchell sings backed by a studio made choir of Joni's in a
meditation on duality. But my favorite track on the album is Edith
and the Kingpin. With backing by Joe Sample, Larry Carlton,
Chuck Findley, Bud Shank, Wilton Felder and John Guerin, the playing is
pop-jazz perfection while Mitchell, staying in her upper register,
delivers perhaps her most impressive vocal. Through the Carissa her
voice was rendered with a seamless accuracy and presence that I have
previously only heard through amplifiers costing multiples of the Art
Audio product, all while the layers of horns, guitars and piano were
likewise rich, harmonically full and easily distinguished. Again,
the Carissa proved that she had the ability to lay out individual lines
while weaving them into a cohesive and vibrant whole.
Soul-Less?
So, where does the Carissa fail? Baldly stated, in very few
places. First and as mentioned a few paragraphs up the page, she
does have a slight mid and upper bass bump. On a loudspeaker such as
the Triangle Antal ES, which already has a strong presence in this area,
the emphasis doesn't create a muddy bass as both components have a very
clean presentation, but it does create a prominent bass. Meanwhile,
over on the more linear Sliverlines or the slightly bass shy Mobile
Fidelity OML-1; this was either less of an issue or an actual blessing.
Second, and again as noted above, the stage of the Carissa is not as
wide as I've heard through other comparable amplifiers, though it is deep
and layered. More important, it is an extremely stable stage with
volume changes seldom resulting in stage changes. This is a
presentation that I can quite comfortably live with as depth and stability
are more important to me than instruments poking outside of the
loudspeakers, but I point it out because it's there.
Third, even though the Carissa has tremendous power for 16 watts, she
still has only 16 watts. When placed behind the Mobile Fidelity
OML-2 – a fairly easy to drive but also inefficient 84dB loudspeaker –
and when played to fairly loud levels, the Carissa began to round off
peaks and lost a bit of dynamic explosiveness though she never failed to
sound musical.
Fourth, least significant and last, right where the midrange meets the
treble the Carissa has a touch of extra bite. Coupled with the
emphasis in the bass, this gives the amplifier a slightly more real than
real presentation, which is not necessarily a bad thing even if it is not
quite an accurate thing.
Soul-Full!
If you haven't figured it out yet, I had a completely enjoyable
experience with the Carissa. She has real dynamic growl, and sounds
far more powerful than her rated power output. On an efficient
loudspeaker she sounds more like 60 than 16 watts. Frequency wise,
for a single-ended amplifier she reaches waayyy down there – I'd guess
to at least 30 hertz – completely flat and with plenty of power for most
any normal load, while having a clear and extended treble. Yes, the
upper bass and lower treble regions have very slight bumps (the treble to
a lesser degree than the bass), but these deviations are shallow and
fairly flat making them easy to deal with. Harmonically, she offers
gobs of detail and nuance as I could easily hear deep into both stage and
noise floor.
Another point in her favor – the add-on attenuator is superb and
using it avoids an additional source of audio failings. Considering
that it costs but $200, which has got to be less than you would spend on
just the power cord for the pre-amplifier it replaces, getting it is a
no-brainer. If I were building a system around the Carissa I
certainly would get it and then take the three to six thousand dollars I
had budgeted for a pre and cables and drop them into a better source and
loudspeakers. Even more, I can see myself doing just that –
building a system around the Carissa as she joyfully and with near
completeness delivers not just a balanced, nuanced and detailed window
into recordings, she also gets to the soul of every piece of music that
passes though her. And while I have tried over the years to describe
exactly what soul is, I know this, in the Carissa I hear it and I think
you will too. Most highly recommended.
Specifications
Type: Vacuum tube stereo amplifier
Frequency Response: 20Hz to 20kHz
Tubes: Valve Art 845 output tubes (KR Audio 845 optional)
Output: 16 wpc single-ended, two channels
Design: transformer-coupled operating in 'Class A'
Feedback: zero
Bias: self-biasing circuitry
Chassis: optional hand-polished, non-magnetic, stainless
steel chassis available
Input Sensitivity: 600mV
Input Impedance: 180k Ohms
Output Impedance: 4 or 8 Ohms
Warranty: 3-year parts & labor warranty, 90 days
for tubes (KR Audio 845 output tubes 1 year)
Optional: volume control available for $200
Price: $5,000 for satin black chassis w/chrome
$5,500 for hand polished surgical stainless steel with gold or chrome accents
Options: Passive Volume control adds $200
Goldpoint series stepped attenuator adds $400
Remote control version adds $500
Company Information
Art Audio
34 Briarwood Road
Cranston, Rhode Island 02920
Voice: (401) 826-8286
E-mail: vze572mh@verizon.net
Website: www.artaudio.com