| Product: Azur 640c
V2.0
Manufacturer: Cambridge Audio - UK
Serial number: YN 640c V2.0-B UK 0508 0067
Approx. price: 400 €/250 £
Reviewer: Maarten van Casteren - TNT UK
Reviewed: November, 2005
Foreword
The Cambridge Audio Azur
640v v2.0 has a very long name, but is an otherwise unassuming
CD player. Still, it is the top CD machine of this English
brand. This is the second version (V2.0) of this player.
Although there are no changes to the exterior there are
many internal differences compared to the first version.
This model employs two Wolfson WM8740 converters where
the first version only used one.
This means that each channel now has its own DAC chip,
working in symmetric mode. This should improve channel
separation, sound stage and improve resolution and signal
to noise ratio in general. On top of that a new toroidal
transformer has been fitted and the analogue filtering
has been redesigned. So, they could have claimed it to
be a completely new model, as far as I'm concerned. In
spite of all these changes the price has stayed the same,
at a very modest £250. Reasons enough to investigate.
The
unit comes packed in a very practical box, with a handle
for easy carrying. Everything is well packaged and the
user's manual is clear, informative and to the point.
Installing it is simplicity itself and the only thing
I noticed when I loaded the first CD is that the CD drawer
doesn't seem to come out far enough: the CD actually is
several millimeters inside the player when it is in the
open drawer. Hardly a problem, though. The casing itself
feels sturdy and the whole finish is surprisingly good,
taking the price into account. The remote control unit
is very stylish, in my opinion, and feels solid and well
made.
Listening
I put the Isotek system
enhancer CD in it and left it on repeat to burn the player
in before auditioning. After 6 hours I had a quick listen
but things were still quite raw at that point with high
frequencies and attacks sounding very hard and forward.
I gave it another try after 20 hours and things had improved
quite a bit. Peter Gabriel's first solo album always is
a good test to see if a player behaves, and it did a good
job with that. The sound stage was deep, if not very wide,
and individual instruments were nicely separated even
in complex bits. Treble was still a bit hard and it lacked
some control in the bass. I left it to burn in for another
day and things did improve a little bit more. After about
three days it seemed to have reached its maximum, so I
started to do some serious listening.
The overall impression
of this CD player is lively and energetic. Resolution
is good and the sound is quite clean and relatively free
of digital 'edge'. Especially the attack, or leading edge
of sounds is portrayed very clearly, making this a fast
and rhythmic sounding machine. Percussion sounds very
clear indeed, and so do all other sounds that depend on
strong attacks, like bells, clicks, acoustic guitar and
piano. Bass is full and deep and the total balance is
good, with neither bass nor treble dominating. The player
also doesn't seem to add too much noise or grain and the
sound is nice and clear of the speakers. Even instruments
that are almost straight behind a speaker do not seem
to come from that speaker but from a space behind it,
which is an impressive feat indeed. Where other affordable
players harden up in complex parts and make the whole
sound blurred and flat this Cambridge Audio is able to
cope with much more than I expected, with the sound only
getting slightly aggressive when the going gets really
tough. Voices sound natural and with very little added
sibilance. Intelligibility is excellent. The impression
of 'air' is very good, with echo's and reverberation from
the recording's acoustical space impressively clear. Spatial
separation between instruments is excellent, with the
player always sounding focussed and transparent, even
in louder and complex parts.
So, an excellent player,
especially for the asking price. But, of course, there
are a few minor points to criticise. Don't think you'll
be buying a perfect CD source for this kind of money.
After a few days of concentrated listening some less attractive
properties start to emerge. Treble isn't completely clean.
Loud piano tones in busy parts do sound a bit hard and
the sound can become a little bit brittle at times. Bass
lacks some control and a fraction of bass detail is lost
because of his. Bowed double bass sound a little rough
with less feeling of an actual physical instrument than
I know to be possible in my setup. At this point I have
to tell you that my own CD player is a Micromega Stage
3, which is perhaps old but has been upgraded with a new
clock and countless other tweaks. Not a good reference
in the sense that you cannot get hold of one yourself,
but still a very good player indeed. The Micromega is
warm, but controlled and quite musical in the sense that
the sound is smooth and never aggressive. The amplifier
was the Anatek A50, modified with a Dact CT-2 volume control
and my speakers are Dynaudio Contour 1.8 mk2. Overall
I preferred the sound of my own player in this setup,
but by a remarkably small margin.
The Cambridge Audio's
character is more towards analytical than musical. There
is no way you can call this a 'smooth' player, although
it certainly isn't a-musical. It is just that the emphasis
is elsewhere with this machine. That said, the sounds
is missing a little bit of body, even though the bass
itself is deep and strong enough. It is more so that individual
instruments lack a bit of inner warmth, making them sound
somewhat leaner and smaller than live size. This probably
is the flip side of that impressive separation of instruments:
if each instrument is smaller then it will be easier to
separate them in the soundstage. The whole mid and treble
actually sound a little bit 'bleached'. Please do realise
that it took me several days to notice this, so it isn't
a major problem. But if you listen to a lot of live recorded
music it will become obvious at some point. Subtle tonal
shades are sometimes lost, especially in slow and quiet
bits. And the tendency of this player to make things sound
'fast' makes slower fragments sound a little bit hurried
and unnatural. The combination of that full, slightly
under-controlled bass and this slight leanness also sometimes
creates strange perspectives. Deep bass is projected more
forward and occupies more space while mid and treble tend
to have good depth and focus but are a bit lean. On one
occasion a bass drum was portrayed several meters more
to the front than the rest of the drumkit, creating the
impression of a drummer with very long legs. Piano also
tends to be taken apart somewhat, with excellent localisation
and 'air' for the mid and treble, but much less so for
the bass. The feeling can be that of different instruments,
or even parts of the same instrument, not occupying the
same space. The whole sound is also not as rock-solid
or unflappable as some more expensive players, although
the difference is not enormous, to be fair.
On the other hand: fast
and spectacular music does profit much from this player's
approach. Certainly pop music, where tonality isn't always
that important, sounds very good, powerful and with a
strong sense of rhythm and drive. Of course, partnering
equipment will influence this too. My Anatek amp is very
precise and quick. The Cambridge Audio might do even better
with a smoother amplifier that will not put its limitations
in the treble into the spotlight. But if you like your
music fast and energetic, even this combination will appeal
to you.
I got a good demonstration
of the player's strengths and weaknesses when playing
Mahler's fifth (Berliner philharmoniker, Claudio Abbado)
where it created great energy and gusto with the brass
in the louder lively parts, but lacked some colour and
subtlety in the more quiet bits by the strings and woods.
This prevents the building of tension somewhat and breaks
the connections between the alternating loud and quiet
parts, and even between parts of the orchestra itself.
It would take things a bit far to call this a player with
a split personality, but with excellent and extreme recordings
like this it does show its shortcomings. I do have to
stress that I was still able to enjoy the performance,
though.
Even
after more than a week of use the soundstage was still
completely within the speakers while my own trusty Micromega
can project things to upto a meter outside of them. The
whole soundstage stayed rather narrow, but with excellent
depth and very good sense of the recording's acoustics.
It made for a little bit of a 'telephoto' perspective.
I rather like sources that project a deep sound stage,
but if you prefer a more forward, enveloping, 'first row'
kind of feeling you could be disappointed. Focus and separation
were still excellent.
Conclusion
The bottom line is that
this player, good as it is, still has a character and
colour of its own, enough to mildly interfere with the
full atmosphere of each recording. Everything has that
slight stamp on it that you learn to recognise after a
while. Detail is being forced upon you a bit, instead
of just being there for you to explore. The details it
prefers to accentuate are also somewhat masking others
that it likes less. This effect is strongest at the frequency
extremes, with the mid frequencies sometimes making the
impression of being a little bit 'modest' in comparison
with this very lively treble and full bass.
But, I do have to be honest
at this point. All these qualities are actually only found
in players costing at least several times more than this
one. And I was judging it in a context with an amplifier
costing more that 4 times what the Cambridge Audio costs,
and speakers that are more than 7 times more expensive.
It would be a little bit too much to expect a player to
perform perfectly under these conditions. On the whole
it actually did very well, certainly holding its own in
these difficult circumstances, sounding quite convincing
most of the time and rather good some of the time. I was
able to listen to it for hours without real fatigue or
irritation and it coped with all my test tracks without
showing serious problems. I am sure it will perform absolutely
brilliantly in a setup with other components of the same
price class, or considerably above it.
The reason I went into
so much detail explaining its shortcomings is more to
enable you to get a clear picture of its character, and
also because I want to take this product seriously. This
player is setting new standards in its price class and
can be judged without taking its modest price into account.
In the end my main problems are with the slight unevenness
that is caused by that fast, deep and well focussed treble
and the much slower bass and with a little bit of treble
roughness and grain. Main strengths are its energy, its
fast and lively mids and treble and its ability to reproduce
complex and dense recordings without falling apart.
One
thing is absolutely certain: for the money this is one
hell of a player, and if you want something better you
will have to pay much, much more.
|