cmalak
Active member
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2013
- Messages
- 2,304
- Thread Author
- #1
http://www.stereophile.com/content/...-800-integrated-amplifier#m7dHxA7HJeAcPSdS.97
It's interesting that MF's take on the amp is that it's a music lover's amp in that it has loads of midrange texture, a slightly rolled off top end, a solid bottom end but not the last word in resolution or transient attack. Sustain and decay of notes are all there and give the full measure of the musical event. What's interesting is that I know quite a few ASers who tried this amp out and who ended up returning it or flipping it because they thought the top end was a bit strident and in your face (which happens to match my experience with MF gear, albeit their mid-fi gear in the form of their A5 integrated amp and CD player - my first foray into the high end). In any case, goes to show how we all hear differently. Anyhoo, thought I would post it for those who tried it out so that they could compare notes with MF's impressions, as well as for anyone who is still interested in checking this piece of gear out.
Here are some of MF's concluding remarks:



It's interesting that MF's take on the amp is that it's a music lover's amp in that it has loads of midrange texture, a slightly rolled off top end, a solid bottom end but not the last word in resolution or transient attack. Sustain and decay of notes are all there and give the full measure of the musical event. What's interesting is that I know quite a few ASers who tried this amp out and who ended up returning it or flipping it because they thought the top end was a bit strident and in your face (which happens to match my experience with MF gear, albeit their mid-fi gear in the form of their A5 integrated amp and CD player - my first foray into the high end). In any case, goes to show how we all hear differently. Anyhoo, thought I would post it for those who tried it out so that they could compare notes with MF's impressions, as well as for anyone who is still interested in checking this piece of gear out.
Here are some of MF's concluding remarks:
The Nu-Vista 800 is a powerful, technically capable integrated amplifier that I'm sure will measure well—like all Musical Fidelity products. But instead of an assault on the state of the art designed to wring every last detail from every recording, regardless of the potentially negative consequences, the Nu-Vista 800 is more an easy-to-listen-to product aimed at the music lover. That is neither an audiophile putdown nor damning with faint praise: After all, it's possible to be an intense lover of music and someone who loves to wring from every recording every last detail, regardless of the consequences. But I suspect Antony Michaelson has had his fill of audiophiles on a quest for the ultimate in detail retrieval: I think he's more interested in reaching lovers of music by making things that sound really good.
At $12,999, this is not an inexpensive product, but it's one that will bring a CD collection to new life and, when matched with the right associated analog gear, do the same with LPs. (I'd go solid-state phono amplification, with a lean, fast cartridge.) That imaginary customer could take home a Nu-Vista 800 and confidently say, "I'm done."