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Classé Audio CP-800
Preamp |
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Preamp
Zeitgeist |
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April,
2012 |

Worth the Wait
It was about a year ago that I spoke to Dave
Nauber, President of Classé Audio about
getting their $14,000 CA-M600 mono amps and
$5,000 CP-800 preamp in for a review. He
said that it may take an extra month or two
before the preamp would be ready but that I
could start with the amps and just hold on
to them until the preamp arrived. Well as
months and months went by, I started feeling
a bit guilty about still having the amps in
my system far longer than I needed while I
was waiting for the preamp to arrive.
Finally in September, I went ahead and
submitted the CA-M600 review. To my surprise
Nauber insisted that I continue to use the
amps because the preamp would soon be ready
to ship and he wanted me to review the
pieces together. Okay Mr. Nauber, you’re the
doctor. Besides, it’s not like I wasn’t
enjoying the Hell out of them. Goodness
knows my Escalante Fremonts loved them. Not
many amps can control the dual 12” woofers
that the Fremonts have.
Finally in December, the CP-800 arrived. I
was so excited that for the first couple of
days I didn’t even connect it to my
reference system. I wanted to wait until the
unit had a chance to reach room temperature.
It had been a particularly cold week when it
arrived and I didn’t want to risk any damage
to it. So I just took it out of the box and
sat it on my Adona equipment rack where it
looked stunning. I had read a lot about the
unit on the web, so to say that I had high
expectations for the CP-800’s performance
would be a gross understatement. Hopefully,
my patience and optimism would be rewarded.
What’s
New?
Despite the fact that the CP-800 is built in
the same chassis as all other previous Delta
Series preamps, at first glance, you become
immediately aware that this is a completely
different animal. The first thing you notice
is a ¼” headphone jack. I’ll admit that I
didn’t quite understand the recent industry
focus on headphones. I know that with the
growth in popularity iPods, iPads, iPhones
and all other portable devices that a good
pair of headphones is essential. But I
didn’t get why headphone jacks started
popping up on multi-kilobuck high-end
components. Frankly, I’ve always thought
that if you own an audio system with a pair
of high-end speakers, the last thing you’d
want to do is listen to it through
headphones. Thankfully, the folks at Classé
knew better. That’s why this headphone
output offers the same quality of analog
output as the main output channels. What I
had failed to realize is just how far the
quality of headphones have come. I got a
pair of B&W P5 headphones for Christmas and
used them for the first time through the
CP-800. It was a revelation to say the
least.
The next thing you notice is a USB input
that allows you to connect Apple’s devices (iPad™,
iPod® and iPhone®). This input accepts
digital audio from these devices but can
also be used to charge them. That’s
thoughtful engineering and a nice little
design bonus.
Finally, when you hit the “MENU” button, you
can see that the CP-800 has tone controls!
But these are not your father’s tone
controls, no. Classé has actually come up
with a slick method for adjusting the
frequencies to compensate for poor room
acoustics and mediocre recordings (more on
this later).

The rear panel is where you really see how things
have changed. There is a bank of five analog inputs
(3 RCA and 2 XLR), nine digital inputs (USB, AES/EBU,
3 coaxial, 4 optical), and four set of RCA and XLR
analog outputs (MAIN, AUX1, AUX2, and SUB output).
The CP-800 is designed to allow you to totally
integrate your audio, video and computer system. I
used it to play my analog rig, a universal disc
player and stream movies and music from the iTunes
account on my Gateway PC via Apple TV.
The Review System
The system that the CP-800 would be used in
consisted of Apple TV, Oppo Digital DV-980H
Universal Disc Player (as transport) connected to
the CP-800’s coaxial DAC input, a George Warren
Precision Sound turntable, Clearaudio Smartphono
phonostage, and Benz Micro Ace cartridge as sources.
Amplification would come from the Classé CA-M600 and
Jones Audio PAM-300 Series II mono amps, and Vitus
Audio RI-100 integrated amp. Loudspeakers used were
the My Audio Design 1920 and Escalante Fremont and
of course the B&W P5 headphones. I also used a
modified APC power conditioner and Acoustic Revive
RTP-2 Ultimate Power Supply Box. Cabling was all
Hemingway Audio and Entreq. I would characterize the
sound of this system as very neutral and very
powerful. When a change in component is made, it is
usually easily recognizable.
Listening
I started my critical listening playing CDs using
the Oppo as a transport and running a digital cable
into the CP-800’s DAC. The unit uses a pair of
Wolfson WM8741DACs which produce differential
outputs for both channels. They can operate at
either 176.4 or 192 kHz, depending on whether the
input is a multiple of 44.1 or 48 kHz. I used the
DAC’s coaxial input for most of my disc listening.
The
first disc I heard was the stunning debut disc from
jazz drummer Jonathan Blake called The Eleventh
Hour [Sunnyside Records]. This recording plays
right into the Classé system’s strengths: dynamics
and power. For its part the CP-800 lays out the
soundstage magnificently. The most obvious example
of this is the title track which starts with a
briefly recessed (sounding) drum solo to segue to a
really cool bass line and fully fleshed out drums.
Through a lesser design this beginning would have
sounded like just a bad and uninteresting recording,
but the CP-800 gave it enough life to draw me in.
Blake is backed by a tremendous horn section and
sprinkles in a neat little layer of harmonica from
Gregoire Maret and piano from another great young
musician named Robert Glasper. Track ten, “Canvas”,
is my favorite tune on this disc. It begins with a
small child singing, ” I love to singa, about the
moona and the juna and the springa, I love to singa…”
If you’re a middle-aged person like me, you’ll
remember that little tune from a cartoon decades ago
in which a young owl wants to sing jazz much to the
chagrin of his father. It’s a cute way to start the
track which is a warm and sweet sounding tune that
again features that great horn section and Maret on
harmonica. But Blake’s drum work is the song’s heart
and the CP-800 renders it with all of its dynamics
intact. This recording is relayed within a lively
and lifelike soundstage. The instruments were played
with realistic size and character, and every song
was a joy to listen to.
The
next disc was from yet another relative newcomer,
vocalist Gretchen Parlato. Her latest recording,
Lost and Found [Obliq Sound] has been life
changing for me and I don’t mind saying that I am
simply in love with this woman. Don’t worry, my
girlfriend NEVER reads any of my articles, so I’m
not concerned about her finding out about this.
Let’s face it, it’s easy for most high-quality
stereo systems to get the power and finesse thing
right, but a really great system will have to also
handle the delicacies with equal authority. Gretchen
Parlato’s voice is the essence of sweetness, barely
going above an orgasmic murmur. The opening track on
this disc a jaw-dropping cover of the Simply Red
hit, “Holding Back the Years.” This track is COOL!!
The rhythm is provided by the soft tapping of the
snare’s rim, a kick drum and some excellent piano
playing by Taylor Eigsti. The CP-800 portrays this
recording in a manner that still makes it what we in
Chi-Town call a “stepper’s cut.” It is smooth, while
still also being dynamic and rhythmic. It’s just a
really cool cut to hear and again, through a lesser
system might come off as a bit flat and
uninteresting. Thankfully the Classé combo treats it
right. And for you fans of really dynamic recordings
tracks like Winter Wind and How We Love are loaded
with enough percussions and keys to satisfy. And boy
does this Classé system have the goods. Slam,
detail, air and spacious soundstaging are among the
words that stood out in my notes while evaluating
this system.
Tone
Control
As I mentioned earlier, the CP-800 has a unique form
of tone control. Simply touch the Menu button on the
faceplate or remote and you’ll see all the menu
buttons: System Setup, Configurations, Tone Control,
Mono, Balance and Status. The tone control can be
used to simultaneously boost or drop the treble or
bass by as much as 6.0 dB.
While the Tone Control screen is displayed, pressing
the volume up button on the remote (or turning the
volume knob clockwise) will increase the high
frequencies and decrease the low frequencies in 0.5
dB increments. Press the volume down button or turn
the knob counter clockwise will get the opposite
effect. You also have the option to adjust only the
bass or treble if you don’t desire this “tilting” of
the frequencies.
There is a scad more flexibility to this unit than
there is time to go into here including the renaming
of all source inputs, controlling the screen’s
brightness, and mapping volume levels to individual
inputs. All of these functions and many more can be
easily operated from the touch screen display or
from the gorgeous Classé remote.
USB
Anyone who was at the 2012 CES knows just how
dominant digital source components with USB
connections were. I’m not sure that I visited one
room that didn’t have such a setup. Classé is
staying a step ahead of the game by not just having
a built-in DAC with the CP-800 but by also including
a USB input on the very front of its faceplate. I
was able to connect my iPhone 4S directly into the
unit, select the front USB input (USB F) from the
touch screen display and in a matter of seconds was
enjoying all the music from my iPhone without having
to touch any rear panel connections.
My
nephew Maurice visited me one weekend and brought
over his Mac Book. So I had him to connect it to the
same front USB input and launch his iTunes library.
Sadly, Maurice’s idea of music is The Best of
DeBarge and a bunch of Rap music with “Explicit”
lyrics. In other words there was nothing I could
tolerate listening to. So I bribed him into
purchasing jazz pianist Robert Glasper’s wonderful
new recording Black Radio [Blue Note] from
iTunes just so that I could hear it through the
CP-800. I have never spent a better $9.99 in my
life. This album is excellent from start to finish
and features a strong blend of jazz, R&B and
hip-hop, featuring artist such as Erykah Badu,
Ledisi, and Lela Hathaway. For pure soul vocal
power, you gotta hear Ledisi on track five, “Gonna
Be Alright.” [I enjoy Lela's version of Sade's
"Cherish the Day" the most - Clement] The
CP-800 gives air and presence to her voice and lets
it rise above the slightly over-produced
arrangement. Here is yet another case of a good
recording being made great by deft electronics. Like
a lot of neo soul and R&B music, the bass lines tend
to dominate. But the CP-800 seems to take this music
to the limits of bass excess without going over it.
The result is music that is delicate when it needs
to be yet always effortlessly powerful.
The
disc that I probably spent the most time listening
to was Marcus Miller’s A Night In Monte Carlo
[Concord Records]. This spectacular live recording
features bassist Miller supported by trumpeter Roy
Hargrove, Raul Midon on guitar and the Monte-Carlo
Philharmonic Orchestra. “Blast” is the opening track
and it features an electrifying performance by
Miller, popping and thumping the strings of his
massive bass. The CP-800 fleshes this performance
out and you can hear Miller’s fingers flying from
fret to fret. All subtleties are there from Miller
voicing direction to his bandmates at the back of
the soundstage to the expansiveness of the venue.
Miller’s cover of Miles Davis’ “So What” features
also features a great solo by the bassist that
benefits from the Classé system’s speed and detail.
This is an awesome disc and what a great system!
Conclusion
As I said in my review of the CA-M600 mono amps last
year, Classé continues to produce equipment that is
beautifully built, thoughtfully designed and
sonically peerless. The CP-800 is definitely from
this same mold but with a definite nod towards the
future. This may well be the preamp Zeitgeist for
this period in audiophilia. It ties together past,
present and future audio/video needs in a gorgeously
put together and relatively affordable package.
Paired with the CA-M600s, and for less than $20k,
there may be nothing close for some time to come.
Enthusiastically recommended!


Specifications:
Frequency response 8 Hz - 200 kHz < 1 dB, stereo
analog bypass
8 Hz - 20 kHz < 0.5 dB, all other sources
Channel Matching better than 0.05 dB (left to right)
Distortion (THD+noise) .0005%, digital
source/bypassed analog source .004%, processed
analog source
Maximum input level 2 Vrms (DSP), 4.5 Vrms (bypass)
(single-ended)
Maximum input level 4 Vrms (DSP), 9 Vrms (bypass)
(balanced)
Maximum output level 9 Vrms
(single-ended)
Maximum output level 18 Vrms
(balanced)
Gain Range -100 dB to +14 dB
Input impedance 50 kΩ (balanced)
100 kΩ (single-ended)
Output impedance 300 Ω (balanced),
(main output) 100 Ω (single-ended)
Signal-to-noise ratio 104 dB, bypassed analog source
(ref. Bal. 4 Vrms input, 101 dB, processed analog
source
unweighted) 105 dB, digital source (ref. full-scale
input, unweighted)
Channel separation better than 100 dB
Crosstalk better than -130 dB @ 1 kHz
(any input to any output)
Standby power <1 W
consumption
Rated power 31 W
consumption
Mains Voltage 90-264 V, 50/60 Hz
Overall dimensions Width: 17.5” (445 mm)
Depth: 17.5” (445 mm)
(excluding connectors)
Height: 4.78” (121 mm)
Net weight 23 lbs (10.43 kg)
Shipping weight 33 lbs (15 kg)
Made for
iPod touch (4th generation) iPod nano (6th
generation)
iPod touch (3rd generation) iPod nano (5th
generation)
iPod touch (2nd generation) iPod nano (4th
generation)
iPod touch (1st generation) iPod nano (3rd
generation)
iPod classic iPod nano (2nd generation)
Made for
iPhone 4 iPhone 3G
iPhone 3GS iPhone
Made for iPad
Price:
$5,000.00
Address:
Classé Audio, Inc.
5070 François Cusson
Lachine, Québec
H8T 1B3, Canada
Phone: 1-514-636-6384
FAX: 1-514- 636-1428
Website:
www.classeaudio.com
E-mail Sales:
sales@Classéaudio.com

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