REVIEW SHOP SHARE LEARN
Opera Audio CD-120
Opera Audio CD-120
MSRP: $ 1200.00

More CD Players from Opera Audio >>
Search AudioReview forums for the Opera Audio CD-120 >>
   
Popular CD Players
more...
Top Ranked Products from Opera Audio.
Divina
Rated:
Diva
Rated:
Consonance Reference CD-2.2
Rated:
more...
 |  Sorted by Latest Review |  Sort by Best Rating >> |  Sort by Worst Rating >> | 
Rating
Reviewed by:

kiwi_1282001

(AudioPhile)

Review Date
February 11, 2008

Overall Rating
 2 of 5

Value Rating
 2 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 2.00 votes

Rate this review?

Review 1 of 3

Price Paid:  $0.00

Summary:
Review of Consonance CD120

I had the opportunity to evaluate this machine at length last year (2007) and I post my comments (which I recorded at the time) below.

My initial observations was that the CD120 appeared to be a very smooth, non-fatiguing performer with above average timing and a good sense of air and space around vocals.

That said, despite such phenomenology, something nagged me about this player as I was putting it through its paces. One early observation I made was that relatively sparse recordings sounded great (particularly vocals with limited instrumental backing) but more complex recordings felt veiled and somewhat restrained. There was a slight heaviness about the more complex recordings (particularly orchestral) which didn’t seem natural to me.

It wasn’t until I put on my test tracks for Dynamics (Britten – Aria Italiana & Stravinsky – The Royal March) and my test track for pitch precision and transient response (Zucker & Jolles – images for flute & harp) that I finally uncovered what was nagging me. Aria Italiana is a rapid fire piece with sudden accent changes. One problem became immediately apparent, the CD120 lacked resolution. The twelve stringed soloists utilised for this recording were almost homogenised into a collectivised whole instead of commanding their own space. Furthermore, the Royal March which is ordinarily captivating dynamic music, thrilling in terms of clarity, thrust and incandescence was rendered anodyne and shrouded. I felt there was a low dynamic ceiling which the CD120 would not exceed and I felt short changed by it. It was clear by now that one could never accuse this player of blinding you with detail, but matters grew worse with the Victor Frost Sonatine piece on images for flute & harp. The harps strings in this piece start and stop quickly so any sense of slowness or haziness promptly informs you that something is not right. Playing the track it became vividly apparent that the CD120 was blunting the leading edge from the harp leading to a softening of dynamic contrasts and an overly restrained presentation sans the emotion.

One of the problems with the snappy superlatives that audio reviewers like to utilise or sometimes brazening bellow to describe how something sounds is that they can often hold double meanings. I began my commentary by noting that the CD120 was a very smooth, non fatiguing performer – which upon first glance would appear to be a commendation. Only in this instance I use the terms in contemptuous albeit enshrouded in a humble captious sense. For while the players smoothness may reduce irritating ‘digital’ qualities – it does so at the expense of resolution, transient response and associated dynamics. Blunt leading edges and rounded peaks whilst clearly non-fatiguing for the listener also tend to paint a shrouded, poorly resolved and veiled complex canvas – one that does not inspire, demand or captivate attention. By way of poor analogy, the CD120 reminds me of a good cup of Horlicks, a great bedtime drink for those who have made a conscious choice of not wishing to sustained by ‘red bull’ till the early morning hours.

Does my criticism mean the CD120 is not a good player? The answer is clearly no. For what is good (or bad) is not just a question of ticking audiophile glossary boxes – rather – it is a question of addressing one’s own taste in musical presentation. In this regard the CD120 may be perfect for some people - but it is entirely unacceptable to me. For a few extra dollars one can purchase a Cambridge Audio’s 840C instead - a multi-award winning player which quickly illuminates the multiple weaknesses of the CD120.

Strengths:
Smooth unoffensive portrayl of music
Rounds music so that every disc is playable

Weaknesses:
Poor resolution
Poor Dynamics
Slow transient response
Blunts leading edges of notes
A player to put you to sleep, not captivate your attention

Similar Products Used:
Evaluated or used the following:

Cyrus CD8x
Arcam DiVA CD192
Marantz SA15-S1
Naim CD5i
Quad 99CD-S
Vincent CD-S6
Cambridge Audio 840C
Cayin CDT-17A
Audio Note 1.1x
Rotel RCD-02
Marantz CD63SE
Marantz CD63 KI-S


Would you like to Comment?
Join audioReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.

Rating
Reviewed by:

stephennic

(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
January 31, 2008

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
Less than 1 month

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 3.00 votes

Rate this review?

Review 2 of 3

Price Paid:  $0.00 from Osborn speakers

Summary:
Consonance cd120 Linear Review.

I have been looking for a replacement for the Marnatz cd63se for about 2 years. At last I found a cd player that did not cost the earth that can replace my Marantz cd63se.
I use a Rotel power amps, valve pre amp, and B& W DM330i speakers (modified, hardwired crossover with wonder caps). I listen to jazz, instrumental, acoustic, rock.

I am very impressed with the Consonance cd120 linear, however it takes a good burn in around 200- 300 hrs and it keeps improving. It is smooth, detailed, very musical and analogue sounding (natural and warm) with plenty of 3D soundstage depth, atmospheric, quite dynamic, rich and sweet. It has a very fluid sweet musical midband, top end is open sweet and airy, the bass is quite solid. It has a real sense of realness and naturalness to the sound (non-digital in the best sense e.g. harshness). It picks up the interplay between instruments, inflections, singers breathing which adds to the overall musical enjoyment. It times well (PRAT) like a good Naim.

I compared it to the Cambridge audio 640c v2, Arcam 73t, Nad c542, Marantz cd63se, Marantz sacd 7001. Compared to the Cambridge 640c v2, the Cambridge was slightly punchier in the bass, more forward and cold sounding. The Consonance was much more musically enjoyable especially the mids (realistic and sweet), deeper soundstage – more layered and fuller deeper bass the top end is more detailed and open. Much better than the Cambridge. The consonance was more natural and open and musical sounding than the Marantz sacd7001, the marantz seemed a bit glassy and clinical in the mids and forward - very wearing after awhile.

The Arcam cd73t was better than the Marantz sacd 7001 however the consonance was more refined, detailed, open and musical, with a deeper soundstage and had a more sparkling top end. The Arcam was drier sounding, had a touch wider soundstage and slightly fuller bass. The consonance was quite a bit better than the Arcam. I compared it to my old Marantz cd63se, the consonance easily matched its musical midband, the consonance was smoother, more refined and detailed.

I had a listen to the next level up in a shop, the Creek Evo and the Rega Apollo both very musical machines, the consonance seemed to have a slightly more open soundstage, natural musical mid-band, more balanced. The Rega Apollo seemed a little light in the bass department however its top end is quite magical (sweet open and airy -impressive). I did also have a quick listen to the meridian cd player on my system (4 x the cost of the consonance), the meridian had a tighter deeper bass, a touch more detailed and refined, slightly more top end air, however I probably preferred the consonance midrange - more musical and natural sounding. The consonance overall came close and I enjoyed it just as much.

It’s important to get good power leads and interconnects and it works well with valve gear too. Listen for hours without fatigue – rediscovering my cd collection. Sit back relax and enjoy - let the music soothe you. It well suited to all kinds of music. It is quite analogue non digital sounding.

One feature it has is selecting the sampling rate. 44.1 brings a little more of the mids out and a touch more livelier and energetic. The 88.2 setting makes it slightly smoother and refined sounding with a touch more air at the top end. The consonance is a nice looking unit which weighs a bit – I think just under 10kg. It comes with an odd shaped but nice heavy metal remote.

Strengths:
Very natural musical sound. Large 3D soundstage with real depth, natural on voices and instruments, sweet detailed fluid expressive midrange and sweet open top end and full warm bass. Detailed, atmospheric, smooth, quite vivid and with a natural analogue type sound with body to the instruments. As I have read in some reviews a spooky sense of realism to the sound. Tonally balanced, refined. Good PRAT -times well. A very enjoyable machine that seems to to work well for all genres of music. Sounds better than it should at the price. Solid build. Overall very impressive.

Weaknesses:
(Nit picking: Need to take price into account). Maybe a touch light on the real low bass. The top end is really nice and open however slightly rolled off, the last bit of top end air and refinement. Some of the limitations is probably due to my equipment though.

Similar Products Used:
Marantz cd63se;6000ose,7300, sacd7001;Cambridge 640cv2;NAD 542,Arcam cd73t,Meridan?
Listen to Creek Evo and Rega apollo, Marantz cd6002 in the shop


Would you like to Comment?
Join audioReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.

Rating
Reviewed by:

Johnno88

(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
June 25, 2006

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
1 to 3 months

Visitors rate this review
5.00 of 5, 4.00 votes

Rate this review?

Review 3 of 3

Price Paid:  $990.00 from Osborn Loudspeakers

Summary:
Price is Australian $.
This is a review of the CD120 Linear.

Got the player about 6 weeks ago to replace my 1992 Rotel 965BX.

The 965BX was hard to replace but the Linear did it conclusively.
The Linear is a fabulous, musical player.
Clear highs with no harshness, great midrange & excellent bass.

A very detailed player but not analytical.

It took about a week to burn in & has since got better & better.

Very musical with all types - Ben Webster, Miles Davis, Sonny Rollins, Weather Report, Keith Jarrett, Diana Krall, Stacey Kent, Ry Cooder, Asleep at the Wheel, The Amazing Rhythm Aces,The Band, Guy Clark, Jennifer Warnes etc etc & classical.

Instruments & voices sound so realistic.

Can listen for hours with no fatigue.

If you are looking for a new player at this price point (or even higher) you should review the Linear.

System:
Consonance CD120 Linear
Audio Analogue Puccini SE amp
Vender Steen 1C speakers
VandenHul Thunderline i/c
DH Labs T14 spkr cable.

Strengths:
No fatigue, warm detailed liquid sound, harshless highs, effortless midrange & realistic bass.

Weaknesses:
None/

Similar Products Used:
Rotel 965BX & reviewed Rotel 1072, Rega Apollo, Marantz 17, Shanling T80 & Jungson SACD,


Would you like to Comment?
Join audioReview for a free account, or Login if you are already a member.

Company Pages

Audio & Video company review pages. Browse product user reviews, compare prices, top ranked products, and compare specs by manufacturer.

Bowers Wilkins Reviews
Bowers & Wilkins
NAD Reviews
NAD
Marantz Reviews Marantz
Denon Reviews
Denon
Klipsch Reviews
Klipsch
Sony Reviews
Sony
Yamaha Reviews
Yamaha
Rotel Reviews
ROTEL
McIntosh Reviews
McIntosh
Bose Reviews
Bose
Polk Reviews
Polk Audio
Paradigm Reviews
Paradigm
Onkyo Reviews
Onkyo
JBL Reviews
JBL
KEF Reviews
KEF
Pioneer Lens Reviews
Pioneer
Harman Kardon Lens Reviews
Harman-Kardon
Panasonic Reviews
Panasonic
Press and News
Submit News & Press...
Audio and Video News & Press Releases.

Latest and Greatest

Best Floorstanding Speakers Under $1000

So many to choose from! Lets us boil it down. How to Choose a Floorstanding Speaker that fits you:

Marantz MA-9S2 Reference Series Power Amplifiers Review

Marantz MA-9S2 Power AmplifierThe list above has one tenet that I continue to hold true: high powered amplifiers are necessary to reproduce the full dynamic range of music with most speakers. This became apparent when I changed from the 100 Watt per channel Bella Extreme 100 to the 250 Watt.....

Lowther’s DX-65 driver in the Teresonic Magus XR Review

A new driver from Lowther is real news. A new five inch driver is even rarer news, so it was with great anticipation that I waited on this pair of speakers to arrive.

Aune Mini Headphone DAC User Review

The unit arrived from China well packed and everything seem to be in place. No external abuse by the carriers. The only problem was the power supply it came with. The box came with a cheap step-down converter.

Aural Symphonics Chrono b2 balanced interconnects Review

The Aural Symphonics Chrono b2 is more a study in contrasts than most cables. Chrono b2 refers to balanced version 2.

Three Koetsu cartridges

The Koetsu line consists of 18 different cartridges divided into four sub categories. The aluminum body Black Goldline at $1800, the Rosewood series starting at $2600 and up to $5900, the Urushi line starting at $4300 to $4900, the Stone Body Platinum series starting at $8000...

Cambridge Azur 840E and 840W Review

If this combo would surmount the challenges and rise to the same level of performance, Cambridge would have a trinity of tasty components worthy of consideration by anyone...

Audio Tekne TFM-9412 integrated 300B amplifier Review

A Dagogo featured article: In the negotiation of his wish to become the U.S. Importer of Audio Tekne, Yujean was given a set of “rules” by Mr. Kiyaoki Imai, owner of Audio Tekne.....

Reviews and Featured Articles
Expert hi-fi audio reviews, blogs, and audio articles.