| The
Audience
Auric
Illuminator
Treatment
|
| A
Pro's
Point of
View |
Jim
Merod
www.stereotimes.com |
| 6
September
2000 |
Specifications
Auric
Illuminator"
CD/DVD/SACD
Enhancement
Treatment
Price
$39.95
Audience
1525 Brian
Place
Escondido, CA.
92025
Ph. (800)
565-4390
Fax: (760)
743-2192
e-mail: auraphon@aol.com
Website: www.audience-av.com
"The
Auric
Illuminator
from speaker
manufacturer,
Audience, is
a modest
looking set
of common
objects: two
plastic
bottles with
a non-toxic
disc
cleaning
gel; cloths
to clean the
discs; and a
black felt
marker with
kick-a-poo
magic light
absorption
edging to be
applied to
your discs.
Ordinary
looking
stuff.
Extraordinary
results."
When
the UPS truck
pulled up with
an
inconspicuous
box bearing a
hilarious
outside
message on
each side Ñ
"WARNING
! This box
contains SAT
(Space Alien
Technology)"
Ñ I knew
that my recent
habit, gassing
myself with
fumes of the
sound
enhancement
liquid inside,
had become
addictive.
Obsessive.
Nuts.
Audio-mania in
extremis. The
box's
message could
not be clearer.
When
you see the
whole of the
message (a
joke that I'll
leave for your
own
discovery),
you may begin
to understand
why our
friends and
wives look at
us with
squinty eyes.
The box from
Audience,
bearing new
disc treatment
marker pens,
was right on
time to
sustain my
practice of
sending off
Auric-treated
discs to
listeners and,
most
important, to
pressing
plants.
The
box also
delivered a
joke in the
nick-of-time,
along with an
enhancement
process worth
every penny of
the $40 that
the full Auric
Illuminator
package costs.
Let
me back track.
The good news
is this. I'm
happy to
report that my
never ending
search for
large and
small ways to
improve
recorded sound
sometimes
succeeds.
Every so
often, I come
across a tweak
that enhances
sound playback
and/or digital
recording.
There are many
(far too many)
claims to
membership in
the elusive
"realm of
sonic tweakdom."
Some tweaks
are useful.
Few triumph
utterly.
The
UPS box
brought me one
that succeeds.
The Auric
Illuminator
from speaker
manufacturer,
Audience, is a
modest looking
set of common
objects: two
plastic
bottles with a
non-toxic disc
cleaning gel;
cloths to
clean the
discs; and a
black felt
marker with
kick-a-poo
magic light
absorption
edging to be
applied to
your discs.
Ordinary
looking stuff.
Extraordinary
results.
That's the
good news. The
bad news is
that this
stuff works so
well, you can
become
addicted to
its use. It
will not blow
your mind, but
it will add
significantly
to your
listening
enjoyment.
I
first came
upon this
highly
effective
treatment of
digital discs
at the
Consumer
Electronics
Show in Las
Vegas when I
stumbled into
the Audience
showroom
suite, at the
Alexis Park,
to find out
how their
complex but
powerful
speaker array
system worked.
It works very
well. That's
another report
down the road.
Before I
departed the
suite, my
host, John
McDonald, gave
me an Auric
Illuminator
package.
In
truth, I'd
been sent over
to the
Audience suite
not only to
hear an
unusual set of
stacked
speakers, but
to check out
their disc
treatment
process.
Legendary
sonic guru,
Dave Magnan,
had insisted
that the stuff
was good.
After nine
months of
almost
continuous
use, I now see
why Dave
Magnan
recommended
it. Dave is
seldom wrong.
This tweak is
the real deal.
There
are other such
disc treatment
systems on the
market. I have
used some that
are fine.
They, too,
succeed it
"illuminating"
digital
information.
They, too, dig
out improved
musical
reproduction
from the pits
and burns
thrown at a
compact disc
or DVD player's
laser pick up.
So far, the
best of these
is the Auric
Illuminator.
I
recommend it
because, for
so little
money, I do
not know
anything that
so greatly
improves the
sound quality
of music in
our
still-evolving,
as yet
imperfect,
world of
digital
encoding.
Using this
treatment
process on
your discs,
you'll hear
improved
imaging, more
coherent
harmonic
structures,
and heightened
dynamic
musical power.
Sometimes you
can spend
several
thousand
dollars on an
amplifier
upgrade and
not gain such
vivid
improvements.
Whether you
are aware of
it or not, you
are built to
receive analog
information.
24-bits and
DVD/SACD sonic
improvements
notwithstanding,
your ears need
all the
comfort and
refined audio
resolution
they can
locate. The
Auric
Illuminator
truly furthers
the
possibilities
of that happy
occurrence.
|