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A
little jazz? How about Bags Meets Ws (DCC Jazz GZS-1093? The dynamics
were right on time. The acoustic bass was more detailed than I've
ever heard it through my JMlab Utopia loudspeakers, if not as powerful
and tractor-pulling strong as the Krell '350Mc can manage. The guitar
was marvelous-fast and detailed, yet harmonic-and I could almost
see Wes Montgomery's fingers at work. Drummer "Philly"
Joe Jones sounded just as one might have heard him in a small club;
so real to the touch. Wynton Kelly's piano was fulsome, if, again,
somewhat lighter than heard through the big Krells, or the Linn
Klimax, but there was nothing missing, just a sweeter swing to the
music. Listening to Milt Jackson's vibes can tell you a lot about
a component's ability to reproduce music, and the Citadel was superb,
just superb. The initial taps on the bars were there, followed by
a delightful billowing of harmonics that mixed with the next mallet
stroke, and so on. Heaven.

What better to follow this with
than Louis Armstrong letting us have it in "St. James Infirmary,"
from Satchmo Plays King Oliver (Audio Fidelity AFSD 5930. Right
from the first note, it was obvious that the Citadels were the amps
to play back this richly textured cut. The cymbals sounded so real
that, once again, I had to tuck those damn neck hairs back under
my collar. Talk about midrange magic and perfectly rendered male
vocals-how could one possibly do better? Clean, harmonic, timely,
delicate beyond description, and richwith no chestiness at all to
muck up the man's marvelous voice. The soundstage was airy and transparent,
Armstrong almost there in the room with me.
Listening to a Japanese K2-processed
CD of The Modern Jazz Quartet (Atlantic 1265, I confirmed that there
was something almost feminine about the Citadel (talk about a misnomer!.
It was delicate, detailed, intricate, articulate, and sweet-not
warm, but musical and airy, especially in the highs. And if I turned
up the volume, the bass could whack the ball with aplomb behind
the left-field fence. Elegant, that's what it was. Elegant.
One can demonstrate this most easily
by spinning This One's For Blanton (Analogue Productions CAPJ015.
The difference in sound between the various amplifiers I compared
the Theta to in the course of this review told me practically everything
I needed to know about the Theta. The Klimax was fast and extended,
a little "tinkly" in the highs on Duke Ellington's piano
(an artifact of the recording, with a lovely midrange, and Ray Brown's
bass was as speedy on the leading edge as you could ever hope to
hear and harmonically fully developed. The Krell was heavier, slower,
more rich and luscious through the midrange, with sweeter highs
not quite so extended, but Ray Brown's bass was phenomenal with
power and richness of tone.
The Thetas were an amalgam of both.
With the volume turned up, the bass was incredibly detailed and
taut, if not the most powerful and balanced a little on the light
side. The mids were true to life, and the highs were as sweet as
could be. You want to enjoy your music? You want something delicate
and filigreed, something with the tonal colors of the rainbow, you
got it in the Citadel.
The sound of the Theta Digital
Citadel monoblocks can he summed up in a single word: delightful.

Put a bow around it and I'll
take it home to me bride.
Theta Digital's Citadel is a terrific
amp for the audiophile who likes detail, delicacy, and sweetness
without euphonics. It has more personality than the similarly priced
but sternly linear Lainin M1.1 monoblock (see Stereophile, Vol.18
No.4 and Vol.22 No 1, it's lighter and less heavy-handed than the
slightly more expensive Classe Omega stereo amp (Vol.22 No.3, WWW,
and more transparent than the big Krell FPB 350Mc monoblocks (hut
without the BIG bass which are just a bit more expensive (Vol.23
No.8 WWW). If anything, the Citadel monoblocks sounded most like
the $20,000/pair Linn Klimax with just a slightly lighter touch
to the music.
As all these amps cost about the
same, it comes down to purely a matter of taste, associated equipment,
and the type of music you appreciate. Find a dealer who's willing
to lend you one or the other (or hopefully all! of these amps, or
who's ready to set up a proper demo for you with appropriate associated
components If you've got the scratch and one or another turns you
on, go for it! If it comes clown to the Theta, all I call say is
it's worth the money and then some.
If you're asking yourself if $16,000
gets you more than $1,600, I'd have to say yes, and in a big way.
Refinement, detail, spatiality, truth of timbre, timing,
huge soundstages that make you feel like you're at the recording
session...all these elements are what you get with the big bux. And
certainly what you get with the Citadel. Highly enjoyable, highly
recommended. Well done Theta!
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