Krell Connect - £3,500
What the world needs now – to quote the great Burt Bacharach – is love, sweet love. Well perhaps, but there’s a sizeable number of consumer electronics companies who think this is no longer quite so pressing, and instead we should all be given network music players to play with. So much so that now it feels like you can’t move for the things. Love isn’t all around anymore – as The Troggs once sang – audio streamers are!
Krell’s new Connect needs to be special then. Indeed, the Connect has the additional burden on its shoulders of being a Krell, something it has to live up to rather than play down. This great brand has long been a major player in high-end hi-fi, and it won’t do for the Connect to be merely average. Fortunately, as we shall see, it is not.
The Connect comes in a choice to two versions. For £2,500 you can buy the streamer itself, and an additional £1,000 gets you a high-quality internal DAC fitted – making it a source component in its own right. Both variants play a plethora of files – the important ones being FLAC and WAV at up to 24-bit/192kHz, but ALAC, AAC, Ogg, WMA and MP3 are also supported. Our review sample comes with the DAC built-in, but the cheaper version simply has a digital output, making it ideal for those that already have a digital converter or DAC-equipped CD player.
The unit itself is based on the Stream Unlimited platform, and uses a Stream 700 board. The digital output signal from this is buffered with similar technology that was engineered for the Anti Jitter Module used in Krell’s £12,000 Cipher SACD/CD player, no less. It then goes to a pair of ESS Sabre ES-9018 DACs operating in dual differential mode, and to a Class A, fully balanced, fully discrete analogue output stage, which uses Krell Current Mode topology.
Being a Krell it is compulsory for it to look big and bold, and so it does. The central section sports a long LED light that glows red or blue depending on the mode – standby or operating. To the right is a small 320 x 240-pixel, 90mm diameter backlit LCD screen.
In my view, additional fascia mounted navigation buttons would make a lot of sense here, so that it’s easier to use. However, I’m sure the company would reply that there’s a perfectly good Krell Connect (iOS or Android) app available for free download, and that is the best way to control things. It’s right, of course, but I know some customers would be happier with a method of operation that didn’t require something else that could crash or get lost. The remote looks and feels lovely, but its tiny buttons won’t win prizes from those with bigger digits. Still, at least the company has taken to the trouble to craft a bespoke controller out of two aluminium extrusions locked together by allen bolts. No plastic here!
There’s nothing unique about the way the Connect works; anyone familiar with anything from a Squeezebox to a Linn Klimax DS won’t have trouble setting it up. As ever, wired connection is better but wireless works effectively, too. Setup is the normal process of entering your network password, after it has had a look around for wireless-enabled devices. The remote control is used to enter the code, and then you’re off. I use it in conjunction with a UPnP-equipped RipNAS storage device and my MacBook Pro running the latest version of Twonky. The Krell Connect app is run on an iPad.
Sound quality
Unsurprisingly, there’s a distinctive Krell family sound to the Connect – one that impresses and charms in equal measure. It’s no shrinking violet, so you don’t need to worry about falling asleep in the middle of your listening session. The powerful, percussive, fluid bass is a great help here, as Propaganda’s The Chase proves. The synth bass line modulates up and down with heady aplomb, sounding wonderfully untroubled by what is going on further up the frequency scale. At the same time, the Connect cuts through this track’s rather dense wash of synthesisers, throwing out loads of detail and a capacious soundstage. Treble is svelte and smooth too, and timed beautifully – the Krell manages to bring all of the music together in a believable, coherent and organic way.
At first listen, the Connect presents itself as a light, bright and tonally spry device – you’d never confuse it with a rich, fat-sounding classic turntable, for example. But it’s so much more than this, as it plays a clever trick of rendering the music in a very clean and detailed fashion, yet is never harsh or objectionable. Indeed, when it’s been on for a few hours, it acquires a seductive creaminess to its tonality. Right at the beginning of its warm-up cycle it can seem a little matter of fact, but when the Connect gets into its stride it becomes a really beguiling performer with a knack of cutting right to the song’s heart and soul.
For example, Steely Dan’s Deacon Blue comes over in a beautifully lucid way; Donald Fagen’s deadpan vocals sound unusually animated and tuneful, while backing saxophones and trumpet have a believable timbre to them that’s rarely heard in a digital source component. Walter Becker’s delicate guitar work is better etched than I am used to hearing, while at the same time it never once descends into brittleness. Indeed, the way the Connect allows all the elements in this very fine recording to play along with one another is a joy to behold – it manages the deftest of party tricks of enthralling yet never tiring the listener. Above all, the Krell doesn’t just give a sense of the recording, it absolutely nails it.
Move from CD-quality to high-resolution recordings, and unlike some streamers I’ve tried, the Krell doesn’t suddenly get a personality transplant when you ramp up the resolution. There’s a proportional increase in sound quality, just as it should be; the music acquires extra energy, detail, drive, power and precision right across the frequency range. Treble becomes slightly smoother and a lot more sparkly, bass is firmer and fuller and the midband widens out even more and drops back, showing the Connect’s ability to create a superbly spacious recorded acoustic given half the chance. Wings’ Band On The Run is an unalloyed pleasure; it’s a great album that to my mind has never quite sounded right on vinyl or CD, but at 24/96 via the Connect it comes over as tonally fulsome, spatially three dimensional and musically gratifying. Once again the Krell’s basic character shines through; things are fast and thrilling with fantastically dynamic pan rolls crashing their way across the soundstage, left to right then back again. Denny Laine’s multi-tracked guitars are beautifully carried, and his and Paul McCartney’s vocals smooth and intricate. Suddenly the track comes alive.
Extended listening reveals the Connect to be a fantastic companion, then. Unlike several rivals that make all the right hi-fi noises but never inspire you to listen all night – whisky and water in one hand, guilty cigarette in the other – you develop ever more respect for this machine. And if you can put your drink down long enough to grab your iPad and reach for The Who’s Won’t Get Fooled Again, you’ll find yourself aghast by Keith Moon’s electrifying, machine-gun snare drum work and Townshend’s glorious power chords. The Krell is consummately neutral and transparent, letting all the richness of recordings come out while capturing their full visceral impact – it’s quite a thing to experience. This means that unlike some rivals, which seem to have been voiced in one way or another, this streamer works uniformly well across a wide range of source material – whether it’s the louche soul grooves of Isaac Hayes’ Theme From Shaft or Bob Marley’s Smile Jamaica, the Connect just, you know, connects!
Conclusion
You would expect Krell’s new streamer to be something special, and sure enough it is. Its sonics are outstanding at the price; I have tried many different machines at the £4,000 price point and the Connect can hold its own with any of them, or better. Of course, it’s always a matter of taste, but the great thing about this is that it’s so neutral, open and transparent that it doesn’t tie itself up in knots trying to flatter one type of music or another. As any digital audio designer knows, this isn’t an easy tight rope to balance on. Personally, I’d like to see a slightly more comprehensive user interface and a larger screen, but it’s fair to say most folk will barely bother with the old fashioned ‘hands on’ approach, as the app is excellent. Overall, an essential audition if you’re lucky enough to be in the market for such a product
LIKE: Naturally musical sound with power and punch; build quality
DISLIKE: Some may want fascia controls and a larger screen
WE SAY: Superb sounding, high end streamer with real musical appeal
DETAILS
PRODUCT Krell Connect
ORIGIN USA
TYPE Network music player/DAC
WEIGHT 8.1kg
DIMENSIONS (WxHxD) 433 x 88 x 427mm
FEATURES
• 6 to 24-bit, 44.1kHz to 192kHz PCM playback
• FLAC, Ogg, WAV, WMA, Apple Lossless, m4a, MP3 files
• ESS Sabre ES-9018 DAC chip
• RCA and balanced XLR outputs
DISTRIBUTOR Absolute Sounds
TELEPHONE 020 89713909
WEBSITE absolutesounds.com
Inside this month's issue: Arcam Radia A25 integrated amp, iFi Audio iDSD Diablo 2 DAC/headphone amp, Eversolo DMP-A8 streamer/DAC/preamp, Line Magnetic LM-845IA valve amp, Record Store Day Spring Drop, standmount loudspeaker Group Test and much, much more
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