EMIA Re-Visioned Quad ESL 57 Loudspeakers, Garrard 301 Turntable, Schroeder and Schick Tonearms, Made-from-Scratch EMIA Phono Cartridge, and Everything Else

Look at the photo. What you see is a re-imagining of the original Quad ESL 57s by Dave Slagle of EMIA (Experience Music Intact Audio). The only thing that remains from the original Quads are the PVC stator parts rebuilt to original standards by Wayne Picquet of Quads Unlimited in Longwood, Florida. The cabinets are made from solid 12/4 tiger maple with walnut accents and built by Andy Armstrong. These reinvented Quads are bi-amped using two push-pull 300B tube amps, which are mounted in the loudspeaker’s base and connected to the Quad panels through Slagle-wound step-up transformers. The high-frequency amplifier uses 80% nickel core and all-silver windings in its step-up transformer, while the bass amp’s step-ups use nanocrystalline cores and silver windings. These Quad-things start at $50,000 depending on wood and parts choices. The version I auditioned would go for about $115,000.

“This is where we think the original designers, Peter Walker and D.T. Williamson, might have ended up as an ultimate statement product,” Dave told me.

The music-playing source for all this re-invention is a restored, vintage grease-bearing Garrard 301 turntable with two tonearms: one by Thomas Schick, the other by Schroeder. The mono and stereo electromagnetic (field coil) cartridges are built from scratch by Dave Slagle. Everything in these prototype moving coils is new, including the stylus, cantilever, suspension, coils, coil-former, and tieback. Both MCs are connected to nickel-core Slagle-built step-up transformers ($2700 for copper, $4500 for silver wire). The SUTs connect to a L–R (no caps) RIAA “Phono Corrector” ($15k) and a remote controlled silver-wound autoformer-based passive preamp with sixty 1dB steps and a seamless transition to up to +7 dB of gain.

All the records Dave played sounded fantastically fine, satiny-smooth, and vivacious, but none as fine or exciting or as real-life-like as the acetate test pressing of Sonny Rollins’ Way Out West cut on a Lyrec cutting lathe by Pete Hutchison of the Electric Recording Company. This unbelievably exotic audio-playback experience (including the ERC acetate) is artisanal audio at its highest level of ambition. In case you didn’t quite follow, let me recap: Pete Hutchison made the vinyl record from scratch, Wayne Piquet provided some Quad parts, Andy Armstrong made the wood cabinets. . . and Dave Slagle made the rest.


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