Parasound Halo Hint 6 integrated amplifier

In his review in the November 2015 issue, Herb Reichert wrote that Parasound’s Halo Integrated amplifier “has a recognizable sonic personality: easy flowing, mostly smooth, and decidedly mellow. . . . But don’t worry—it’s not milquetoast mellow or unwashed-hippy-stoner mellow. It is, instead, an everything’s-under-control, don’t-worry-now mellow.”


I hoped to hear the Halo Integrated for myself. So when, for the March 2019 issue, I reviewed the Spendor Audio Systems A7 loudspeaker, which requires more power than my 20Wpc Shindo Laboratory Haut-Brion amp can muster, I requested a loaner. Parasound sent me the revised version, the Halo Hint 6, with a revised list price of $2995—a $500 increase.


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Phil Jackson, Parasound’s product and sales specialist, explained via e-mail: “New changes from the original Halo Integrated include a Burr-Brown, analog resistor-ladder volume control; dimmable front-panel volume display; updated uPnP USB receiver; an additional optical input (two total); ball-bearing–supported, solid-aluminum volume knob; programmable default volume setting; ‘favorite volume memory’ with remote-control button; increased phono-stage gain of 7dB (from 35dB to 42dB) for lower-output MM cartridges; improved left/right channel separation and balance tracking; and updated cosmetics with subtle gold highlights.”


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Beyond the noted hardware changes, the Halo Hint 6 remains mostly unchanged from the Halo Integrated. Both versions are 17.25″ wide by 5.875″ high by 16.25″ deep and weigh 33 lb, have a class-AB output section delivering 160Wpc into 8 ohms, a discrete headphone amplifier and 3.5mm headphone jack, a 32-bit ESS Sabre32 DAC chip, five line-level RCA inputs, defeatable tone controls (!), a subwoofer output, and optical, USB, and coaxial digital inputs.


Listening . . .
Though I didn’t have on hand a moving-magnet (MM) cartridge that I could use with the MM input of the Hint 6’s revised phono stage, I did have four pairs of speakers that I figured would reveal any changes from Herb’s assessment of the original Halo Integrated’s easy-flowing personality.


I played three LPs on my Kuzma Stabi turntable with Stogi tonearm, running my Hana EL moving-coil cartridge into the Hint 6’s MC input: Ella Fitzgerald’s Ella Swings Brightly with Nelson (Verve V-4054); Noah Preminger’s Some Other Time (Newvelle NV003LP); and Souvenir Part II: music for strings by Tchaikovsky and Nielsen, performed by the Trondheim Soloists (2L 2L-090C-LP).


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With Spendor Audio Systems A7s
The Spendor A7 ($4995/pair) demands power to burn. Given that power, it produces such razor-sharp images that I hoped to buy a pair—but I was concerned that it and the Halo Hint 6 would be a mismatch. Thankfully, they warmed to one other right away. The sound was anything but mellow with the Spendors’ tweeters firing at ear level, but joined the Spendor’s crispness to the Hint 6’s wholeness and refinement. It almost felt as if I were leaning into the Trondheim Soloists’ performance of Tchaikovsky’s Serenade for Strings in C.


On his Some Other Time, Noah Preminger’s tenor saxophone was downright creamy, with a warm burr that softened Billy Hart’s mallet-generated cymbal crescendos. The treble seemed rolled off, but the overall sound was generous, even voluptuous. In “I Won’t Dance,” Ella Fitzgerald’s big voice was rendered large, with the rhythm section, strings, and brass panned hard left and right. This combo made a devilishly good pair, sweet-toned but with serious jump and juice.


With DeVore Fidelity Orangutan O/93s
I hadn’t played my reference speakers, DeVore Fidelity’s Orangutan O/93s ($8400/pair), in a while, but when I drove them with the Parasound Halo Hint 6 I remembered how much I love them, and why I bought them many years ago. The big primates get it all right: a wide, realistically layered soundstage in my small den, spot-on tonality and texture, very good resolution, an almost genteel (tweeters below ear level) but propulsive low end, and a beautiful way with voices.


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The Hint 6 let the O/93s shine. At almost twice the price of the Spendors, the DeVores produced a much fuller sound, with a deeper, broader soundstage. Drums had more kick. Ella Fitzgerald was in my ear, singing her subtle dynamic inflections for me and me alone. The Preminger disc became muscular and dynamic, sax and cymbals more visceral. Now, instead of sounding simply honeyed, the music vibrated and grooved. The Trondheim Soloists sounded less crystalline but somehow truer of tone. The strings were less separate and distinct, more massed together as a single organism. My emotional response remained undiminished.


The Hint 6 provided a level of control and nuance that the DeVore O/93s devoured. Both components were transparent, dynamic, always in service to the music.


With Quad S-2s
This mighty Quad stand-mounted model ($999/pair) has a ribbon tweeter and I was concerned lest the focused power of the Parasound Hint 6 kick it too hard. But while the soundstage was smaller than with the other speakers, the Parasound never pushed the Quads’ ribbons into dangerous territory. Instead, music sounded brilliant and tangible, with a pulsating energy that made the strings of the Trondheim Soloists absolutely breathtaking. The sound was exhilarating. The Quads revealed the upper air of the Fitzgerald LP, with horns, hi-hat, and upper double-bass frequencies to the fore. And Preminger’s tenor sax became less soft, more explicit and clean. The Halo Hint 6 enabled the Quads’ drive and clarity and, ultimately, their altogether purposeful sound.


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With Klipsch Heresy IIIs
Another speaker I truly love, Klipsch’s Heresy III fat-boy floorstander ($1998/pair), provides the most fun you can have without going to jail, and for far less than the cost of a Better Call Saul–style attorney. I’ve yet to find an amplifier that couldn’t cozy up to the Klipsches’ 12″ woofers and specified 99dB sensitivity and 8 ohm impedance, and the Parasound was no exception. This combo was magical. The leading edges of voices, tenor saxophones, and drums reached out to caress my ears. A joyous sense of upper-treble air made all music exhilarating, transparent, and fun. The splat, boom, and bam of Nelson Riddle’s orchestra was off the chart. Ella seemed somehow goosed with extra propulsion and juice. And I felt I was hearing the Trondheim Soloists for the first time, their strings entirely chewy, rhythmic, and tactile, if lacking the more saturated color and refinement I heard through the DeVore O/93s.


Conclusion
Is Parasound’s Halo Hint 6 Integrated Amplifier a party amp? A hard-rock enabler? A suave, swinging jazz proselytizer? It’s all these things. The Hint 6 worked well with every speaker I threw at it, delivering an upfront, slightly cool, dynamic sound, LP after LP. Even at its higher price of $2995, the Halo Hint 6 offers good value in true Swiss Army knife fashion. I can’t think of another integrated amplifier that offers so many options and has such solid, generous sound. Recommended.

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COMPANY INFO

Parasound Products, Inc.

2250 McKinnon Avenue

San Francisco, CA 94124

(415) 397-7100

www.parasound.com

ARTICLE CONTENTS

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