Bending Wave And EMM Labs
Bending Wave is both a retailer in Boca Raton, FL, north of Miami, a distributor of Goebel speakers from Germany, and always warm and welcoming to
Enjoy the Music.com. That's because Oliver Goebel has a foot on both shores. I was impressed when I first heard Goebel speakers at AXPONA before COVID. That impression was further solidified here with the tall Divin Noblesse ($269k) driven by Emm Labs amplification, another world-class brand.
The music was a techno LP I was not familiar with, and the synth beat sounded pretty much like a synthesizer, but man, did that speaker move air. There was continuity of resolution, air, and power from top to bottom, and that bottom was low. It is not common to find a speaker with such air in the bass. Perhaps that comes in part from the four ports around each woofer that keep the back pressure even on the large cone. I've seen that approach taken a couple of times recently by other manufacturers.
With an efficiency of 95dB and impedance of 4 Ohms (3.8 Ohms at 100Hz minimum), you wouldn't think an amp of such power as the Emm Labs MTRX2 V2 would be necessary, but the speaker never flinched, and the music never wavered. It was as rock solid as live music and as present as music is likely to be at a dance club. This is actually their mid-size reference speaker. The Devin Majestic ($600k) is even larger. If you need more bass, their subwoofer looks like four clowns could climb out of it.
All of the gear appeared to be from Emm Labs in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, even the TX1 CD transport at the upper right. Only the unit in the lower right corner raised doubt about the origin. Oh, that was a Revox tape recorder with a SonoruS badge and modification on top of the rack, too.
The Clearaudio Reference Jubilee Limited Edition, from Germany, was in use, fitted with an optical DS Audio Grand Master EX cartridge—top-of-the-line, whose signal was handled by the Emm Labs phono stage. (My original photo is higher resolution than what you see here, and what looks like the cartridge is actually its reflection on the surface of the LP.) The ‘tower' on the left was the DS Audio ION-001 Vinyl Ionizer that removes static from the LP, creating a quieter background.
It was late in the afternoon, and I needed to press on, but I wished I could have pulled out my George Thorogood
Live L