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Alex Shelley wins Impact World title at Against All Odds

In an surprise victory, Alex Shelley defeated Steve Maclin to win the Impact World title at Friday's Against All Odds in Columbus, Ohio.

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Shelley picked up the clean win after hitting his Shellshock finisher in the evening's main event.

It's the first World title reign for Shelley who was unsuccessful in besting then-champion Josh Alexander at last August's Emergence. Shelley had previously held the Impact Tag Team titles three times and X-Division title once. He earned the shot with a win in a six-way no. 1 contender's match at last month's Under Siege.

Shelley's Motor City Machine Guns teammate Chris Sabin earned his ninth X-Division title earlier in the night with a win over Trey Miguel.

The loss ends Maclin's relatively short title reign which began at April's Rebellion with a victory over KUSHIDA for the title vacated due to Alexander's injury. Defenses against Rhino and PCO followed.

Shelley will defend the title against Nick Aldis at July's Slammiversary after Aldis earned the shot by winning the first-ever 8-4-1 match earlier in the night.

Aldis was part of a four-on-four tag team match where the winning team immediately moved onto a four-way for the title shot. In a match that included Jonathan Gresham and Bully Ray, Aldis tapped out Heath to earn the win.

Aldis will be looking for his second run with the title and the first since 2014 when he was known as Magnus and the promotion was still called TNA.

Here's the current card for the Saturday, July 15th pay-per-view in Windsor, Ontario, Canada:

Impact World Champion Alex Shelley defends against Nick AldisImpact Knockouts Champion Deonna Purrazzo defends against Trinity

WWE Raw video highlights: Seth Rollins’ first World Heavyweight title defense

After making his first televised defense of the World Heavyweight Championship, Seth Rollins looks to already have his next challenger.

Rollins defeated Damian Priest in the main event of last night's Raw to retain the World Heavyweight Championship. Rollins and Finn Balor then had a staredown in the ring after the match was over.

Priest agreed that the rest of Judgment Day would stay backstage for his match against Rollins, but that didn't end up happening. When Balor tried to interfere near the end of the match, he got dropped with a superkick by Rollins. The distraction led to Priest giving Rollins a South of Heaven chokeslam, but Rollins was able to kick out. Rollins delivered a stomp to Priest soon after to retain the World Heavyweight Championship.

It appeared that Priest was disappointed that Balor got involved in the match. He asked Balor why he was there, which allowed Rollins to slip out of a Razor's Edge before hitting the stomp.

There was a moment in the match where Rollins gave Priest a powerbomb into the barricade — the same move that Rollins injured Balor with in their Universal Championship match at SummerSlam 2016.

Money in the Bank qualifiers also continued on last night's Raw. Becky Lynch and Zoey Stark both booked their spots in the women's ladder match.

More coverage from last night —

Recapping the rest of Dominion, full RAW report, ratings, and more: Wrestling Observer RadioJey Uso to choose sides on WWE SmackDownBecky Lynch & Zoey Stark qualify for WWE Money in the BankReport: Vince McMahon backstage at WWE RawWWE Raw live results: Seth Rollins vs. Damian Priest title match

WWE Raw video highlights —

Damian Priest agrees that Judgment Day will stay backstage for World title match

Money in the Bank qualifying match: Becky Lynch vs. Sonya Deville

Video package recaps Roman Reigns' 1000-day celebration

Gunther vows to teach Kevin Owens discipline

Kayden Carter & Katana Chance bring the party and everyone's included

Kevin Owens vs. Gunther

Matt Riddle is tired of seeing Gunther cheat week after week

Ronda Rousey & Shayna Baszler vs. Kayden Carter & Katana Chance

Johnny Gargano's story is just getting started

Ricochet vs. Shinsuke Nakamura

Chad Gable is ready to start training Maxxine Dupri for her in-ring debut

Dominik Mysterio appears as a surprise guest during Miz TV with Cody Rhodes

Dominik Mysterio slaps Cody Rhodes during Miz TV

Money in the Bank qualifying match: Zoey Stark vs. Natalya

Jey Uso will choose his side on SmackDown this Friday night

Indus Sher attack Cedric Alexander & Shelton Benjamin

Seth Rollins vs. Damian Priest for the World Heavyweight Championship

Raw fallout: Becky Lynch explains what winning MITB would mean to her

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Raw fallout: Zoey Stark shows Trish Stratus some gratitude

Raw Talk: Imperium, Bronson Reed, Kayden Carter & Katana Chance interviews

Daily Update: Wrestling world pays tribute to The Iron Sheik

Daily Update

Latest News:

WWE NXT ratings remain strong with main roster talent influxTony Khan says CM Punk is ‘very important’ to AEW, ‘been a big draw’Edge advertised for August WWE SmackDown in TorontoWWE Hall of Famer The Iron Sheik passes away at 81Jon Moxley to team with Homicide at NJPW Strong Independence DayThree matches added to Impact Wrestling lineup

Latest Audio:

Lance Storm remembers Iron Sheik, Dynamite preview, NXT TV report: Wrestling Observer LiveKing of the Ring 1994 part 1, Shawn unveils his Emmy, plus Granny! Bryan & Vinny Show

Latest Free YouTube Video:

This Week's Wrestling Observer Newsletter:

June 5, 2023 Observer Newsletter: AEW Double or Nothing & WWE Night of Champions recaps

In this issue:

Match of the week and performer of the weekFull Double or Nothing coverageAll the business notes on the showHow the show did on PPV and in theatersTony Khan's goals for CollisionMore on the new AEW TV deal with WBDWhere All In 2023 stands on the biggest crowds and gates in wrestling historyTony Khan talks Bill GoldbergBryan Danielson talks AEW creativeMatt Jackson on coming back so quickly from a muscle tear, the stunts in the match, how preparation was less than last year and whyThe latest Bloodline sagaBusiness notes on Night of Champions and how AEW/WWE crossover viewership changed this past weekend from the pastHow comparisons of big event interest changed greatlyBest of the Super Juniors finals, Dominion and All Together Now, a look at the big events in JapanNXT Battleground coverageOne of the longest lasting wrestling promoters who ever lived, Brian Dixon, passes away at 74Stardom has World & Wonder of Stardom champions face off on PPV show and where this leadsTwo future stars leave two different promotions this past weekWill Ospreay talks futureNew Japan President Takami Ohbari talks the state of the business, how close the company was to being in real trouble, and how they've had to change the businessBilly Graham funeral notesBobo Brazil day and a look at the iconic figureAdvance ticket sales for all upcoming WWE and AEW showsStreaming and international TV numbersRecords at stake in UFC fights this weekInternational promotion looking at crowd of 50,000 for a show tomorrowWWE's arguments to get MLW lawsuit dismissedInjury updatesWWE market valueTwo people under WWE deals are one week away from competing for a sports world championship shotMerch updates

This Week's Retro Observer Newsletter:

April 19, 2006 Observer Newsletter: Randy Orton, UFC Ultimate Fight Night recap, more

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Wednesday Update

WWE

WWE extended its condolences to The Iron Sheik’s family, friends, and fans following his passing.Paul “Triple H” Levesque tweeted: “The legend. An all-time great performer and WWE Hall of Famer who brought his character to life and transcended our business. My condolences to The Iron Sheik’s family, friends and fans.”Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson shared a video sending his condolences to Sheik’s family.Ric Flair: “My Dear Friend Khosrow Vaziri!!! We Started Wrestling Together In 1972. Seems Like So Long Ago! We Crossed Paths So Many Times Over The Years & You Were Always So Entertaining. The Greatest Line You Ever Said To Me In 1972: 'If I Had Your Hair, I Would Be With Elizabeth Taylor!' Rest In Peace My Friend. Be As Entertaining To God As You Were To All Of Us!”Bray Wyatt: “We will miss you Bubba #HUMBLE”Natalya: “NOTHING BUT LOVE AND RESPECT to the Iron Sheik. The wrestling world has lost an icon and a very special person.”Jimmy Hart: “Sheiky baby – love you forever – so many incredible memories and moments from our time in Memphis, our 2005 HOF induction, and many more – you will be missed”Michael Hayes: “So sorry to hear of one of the all time greats passing away, Iron Sheik. Had a lot of funny times with ‘Sheiky Baby.’ My prayers and condolences to his family, friends and fans.”Mick Foley:The wrestling world lost a true legend today, with the passing of Khosrow Vaziri, better known to fans across the globe as The Iron Sheik. Although I never got to know The Sheik well, I was fortunate to have been on hand for two of his most iconic matches – his WWE title victory over Bob Backlund at Madison Square Garden on December 26, 1983 and his 'Boot Camp Match' with Sgt Slaughter at MSG in August, 1984. I also had the honor of wrestling the iron sheik for the first and only time – on a tour of Dominica in 1987.Khosrow Vaziri was truly one of a kind. I send my deepest condolences to his family, friends, and all those who loved him.Today is Foley’s 58th birthday.On his radio show today, Pat McAfee held a moment of silence for Iron Sheik.Paul Heyman was interviewed on Tetragrammaton with Rick Rubin.Zelina Vega, LA Knight, and Tiffany Stratton were guests on WWE’s The Bump this afternoon.

AEW/Other Wrestling

AEW joined the wrestling world in mourning the passing of The Iron Sheik.Miro reflected on how Sheik influenced him: “Iron Sheik had a huge influence in my career. Back in FCW ( WWE DEVELOPMENTAL SYSTEM )DAYS I had no idea about speaking on the microphone. then i went and studied his ability and that’s where things started to turn. Legit wrestler, pro wrestler and amazing entertainer. RIP”Jake “The Snake” Roberts: “RIP to my old friend The Iron Sheik. A true icon and someone who left a mark on wrestling that can never be erased. Another great one gone.”Taz: “I remember working small shows throughout the north east in the very late 80’s/ early 90s… Trying to learn my way Sheik was one of the very few veterans that always helped the young guys. Condolences to his family & friends. #Legend”The NWA tweeted: “The NWA is saddened to hear of the passing of one of the sports great legends, Hossein Khosrow Ali Vaziri, 'The Iron Sheik.' We send our condolences to all of his family, friends and fans.”Dave Meltzer discussed Iron Sheik’s passing during an appearance on The Jeff Marek Show today.Tony Khan spoke to Sports Illustrated about working with Bryan Danielson:Bryan and I have had a very close relationship since he came to AEW. He’s one of the greatest wrestlers of all time, and he’s one of the most intelligent people I’ve ever known. He has a great mind, and I love talking to him about stories, matches, ideas and psychology. I work with a number of people closely to bounce ideas off, and Bryan has been involved with us in the office more than ever lately. He had some very complimentary things to say about our relationship and working together, and to receive that type of praise from someone I respect so much, those are quotes I’d want on my tombstone.AEW shared Fight Forever character spotlights on Sting, Brodie Lee, and Abadon.During a virtual signing for K&S WrestleFest, Jim Ross was asked if we could see Mauro Ranallo join the commentary team for AEW Collision: “He’s a friend of mine… no. He has mental health issues. He can help any organization, Mauro. Mauro Ranallo is that good. He’s not a great traveler and that’s not knocking Mauro. It’s just he has issues that are more important than who’s doing Dynamite next week.”Trinity appeared on the Sherri Shepherd talk show to discuss her return to the ring.Big Japan wrestler Yuji Okabayashi announced that he’s taking an indefinite hiatus away from the ring starting in July.In response to a fan on Twitter, KENTA commented on potentially facing CM Punk: “I don’t really care who’s the original G2S. There is only one truth. If you want me to have match against Punk, Give Me correct amount of money. Other than that I don’t need to have this match. Seriously.”Richard Holliday noted that he’s reached one year without consuming alcohol: “Today marks one full year with no alcohol. Not stating I’m practicing Sobriety, but for the past year it simply didn’t interest me. If something doesn’t fit into YOUR lifestyle, cut it out! Don’t worry about what other people do. *Coffee is better anyway* Also, if alcohol is a problem for you, I can’t speak to the process of properly eliminating it, but there are plenty of people who can, and you should reach out, I’m sure they’d be happy to help.”Click Here: Giorgio Chiellini jersey sale

GT Audioworks Loudspeakers, Pass Labs Electronics, Basis Audio Turntable and Tonearm, Mosart Cabinet

The other big room with spectacular sound on the Rockville Hilton’s atrium level featured products from Pass Labs, GT Audioworks, and Basis Audio.

Every year, Steve Rabitz, vice president of sales at Sound Insight in Massapequa and Huntington, NY, puts on a grand show in a giant blue-lit space dominated some really tall GT Audioworks planar quasi-ribbon speakers.

Greg Takash, GT Audioworks’ personable engineer/designer, explained what distinguishes his planar ribbon speakers from other brands’ long-established quasi-ribbons: “My speaker”—GT Audioworks only makes one model—”has no crossovers, transformers, or anything else between the superlight drivers and the ($65,000) Pass Labs XS 150 mono amplifiers they are connected to. I voice my speakers with these Pass Lab amps, but they are very sensitive and do not require high power: just enough current to drive their 4 ohm impedance.” I have heard Greg’s GTA3.1R speakers many times and can attest to their directness, clarity, and super-descriptive spatiality. They can go one-on-one with the best speakers at any price, and they cost only $23,500/pair. The GT Audio Works open-baffle active modular subwoofer system starts at $7000.

I also met Basis Audio’s Alex Bourque, who said that the late A. J. Conti’s turntable designs are performing better than ever. The $115,000 Basis Transcendence turntable with the Basis Superarm ($15,750) and the My Sonic Lab Ultra Eminent Ex Cartridge ($7000) drove a Pass Labs XS phono stage ($45,000) and XS line-level preamp (also $45,000)—sitting on a beautiful Mosart “Quieten” wood cabinet by Bruce Schuettinger—to make big, elegant, relaxed sound.

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AEW House Rules Friday results: Dax Harwood vs. Daniel Garcia, two title bouts

AEW returned to the road for the first of two House Rules live events this weekend, kicking off at the Cadence Bank Arena in Tupelo, Mississippi.

Results come courtesy of Wrestling Bodyslam:

Britt Baker defeated Ruby SohoJay Lethal & Satnam Singh (w/ Jeff & Karen Jarrett) defeated The Boys (Brandon & Brent Tate)Powerhouse Hobbs defeated Shawn SpearsMax Caster defeated Pat BuckMatt Hardy, Jeff Hardy & FTW Champion Hook defeated Juice Robinson, Kyle Fletcher & Preston VanceAEW Women's Champion Toni Storm (w/ Ruby Soho) defeated Skye Blue to retainDax Harwood defeated Daniel GarciaTBS Champion Kris Statlander defeated Anna Jay A.S. to retainOrange Cassidy & Darby Allin defeated Big Bill & Ethan Page

Notes:

The Harwood/Garcia match went to a 20-minute time limit draw before Tony Khan came out and restarted the match so there would be a winner.This was Storm's first title defense since winning the belt last Sunday at Double or Nothing.AEW heads to Huntsville, Alabama's Propst Arena at the Von Braun Center with the following advertised lineup:TBS Champion Kris Statlander defends against Lady FrostAEW Women's Champion Toni Storm & Anna Jay A.S. vs. Britt Baker & Skye BlueDarby Allin & Orange Cassidy vs. Daniel Garcia & Matt MenardHook & Jeff/Matt Hardy vs. Big Bill, Ethan Page & Preston VanceJuice Robinson vs. Pat BuckMax Caster vs. Tony NesePowerhouse Hobbs vs. Shawn SpearsJeff Jarrett & Satnam Singh vs. The Boys (Brent & Brandon Tate)

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Just In from CAF (Part I): Audio Note UK DAC and Cabling, Acapella Audio Arts Music Server, Integrated Amplifier, Loudspeakers, and Cabling, HRS Equipment Rack

Veteran Palo Alto, California distributor Audio Federation presented a system that included large horn-loaded speakers and Audio Note UK gear, two of my favorite things.



Staged by Cornelia and Michael Davis, the beautiful-looking Audio Federation assemblage consisted of the Acapella Audio One music server ($6875), Audio Note UK DAC Five Signature ($98,355), Acapella LaMusika integrated amplifier ($110,000), new 93″ tall, 450lb Acapella Audio Arts Campanile 2 loudspeakers ($66,500/pair) with an updated spherical horn midrange (95dB at 8 ohms), and Acapella and Audio Note UK cabling.


Streaming a 44/16 file of the Mercury Living Presence recording of Brahms’ Piano Concerto No.1 in B flat major performed by Gina Bachauer, the sound was very large scale, clear, dynamic, and clean.

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NWA crowns Crockett Cup 2023 winners

NWA has crowned the winners of the Crockett Cup 2023 tournament. 

Trevor Murdoch & Mike Knox defeated Blunt Force Trauma (Carnage & Damage) in the finals of the Crockett Cup 2023 to win the tournament at Sunday's NWA pay-per-view event. 

After a main event match that included a referee bump, plus interference from Aron Stevens with a loaded glove, Knox and Murdoch hit Carnage with High and Low to secure the victory and capture the Cup. 

NWA president Billy Corgan and David Crockett presented Murdoch & Knox with Cup to close the show and wrap the two-night pay-per-view event. 

Earlier in the evening, Kamille defeated Natalia Markova to retain the NWA World Women's Championship, EC3 defeated Thom Latimer to retain the NWA National Heavyweight Championship, M95 defeated Angelina Love & Max the Impaler to retain the NWA World Women's Tag Team Championship, The Country Gentlemen retained the NWA United States Tag Team Championship in a gauntlet match, and Kenzie Paige retained the NWA Women's TV title in a DQ loss against Ruthie Jay. 

Elsewhere on the card, Colby Corino won a scramble match to earn a future NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship match against Kerry Morton. 

Our full report on Sunday's show can be found here. 

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dCS Rossini Player & Rossini Clock

It has been 20 years since I first became aware of the British company Data Conversion Systems, which manufactures audio products under the dCS brand. Rather than use off-the-shelf conversion chips, the groundbreaking dCS Elgar D/A converter, which I reviewed in our July 1997 issue, featured a then-unique D/A design that they called a Ring DAC. This featured a five-bit, unitary-weighted, discrete DAC running at 64 times the incoming data’s sample rate—2.822MHz for 44.1kHz-based data, 3.07MHz for 48kHz-sampled data and its multiples—with upsampling and digital filtering and processing implemented in Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs). Oversampling to a very high sample rate allows the word length to be reduced without losing resolution, and use of a low-bit multi-bit DAC makes for very high accuracy in the analog voltage levels that describe the signal. (If this seems like voodoo, for a given signal bandwidth, bit depth and sample rate are related. To oversimplify, double the rate, and you can reduce the bit depth by one bit while preserving the overall resolution.)


dCS followed the Elgar with other models of D/A processor and SACD player, all using variations on the original Ring DAC, until 2012, when the company launched the Vivaldi series—D/A processor, SACD transport, upsampler, and master clock—based on a comprehensive revision of the concept, and which Michael Fremer reviewed in January 2014.


The earlier Ring DAC used quad latches (a circuit element that can be instantaneously “flipped” between two stable states) to select current sources based on metal-film resistors. The new Ring DAC design still included high-speed latches and precision metal-film resistors, but instead used 48 individual latch chips said to eliminate between-latch, on-chip crosstalk, resulting in lower jitter. A pair of high-speed, software-updatable FPGAs replaced the earlier models’ mapping ROM chips, which allows individual errors in the DAC’s current sources to be randomized, which was claimed to reduce the level of distortion and spuriae by 3dB.


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The Vivaldi components are expensive—the SACD Transport costs $41,999, the DAC $35,999—so it was welcome news to see, at the 2015 Rocky Mountain Audio Fest, the introduction of the somewhat less costly Rossini models, which also use the new Ring DAC. The line comprises the upsampling CD/Network player ($28,499), an upsampling D/A processor ($23,999), and a master clock ($7499). As Michael Lavorgna had reviewed the Rossini DAC and the Clock for our AudioStream site, I asked for a sample of the Rossini Player to review (footnote 1). It arrived accompanied by a sample of the Rossini Clock.


Rossini Player
Superficially, the Rossini Player resembles the dCS Puccini SACD player ($18,999), which I reviewed in the November 2009 issue, along with the matching U-Clock ($5499). But while the Rossini doesn’t play SACDs, it accepts digital audio from external sources via: a USB Type B port; two AES/EBU ports that can be used singly or in parallel to handle DSD data from a dCS Vivaldi, Scarlatti, or Paganini SACD transport; a TosLink input; and two S/PDIF inputs, one on an RCA, the other on a BNC jack. A USB Type A port accepts a thumb drive so that audio files stored on the drive can be played, and an Ethernet port permits audio files stored on other devices on the network to be played, as well as music from online streaming services Spotify, and Tidal, and from Apple devices via Apple’s AirPlay. File formats supported include all major lossless PCM codecs up to 24 bits sampled at up to 384kHz, plus DSD in DoP format and native DSD up to DSD128. The only format it doesn’t support is 32-bit floating-point WAV, which Pro Tools now works with.


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As with earlier dCS players, a standard feature of the Rossini is upsampling to the DSD format, and it adds selectable DXD upsampling (PCM at 352.8kHz or 384kHz) as an option. Like the Vivaldi, the Rossini offers a choice of reconstruction filters; Filters 5 and 6 operate at 44.1kHz and 176.4–384kHz, while Filters 1–4 work at all sample rates from 44.1 to 384kHz. From the manual: “Filter 1 offers the sharpest cutoff, least Nyquist imaging but longest energy smear. Filter 4 gives the gentlest rolloff (usually with significant Nyquist imaging) but the shortest transient response with least energy smear.” The four filters available for DSD playback progressively reduce the level of ultrasonic noise.


The front-loading CD mechanism is the Stream Unlimited JPL-2800 SilverStrike. The Rossini’s Ring-DAC analog board is claimed to be the fifth generation of the one originally designed for the dCS950 Pro DAC and is the same as used in the Vivaldi line. The power supply features separate transformers for the digital and analog sections, and multistage voltage regulation.


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The panels of the Rossini’s enclosure are machined from aerospace-grade aluminum, with internal damping applied to reduce vibration. The front panel echoes the “wave” contouring first seen on the Vivaldi, but in simpler form. A rectangular display to the left of the CD drawer shows source, file, and setup information; when the volume is adjusted either with the app (see later) or with the control on the other side of the drawer, this changes to a large numeric display in dB that can be seen from across the room.


Rossini Master Clock
The Rossini Player can be used by itself or with one of the dCS Master Clocks. The two word-clock inputs on its rear panel are on 75 ohm BNC jacks; one accepts a 44.1kHz TTL-level signal, the other 48kHz. These inputs use a multistage Phase Locked Loop (PLL) system to minimize jitter. The Rossini Master Clock can output to the Rossini Player’s word-clock inputs, via two short lengths of coaxial cable, both 44.1 and 48kHz clock signals. The Player is then set to auto-clocking mode (“W” on the Player’s display), so that each family of sample rates—44.1, 88.2, 176.4, and 352.8kHz, or 48kHz and its multiples—is decoded using the appropriate master clock.


1116dcs.clock.jpg


dCS says that the Rossini Master Clock uses a microcontroller to ensure smooth frequency correction as the temperature changes, this approach claimed to give “a more stable result than either oven-controlled crystal oscillators or even atomic clocks.”


I don’t need to be convinced of dCS’s philosophy of using an external word-clock generator. In 2005 I reviewed the dCS Verona clock, then priced at $6995. With the Verona clocking dCS’s Verdi SACD transport and Elgar Plus DAC, I wrote: “there was an authority to the sound that I didn’t remember from the system pre-Verona.” Without the Verona the “sound was the same, but there was less ‘there’ there . . . the soundstage was slightly less developed, and the sense of images of musicians and a vocalist hanging there in the space between and behind the loudspeakers was slightly diminished.”


1116dcs.clockbac.jpg


Like the Verona, the Rossini Clock offers the choice of applying to its clock signals dither—a small random timing offset—this selected with two front-panel buttons. Dither avoids the “dead zone” that receivers using a PLL with a very narrow acceptance window can suffer from. I had no problems using the Clock without dither, but ended up leaving it switched on. I’m a belt-and-suspenders guy.




Rossini App
Perhaps as important as the technology used in the Rossini hardware is the fact that every function of the Rossini Player can be controlled with an iOS app. And not only such regular functions as source selection, CD transport controls, and the choices of reconstruction filter and upsampling, but selecting files to be played from a USB stick or, via the UPnP interface, files on any network devices running a UPnP server software. The Rossini app also features a configuration wizard to allow easy setup of a Rossini Player or DAC.


I began my auditioning using v.1.1.8 of the app, then a beta version of the upgraded version, v.1.2.3, which includes Roon endpoint integration as well as some unspecified enhancements. I loved the app. My only criticisms are: 1) With the app that controls the Aurender N10, I’ve gotten used to the music fading down when I press Pause. With the Rossini app, the music stops immediately. 2) The volume-control icon on my iPad mini is a bit too small for my fat fingers to repeatably set the level. I know—First World Problems!




Listening
The first matter to address with the Rossini was which upsampling algorithm to use. In general with CD-sourced music, I preferred the DSD upsampling, which slightly increased the sense of spaciousness of the soundstage. But some hi-rez rock recordings—such as “Under Pressure,” from Ray LaMontagne’s Pink Floyd–tinged Ourobouros (24/96 FLAC download from RCA/PonoMusic)—sounded a little less aggressive in the treble with DXD upsampling. This was with Filter 4 (see later).




Footnote 1: I actually ended up with two samples of the Player. I began with the first sample (serial no. ‘51423), but continued with a second sample (serial no. ‘52118) when dCS discovered that the first sample had a minor manufacturing fault that had affected the first five units to come off the production line.

NEXT: dCS Rossini Player & Rossini Clock Page 2 »

COMPANY INFO

dCS (Data Conversion Systems), Ltd.

US distributor: Data Conversion Systems Americas, Inc.

PO Box 541443

Waltham, MA 02454-1443

(617) 314-9296

www.dcsltd.co.uk

ARTICLE CONTENTS

Page 1
Page 2
Specifications
Associated Equipment
Measurements
Jason Victor Serinus
MQA Playback

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Will Ospreay expects to stay with NJPW: ‘I just don’t want to live in America’

During an appearance on Insight with Chris Van Vliet, Will Ospreay addressed his contract status.

Ospreay stated last month that his NJPW contract is set to expire in February 2024. That led to speculation over whether Ospreay could jump to another promotion, but Ospreay clarified that he expects to come to terms on a new deal with NJPW.

Ospreay reiterated that while speaking with Van Vliet, noting that he just doesn't want to move to the United States.

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"I am very confident that me and New Japan are going to work something out because I just don't want to live in America," Ospreay said. "That's my full-stop thing. I just don't want to."

Ospreay admitted that he's tipping his hand a bit by saying he doesn't want to live in the US.

"I'm basically saying, we'll sort something out [with NJPW]," Ospreay said.

Van Vliet asked Ospreay what he has left to accomplish in NJPW:

I just like doing it. I can always reinvent, I can always change it up. Right now, the United Empire is real hot. Merchandise sales with us are real good in Japan. Like, we’re number one faction in New Japan voted by Tokyo Sports and fans. I can feel something that — it wasn’t the best start with the United Empire because of COVID and everything. There was no reason for myself, O-Khan, Jeff [Cobb], and [Aaron] Henare to be put together, but we just made it work. There was a bunch of things that always happened, but in the end, we finally got all the group together. Ten jewels make the crown. So like, I can’t walk around in Japan now without at least being stopped once or twice a day [with] people doing the [United Empire hand sign].

While contracted to NJPW, Ospreay has made several appearances on AEW television. AEW and NJPW are joining forces for Forbidden Door 2023 in Toronto on June 25.

At NJPW Dominion on June 4, Ospreay is facing Lance Archer in the finals of a tournament to decide the next challenger for Kenny Omega's IWGP United States Heavyweight Championship. Omega won the title from Ospreay at Wrestle Kingdom 17 this January.

The full interview with Ospreay is available to watch below:

DALI Callisto 6 C wireless loudspeaker

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PS Audio’s Paul McGowan has been sending out a daily newsletter by email since 2011. In his May 29, 2019 epistle he asked, “What would our world of high-end audio look like if there were only active wireless loudspeakers? If even the half-a-million-dollar mega-beasts were internally amplified and connected via wireless and controlled from an iPad? No more boxes. No more wires and cables. Only speakers.


“Would we have come full circle, back to the days when music reproduction systems were self-contained?” he concluded.


As I read Paul’s newsletter, I had just started to write this review of a wireless speaker from Danish manufacturer DALI (Danish Audiophile Loudspeaker Industries), the Callisto 6 C, a pair of which has been living in my listening room for the past two months. The Callisto 6 C costs $5750/pair including a DALI Sound Hub fitted with a BluOS NPM-1 module (see later) and is indeed a self-contained music reproduction system.


Going without wires
Stereophile has reviewed other wireless speakers in recent issues. Jim Austin reviewed Apple’s HomePod in August and September 2018, and Herb Reichert and I reported on KEF’s LSX in May and June 2019. What these loudspeakers have in common, other than an absence of connected cables—they do have wires for power—is that they use class-D amplifiers and powerful digital signal processing (DSP) to implement the crossover and optimize the loudspeaker’s performance in the time and frequency domains.


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Both the KEF and Apple also use DSP to adjust the speaker’s behavior to allow for its position in the listener’s room. The Callisto 6 C doesn’t include the latter capability, but what it does have when used with DALI’s Sound Hub is the ability to accept PCM audio data sampled up to 192kHz. (Internally, however, the Callisto system is limited to 96kHz.) The HomePod is restricted to sample rates up to 48kHz, and while the KEF can decode 176.4kHz and 192kHz PCM data, it can only do so with a wired Ethernet link.


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The Sound Hub is a relatively small black box with a circular display centered within a front-panel volume-control ring, just below three control buttons. A second, square display on its top panel is active when a pair of Callisto speakers is connected (see later). According to DALI, the Hub connects to the speakers with either a 2.4GHz or 5.8GHz Wi-Fi link, whichever offers the best quality, using “a proprietary 30-bit protocol.” This link transfers uncompressed, 24-bit I2S-formatted audio data sampled at 96kHz, “utilizing the remaining bits to control volume, speaker ID, and other control data.” This link is bidirectional—swipe your finger left or right along the top panel behind the gently curved front baffle of one of the speakers and you can adjust the levels of both, with the volume indicated with white-LED bargraphs on their baffles beneath the woofers and in numbers on the Sound Hub’s front-panel display. Each speaker also has an analog input on a back-panel RCA jack; when the speakers are hard-wired, the analog signal is converted to 24/96 digital and the volume control is disabled.


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On its back panel, the Hub has analog inputs (one pair on RCA jacks, another on a 3.5mm stereo jack) and three S/PDIF digital inputs(one coaxial and two optical TosLink). Wirelessly, the hub accepts Bluetooth input, including aptX-HD. A Type A USB port provides 5V power for a Chromecast Audio dongle or to charge phones, and there is a service port. Also on the rear panel is a pair of preamplifier outputs and a mono subwoofer output, plus two ports for plug-in modules. One of those ports can be occupied by the BluOS NPM-1 module, which is included with Sound Hubs sold in North America; the module adds Ethernet and Wi-Fi network connections to allow control of the Callisto/Sound Hub system and the transmission of data from a NAS, with MQA decoding, using the Bluesound BluOS Controller or Roon apps. The Sound Hub is supplied with a remote control that connects via Bluetooth.


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The Callisto 6 C
I am 600 words into this review, and I haven’t yet discussed the loudspeakers. The Callisto 6 C is a tall, slim tower, just over 39″ tall. An optional pair of spiked outrigger stands provides stability on carpeted floors.


The last DALI loudspeaker I reviewed was the Rubicon 8, in March 2015; the Callisto 6 C features a line-up of drive-units similar to the Rubicon’s, but with two woofers rather than three, these operating below 2.6kHz. These woofers feature a unique cone material—paper pulp impregnated with a matrix of wood fibers, the combination said to give a better controlled transition from pistonic motion to break-up—and the cone is terminated in a soft, low-loss rubber surround.


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Like the Rubicon, these woofers use what DALI calls their Soft Magnetic Compound (SMC) in the magnet pole pieces. Conventional magnetic materials suffer from hysteresis: It takes longer for them to be demagnetized than to be magnetized, which results in distortion, especially at high frequencies. If the pole pieces could be made from a material that is highly susceptible to magnetization but is also an electrical insulator, the hysteresis and the resultant distortion, especially third-order, would be very much reduced. SMC is formed from small particles of iron that are each coated with an insulating material to create a substance that is still highly ferromagnetic but has a very low electrical conductivity—about 1/10,000 that of iron. This dramatically reduces hysteresis. The Callisto woofer’s SMC pole piece is surrounded with a copper ring to minimize the modulation of the magnetic field by the current fed to the voice-coil.


The woofers are loaded with two flared ports on the rear of the enclosure. DALI CEO Lars Worre holds strong opinions on the behavior of reflex systems, feeling that the ports should be used more to reduce distortion rather than to achieve the ultimate low-frequency extension. Worre told me that the textbook reflex tuning, where a Q of 0.7 gives maximally flat extension and a response that is 6dB down at the port tuning frequency, compromises the woofer’s behavior in the time domain and results in too much bass in real rooms. (“Room gain,” the reinforcement of a speaker’s bass due to reflections from the boundaries, typically tilts up the low-frequency output by approximately 4dB/octave below a corner frequency that is inversely related to the size of the room.) DALI speakers use what Worre refers to as “Fast Tuning,” where a lower-Q woofer alignment gives sufficient in-room bass extension coupled with much lower group delay at low frequencies and reduced ringing at the port tuning frequency.


Also like the Rubicon, high frequencies are handled by a pair of units: a conventional soft-dome tweeter, this a little larger than usual (1.15″), and a ribbon supertweeter 0.67″ wide and 1.77″ tall. There is no crossover between the two high-frequency drivers: The ribbon tweeter rolls in above 8kHz and widens the horizontal radiation pattern above 10kHz, where the dome tweeter is starting its mechanical rolloff. This is intended to give a greater range than usual of seating positions at which listeners can hear a full high-frequency balance.

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COMPANY INFO

DALI A/S

US distributor: NAD Electronics International

633 Granite Court

Pickering, Ontario L1W 3K1, Canada

(905) 831-6555

nadelectronics.com

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