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Equipment Review

May 2000


Silverline Audio Sonata Loudspeakers

by Marc Mickelson

 

Alan Yun at Silverline Audio just keeps churning out new speakers -- you'll read reviews of his new SR20 and Panatella II speakers on SoundStage! soon -- but his more mature Sonata and Sonatina models are the fat part of his company's lineup. This is the case because of what the two speakers cost -- $3800 and $5500 per pair respectively -- as well as their tube-friendly nature and overall sound quality. I reviewed the Sonatina in issue 2 of our E-Mag, and in that review I compared it to the larger and more expensive Sonata. The idea was to divulge the ways in which the smaller, less expensive speaker was like -- and unlike -- its larger sibling and in so doing let you know which of the two models you might want to consider.

Well, now it's the Sonata's turn in the spotlight, and I find I have little to say about it that I haven't already said about the Sonatina. The first thing you notice is their good looks, and the pair I had, in birdseye maple, was not even the most lovely of the finishes (this distinction would go to briarwood). This didn't stop one of my non-audiophile friends from inquiring about the cost of the Sonatas when he saw them in my listening room. He thought they would compliment the floors in his living room, and he was right. I remarked in the Sonatina review that the speakers look like a model from Avalon, but what I didn't say was how different the products from these two companies are. While the Silverline speakers love tubes, especially low-powered ones, I have never heard a pair of Avalons driven by anything but beefy solid state (which is not to say it doesn't happen, only that I haven't heard it). The Silverline speakers are also considerably less expensive and offer a sound that is intrinsically different, more toward ease and civility. One thing the two speakers do share is sounding great at shows -- both companies' products were impressive at HI-FI '99 in Chicago and CES 2000.

Looks and show reputation are only window dressing; of course, it's how a product functions in your room and system that matters. As I found with the Sonatinas, the Sonatas offer airy and clear treble that has no intrinsic faults of its own. As with the Sonatina, the Sonata casts a very spacious soundstage that gives more than a hint of the space in which the recording was made -- if it's on the recording, that is. The midrange takes great advantage of SET amplification to give an exceedingly clear picture of voices, which don't sound thin, instead offering fine presence and dimension. I'm a Greg Brown junkie and listened to his The Poet Game [Red House RHR CD 68] and Further In [Red House RHR CD 88] more than a couple of times when the Sonatas were in my system just to hear Brown's chesty singing.

Where the Sonata veers from the sound of its smaller brother is in the bass, which is both deeper and weightier, as you would expect given its larger 10" woofer. However, where the Sonatina's bass is present but not readily noticeable, the Sonata's bass is fully accounted for when the recording has the bottom end to display. This can be a good thing if your amp controls the bass fairly well or a bad thing if your amp is all loosey goosey down low. Lower-output tube amps, especially triodes, can be a bit overly ripe in the bass, and the Sonata's big woofer will not be kind. I often wondered about bi-amping the speakers to tighten up their bass when it was needed, but then the Lamm monoblocks I use most of the time don't cause any problems with the Sonatas, so I didn't experiment. You may want to if you find, as I said in my review of the Sonatina, that you'd like the Sonata's bass "to have a little less play."

As I've indicated, there are many reasons to like the Silverline Sonatina and Sonata. In the end, given the similarities of the two speakers, the person who should consider the Sonata is someone who likes the Sonatina but wants deeper and weightier bass because this is essentially what the larger speaker offers. In my Sonatina review, I mentioned that experimentation with a subwoofer was not recommended because of worry for what might happen to the overall sound produced if integration weren't just right. The Sonata, however, gives you some or even most of what a subwoofer would offer and retains the good things about the Silverline sound.

If you are interested in either Silverline model, I would strongly suggest listening to both. You may find that the added low-end response of the Sonata is irresistible or that you can live with what the Sonatina offers -- as I could. Both speakers are worthy of your consideration if you're a tubehead and music lover.

...Marc Mickelson
marc@soundstage.com

Silverline Audio Sonata Loudspeakers
Price:
$5500 USD per pair; $6500 per pair in piano-black finish.
Warranty: Five years labor, one year parts.

Silverline Audio
2170 Commerce Avenue, Suite P
Concord, CA 94520
Phone: (925) 825-3682
Fax: (925) 256-4577

E-mail: sales@silverlineaudio.com
Website: www.silverlineaudio.com


Silverline responds:

We at Silverline Audio would like to express our hearty thanks to Marc for his very thorough and precise follow-up review on our Sonata speaker. The comments are positive and factual.

Once again, thank you for spending so much time and energy reviewing our Sonatas.

Alan Yun
Silverline Audio

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