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TNT-Audio - Internet HiFi magazine (Italy)
"...the Role Audio Kayaks best the LS 3/5as quite nearly across the board. When we consider that the final version of the BBC monitor was priced at almost $1500 the amazing value of the Kayak is fully understood."
Role Kayak Loudspeakers
...Role Audio is a division of NSM Loudspeakers. The designers at Role seek to build perfectionist loudspeakers that are small, in the case of the Kayak quite small. Role believes that a loudspeaker must fit, both literally and figuratively, into a user's life. So, the products are svelte, understated yet quite elegant. The two floor standing designs, the Enterprise and the Windjammer strike and especially fine profile, looking rather like from AudioPhysic. The stand mounted Kayaks are joined by a flexible D'Appolito (MTM) design called the Discovery that is equally well suited as a front channel speaker, a center channel or a stand alone monitor. The EXP powered subwoofer rounds out Role's product offering. The entire Role line (save the EXP) employs various combinations of the same two drivers, a 4.5" woofer and a 1" tweeter. There are floor standing versions that are ported and stand mounted versions that are sealed. All benefit from very tight matching of drivers and meticulous selection of the crossover components. The smallest and most unassuming of the line is the nimble Kayak. At 8" tall by 6.5" deep and a mere 5.5" wide in can only be called a very small speaker. For old guys like me, the similarity between the Kayak and the venerable BBC LS 3/5a is unavoidable. The Kayak is very clean in appearance. All six sides of the enclosure are well veneered in a unique birch finish. Birch is very rarely used in loudspeaker veneers and I have always wondered why. The last incarnation was from no other than Klipsch if my memory serves me. The light colored, medium grain of the Kayak contrasts nicely with the black grille to create the look of a serious if diminutive transducer. Eight inches is not a lot of space in which to array one driver atop another. In fact, spacing is so tight that the outer edge of the Kayak's woofer overlaps with the trim ring of the tweeter. Both drivers are well mounted to the baffle and the speaker looks equally at home, if a tad less domesticated, with the grill removed. On the rear of the speaker are a single pair of the superb Superior binding posts mounted directly to the speaker. I despise those horrible little cups that lesser speakers use, and the sight of those high quality posts right out in the open warmed my heart. For those of you who may not be aware, the Superior posts are truly the finest posts available. They may lack the neoindustrial look of an all metal post, but they are better in every other respect including strength, sonics, durability and suitability of virtually every type of connector. Be aware of poor imitations, but once you use these posts you'll have a very hard time being happy with any other design. All in all, the Kayak is impressively designed, assembled & outfitted. My only concern in setting this speaker up was finding a suitable stand. In order to get the tweeter to a reasonable listening height, something in the neighborhood of a 30" stand would be needed. I had a 20" and 25" pair on had but I ended up using a custom pair of 32" stands that I built out of cinder blocks and construction cement. They are among the most rigid, cost effective and sonically neutral stands that I have ever used. They look, however, like hell. Though the nice folks at Role
Audio said that they routinely run their speakers in at the factory,
I used my own tried and true method of assuring that the drivers
and crossover networks are well broken-in. The technique involves
placing both speakers face to face, just as close together as
possible. Once I got the Kayaks well broken in I turned to my latest reference recording for tonal and timbral neutrality. The record is called Krushevo (M•A Recordings M044A [cd]) and it is nothing less than the finest recording of two guitars that I have ever heard. My review of this CD will appear on this site soon, so watch for it if you're a lover of fine guitar and superb recordings. The featured guitarists are Vlatko Stefanovski and Miroslav Tadic. Track five is a haunting duet called Proseta Jovka Kumanovka. Through the Kayaks the images of the Ramirez and Sakura guitars float well clear of the speakers, their subtly different voices clearly differentiated. It is very easy to forget that one is listening to a $600 dollar speaker and become lost in the music. Next up was the 20 bit remastering
of Glenn Gould's version of the Liszt transcriptions of Beethoven's
Symphony No.6 (Sony SMK52637 [cd]). The comparatively monochromatic
sound of a piano lays the sound and tonality of symphony bare.
The result is that the listener hears nuances of tone and melody
that were likely missed in the wave of timbres that emanate from
a full orchestra, at least we hope. Iris DeMent's "Troublesome
Waters" from her My Life CD (Warner Bros. 9 45493-2 [cd])
is an excellent test of a speaker's neutrality in the most critical
(to my ears) region of the spectrum, the upper mids. The Kayaks
sounded quite good on this cut, with a well balanced sense of
focus on the fundamental of Iris' voice, and a nicely rounded
acoustic portrayal of the rest of the musical instruments. The Kayaks showed their best on one of my favorite reference recordings, Arcangelo Corelli's "Concerto No.IV in D Major." (Harmonia Mundi HMU 907014 [cd]). I was doing some work on my computer when the sound of the Adagio-Allegro wafted down the hallway and into my office. The sound of the strings, the very music, was breathing with life. I went into my listening room and was enthralled. The Kayaks capture the spirit of the baroque instruments and the sense of space superbly, for a speaker of any price. Once again, truth of tone and timbre creates an emotionally stirring musical experience. Excellent... As I noted before, the Role Audio
Kayaks look very much like the classic LS 3/5a and since I happen
to have a nice pair of Spendors I couldn't help but compare the
two products. As an aside, I always found the Spendor version
of this BBC spec'd classic the best and the Rogers version the
weakest. The simplicity of small speakers
can make their comparative weaknesses more tolerable than a larger
design. In loudspeakers, size is often a cause of coloration
in itself. The little Kayaks are smooth and easy to listen to
for extended periods. They reward quality associated equipment,
yet their self-effacing character make them accepting of less
than optimally matched systems and marginal placement. The Kayaks
have softened my disdain for loudspeakers and, though it may
not seem like it, this is high praise indeed.
© Copyright 2001
M.L. Gneier - http://www.tnt-audio.com
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