Arcam FMJ CD17 CD Player and FMJ A28 Integrated Amplifier (TAS 198)

Affordable Excellence

Related products:Arcam FMJ CD17 CD Player
Arcam FMJ A28 Integrated Amplifie

 

Affordable excellence. Funny how sensible, refreshing, and downright sane that phrase seems these days. Don’t get me wrong: For those who can afford it, which more or less excludes most of us, owning the finest gear our hobby has to offer most assuredly rewards with intense musical satisfaction and aural pleasure. But most of us don’t play in the Big Leagues, and there’s many a tale to be told about those who jeopardized financial security for the latest object of desire. (Fess up, guys: Ever smuggled a new piece of gear into the house hoping the wife wouldn’t notice?)

But thanks to companies like Arcam—and there are plenty of others—it is possible to enjoy mighty fine sound and real musical pleasure without threatening financial and marital stability.

Priced at a respective $999 and $1699, Arcam’s new FMJ CD17 compact disc player and 75Wpc FMJ A28 integrated amp quite frankly astonished me by their performance. Not that I don’t expect good sound from Arcam. This 30+-year-old company long ago earned a solid reputation for affordable excellence. And while I’ll hit the specifics soon enough, what especially impressed me about this Arcam tandem is the way they grab your attention and pull you into the music. Ultimately, for me, this is what separates really good audio from the pack. And I’m not talking about razzle-dazzle, exaggerated, “hi-fi” sound, but a musical delivery that’s natural and emotionally compelling. Curiously, this trait isn’t necessarily reflective of price. I’ve heard more than a few expensive items that have excelled at the sonic stuff (loads of detail, accurate frequency and dynamic response, wide open soundstaging, etc.), yet for whatever reason have failed to engage me on an emotional level.

These Arcam components do.

Before sitting down to “seriously” evaluate review samples, I generally like to start by casually playing a few tunes while puttering away at the computer in my office next to the listening room. The day I first fired up the Arcam gear—and Mike Marko, Senior Product Manager for Arcam in America, was kind enough to supply already broken-in samples—I happened to receive a few Mobile Fidelity CDs and LPs for an upcoming feature on that company. Among them was The Band’s Music From Big Pink. Having just written about the group’s drummer and vocalist Levon Helm’s Electric Dirt (also reviewed in TAS 198), and being a big fan of The Band’s debut effort, I slid the disc into the CD17’s drawer, hit play, set the volume, and walked back to the computer. Not for long, however.

Shortly after the opening strains of “Tears of Rage” I found my concentration was broken; I was completely distracted by the music. Now, kudos to MoFi for doing such a fine job remastering this terrific record—it has a clarity, air, detail, bass extension, and dynamic wallop that outshine my old Capitol rainbow-label LP, as a later direct comparison would reveal. And that excellence no doubt played a factor in the music’s pull. But that doesn’t detract from Arcam’s achievement—within seconds my mind was wandering to the music, my shoulders swayed as I typed, and I was soon in the listening room completely pulled into a record I know as well as any other, yet riveted as if I’d never heard it before. No wonder deadlines get blown!

The more I listened, the more evident it was that both of these Arcam components possess unusual transparency, tonal accuracy, and dynamic resolve. For instance, listening to Telarc’s recent release of The Planets (also reviewed in this issue) revealed impressive instrumental timbres and textures, a deep sense of hall ambience, air around instruments, and delightful dynamic nimbleness as well as dynamic range, which is ultimately restricted, if not hugely, by the integrated amp’s honest 75Wpc rating.

By the way, the FMJ A28 falls in the middle of Arcam’s integrated amplifier series, sandwiched between the FMJ A18 (50Wpc) and FMJ A38 (105Wpc). As with most of the company’s designs, the chassis, which comes in black or silver, is slim and functionally straightforward. The A28 offers six line-level inputs and a moving-magnet phono input, as well as the standard tape and preamp outputs. Unlike the more expensive Rega Elicit integrated reviewed in this issue, Arcam does not offer an optional mc card for the A28. Two sets of binding posts allow for single- or bi-wiring, as well as bi-amping when the A28 is mated with another Arcam power amp such as the A38. (My evaluations were conducted in the single-wire mode.)