Blue Sky System 5.1 review

Replicate the sound of a professional movie dubbing studio

TechRadar Verdict

For those looking for a more individual home theatre system, this THX active system is a great proposition. It's rich in character and is tailor-made for home theatre histrionics

Pros

  • +

    Clean, neutral, well-balanced performance with solid extended bass

Cons

  • -

    Some loss of air and subtlety and coarseness in mid/upper mid

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Blue Sky is the company formed by one of the creative lynchpins of American speaker legend Miller & Kreisel, who decided to strike out on his own. Its core business is active loudspeakers for the professional and studio worlds, but the Blue Sky package reviewed here is also appropriate for mid-to-large domestic home cinemas.

The company, Blue Sky International based in New York, has met with considerable success, including selling a substantial number of systems to the Skywalker Ranch postproduction facility, part of Lucasfilm, where they have been used for production work on big-budget films such as The Hulk, Tomb Raider and Finding Nemo.

More to music

Although designed as a home theatre product, the system does an acceptable job with music. The mid-band is smooth and layered, and the bass extended, but there is some loss of air and presence at the highest frequencies, giving a slightly cool, distant presentation.

There are some colouration artefacts in the central and upper mid-band and congestion in the treble that gives a rather coarse effect with complex sounds. Full orchestra in particular can be quite badly affected. Nevertheless, for much of the time the Blue Sky system is an elegant and persuasive performer, particularly in multi-channel mode where the low crossover point of the sats helps give the system a broad, even dispersion.

But while the Blue Sky works well (albeit with some caveats) as a music system, especially with multi-channel music, the system really comes together when used for home cinema.

There are two reasons for this. First, vocal intelligibility is extremely good. The satellites have been voiced with this in mind, and it has been achieved without any obvious artifice, though the colourations noted with music may have had the paradoxical effect of lifting vocal performance.

Its other main strength is the subwoofer. The SUB 12 is not the most sophisticated performer on the planet, but it has been designed with the studio world in mind, and it is more than capable of coping when real power is required to reproduce explosions and other loud special effects.

More impressive still is the way it fills out the sound during more prosaic passages. The opening numbers from Moulin Rouge, for example, are warm and full and powerful, and the whole system sounds comfortable and able to rise to the occasion when dealing with varied and incident rich soundtracks such as LOTR: The Fellowship of the Ring.

For those looking for a more individual home theatre system, this THX active system is a great proposition. It's rich in character and is tailor-made for home theatre histrionics.

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