Electrocompaniet ECC-1 review

Upmarket CD player that compromises on its design

Electrocompaniet ECC-1
The ergonomics of the ECC-1 could do with some improvement but otherwise it's a gorgeous CD player

TechRadar Verdict

Outwardly an attractive player, this is let down by a disappointing amount of graininess in the upper treble and also by annoying ergonomics and slow disc-handling

Pros

  • +

    Attractive design

Cons

  • -

    Slight graininess in upper treble

  • -

    Slow disc loading

  • -

    Annoying ergonomics

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Hot on the heels of Electrocompaniet's cheaper PC-1 CD player, the ECC-1 is the basic CD-spinner from the company's 'Classic' line.

It's an unusually large machine and very heavy too, mostly due to the use of thick steel for the casing, though the generous toroidal transformer will add a bit, too. The front panel is a piece of polished acrylic sheet, with the CD drawer in the centre.

ECC-1 rear

This includes the balanced output, which is not an afterthought – quite the reverse, in fact, as the phono sockets are wired to two pins of the XLR output connectors. A single digital output is available.

Sound quality

Although nothing seemed overtly wrong with the sound of this player, our listeners were not entirely drawn into its music-making and expressed a variety of reservations regarding it. None of these were major, but the overall picture is of a sound that's just not quite completely rounded-out, especially as regards fine detail and insight.

This became evident from the first track played, where one listener was concerned to find the timing unclear, while another thought the vocals and reed instruments were a little on the thin side.

Things picked up a bit in the classical tracks, with more satisfying tonality and better timing – or could it just be that most classical music relies less critically on this aspect and so it is less obvious if it is slightly compromised?

The large forces of Rachmaninov's Symphonic Dances were clearly differentiated in the lower parts of the spectrum, but comments were made indicating that a little more precision in the treble would have been welcome. Solo piano had plenty of body, but lacked a little refinement and had a slightly 'twangy' quality.

In our sighted listening, after the panel had departed, we found that the real problem seems to be a slightly grainy quality in the high treble. Bass and midrange, on the odd occasions when they occur with little or no treble accompaniment, are very clear and well defined, but the treble grain makes itself felt across the range – we get a lot of information from the high treble and when that is frustrated, our ears react badly to the whole sound.

It's a pity as it does compromise the performance of this player and conceals some good performance in areas such as midrange tonality and imaging.

Maybe Electrocompaniet could score a double whammy by addressing that at the same time as the ergonomics?

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