Clearaudio Performance review

A listening experience that leaves us floating on air

The Performance features a ceramic alloy bearing material for the main shaft

TechRadar Verdict

The floating platter rids the sound of the signature imposed by the turntable plinth, and our LPs are reborn. Cor!

Pros

  • +

    Superbly uncompromised sound

    Good price

Cons

  • -

    No obvious failings

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You might have been mistaken for thinking that all the innovations in turntables had been long done with. Now well into its dotage, the senior format not only refuses to die off, but also continues to break new ground.

Clearaudio is unquestionably leading the charge in modern turntable development, and - from here at least - it doesn't seem like vinyl's last hurrah.

Hardly noticeable

The deck, when set-up properly, has one of the least obvious sonic signatures you can get from a turntable. The plinth's influence on the sound seems minimal and all that's left is you and the vinyl. Well, almost.

There's an arm and cartridge there, too. The Satisfy is easy to set up, but also easy to fiddle with. If you're the sort who can never 'fit and forget', you're in for a lot of tweak-time (secretly, I think that's more of a plus than a minus for those who enjoy a nice tweak).

Fortunately, that means the arm has a degree of freedom that almost matches the turntable itself, and it's a low-signature product, too. Which just leaves the cartridge... and that sounds open, fast and very natural, in the manner of the very best MM cartridges.

In fact, the Maestro is one of those MM cartridges that challenges the received wisdom that moving coil cartridges are intrinsically better (you can improve on the sweetness of the cartridge without sacrificing the speed with a good MC, but that would more than double the price of the turntable).

Its only real limitation is that it sounds dry with some 1970s recordings, but this isn't really a stumbling block, as many 1970s recordings do sound arid on modern equipment.

It's perhaps the most telling aspect of the Performance's, er, performance that sonic descriptions point toward the sound of the arm or the cartridge. When it comes to the turntable itself, the reviewer's job gets very hard indeed... because there's not a great deal to say!

It's as fast, dynamic and precise as the record on the platter and as quiet as the phono stage it's hooked to. And that, quite frankly, is high praise indeed.

We suspect that if you had a power supply akin to the one with the Ambient, with a more accurate speed control, the sound would improve by making the deck disappear still further. Perhaps if you changed the plinth structure, it would sound slightly deeper or even more accurate. But it's already so good, it's hard to pinpoint where improvements could be made.

If you want to liberate your vinyl, the solution seems to be to float the platter on air. You'll be surprised at how good it can be.

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