Call us anytime

0207 454 1234 , 01277 890 888

Drop us a line

[email protected]

Category: Music

Grab your chance to visit Linn in Scotland!

Linn love to welcome visitors at their factory in Glasgow, Scotland. So why not visit Linn and you’ll be given a guided tour of their purpose-built Richard Rogers-designed facility, get the chance to listen to your favourite music on the latest Linn systems and dine in the famous Linn canteen! You will also have a tour of the new Linn Appartment, showcasing all their systems in different rooms. Everything bearing the Linn name is designed and manufactured under one roof so you can see every stage of the process. If you want to visit Linn, drop us an email: [email protected] and we’ll contact you to arrange the details. Rococo Systems and Design [The Linn Factory]

Read More

Systems to fit your life: The Linn Klimax System

The Linn Klimax system reads like a designer wishlist: sound quality beyond compare; stunning looks and build quality; one discreet unit machined from a single block of aluminium and flanked by a pair of gorgeous loudspeakers. This isn’t just the last music system you’ll ever need — it’s the last system you’ll ever want. Featuring Klimax DSM, our best digital music player with inputs, and Klimax 350A, our highest-performing speakers with built-in power amplification, this an incredibly simple system which will make anything you listen to at home sound better. As one of the UK’s largest Linn Dealers and an Authorised Klimax Dealer, book your place in our Demo rooms and let us show you how a Linn Klimax system can transform the music you love. Call us on 0207 454 1234 or e-mail on [email protected] to book a date and time that’s convenient to you. View the Linn Klimax in more detail here.

Read More

Linn Akubarik – The Linn Activ Loudspeaker You’ve Been Waiting 40 Years For

40 years of Linn’s loudspeaker knowledge and expertise have been applied to produce the Linn Akubarik – a new Linn loudspeaker that stands apart from the crowd. Linn Akubarik includes a host of ground-breaking technical developments as well building on key technologies from Linn’s reference Linn Klimax 350A loudspeakers. What So Special About Linn Akubarik? There are many aspects to Linn Akubarik that make it a very special loudspeaker – so here are some of the highlights: Integrated With Aktiv filters and Chakra power amplification all on one board, the circuit layout is optimised for the shortest signal path, eliminating interconnections and reducing noise. Powered by Linn’s latest generation Dynamik, the loudspeaker is completely silent, thanks to efficient and passive cooling without the need for a fan. 3k Array Linn’s unique 3K driver array houses the mid-range, tweeter and super-tweeter drive units close together to replicate a single point source with wide dispersion, ensuring great sound wherever you listen. Isobarik Bass System Linn have gone back to their roots with an isobaric bass system cleverly concealed in the lower section of the loudspeaker cabinet to produce lots of rich, deep bass within a surprisingly compact package. Cabinet Already being hailed the ‘Baby Klimax 350A’, Linn Akubarik takes design cues from their reference loudspeaker. But the curves not only look beautiful, they’ve been designed with great sound in mind. The New Akurate System Completing the Linn Akurate system, Linn Akurate DSM and Linn Akubarik loudspeakers offer a new level of performance and simplicity, and provide the best value system available in the market at this price point. Linn Akubarik is available in Linn’s 6 standard or high gloss wood veneer finishes as well as over 200 high gloss colour finishes. You can choose between chrome or black 3K arrays, and the loudspeaker comes with a black painted stainless steel stand with stainless steel spike and lock nut system.

Read More

NEW to Rococo – Linn Kandid, the best cartridge Linn has ever made

40 years after the introduction of the Linn Sondek LP12, Linn are delighted to announce the arrival of the best sounding cartridge they have ever made – Linn Kandid. One of the key performance improvements comes as a result of removing the cartridge housing – probably also the most striking aesthetic difference Linn have made to Kandid. Stripping back the housing to expose the motor assembly has resulted in an even purer, cleaner sound than ever before. More accurate audio reproduction is achieved thanks to the repositioning of the stylus and cantilever within the body of the cartridge. The angle of the magnets and coil in the front pole piece has been off-set so that they are parallel when the record is playing which ensures perfect alignment for accurate movement on the record. Kandid is the perfect partner for the Linn Ekos SE tonearm. The chassis is machined from the same aircraft grade aluminium as the Linn Ekos SE headshell and features their 3-point mount for completely rigid and accurate coupling with the tonearm. Limited availability Linn’s production capacity for Linn Kandid cartridges is limited and as we anticipate very high demand for this product, the lead time for delivery could be up to 6 months, so it’s advisable to place orders as soon as possible. Tech spec: Cartridge type: Low output moving coil Stylus and cantilever: Slot mounted, 3um x 70um nude line contact diamond in boron cantilever Vertical tracking angle: 20 degrees Tracking force: 1.72g – 1.77g (1.75g preferred) Pin connection type: Flying wire with termination clips Recommended load: 70Ω ~ 1kΩ (determine optimum by listening) Separation at 1kHz: Better than 35 dB Channel balance at 1 kHz: +/- 0.5 dB Output at 1 kHz @3.45 cm/s: 0.4 mv Weight: 5.7 g (without stylus cover) This fantastic cartridge is limited so make sure you orders yours and fast! Available at Rococo here.

Read More

NEW to Rococo – Linn Sneaky DSM

Linn Sneaky DSM Fed up trying to squeeze the best possible sound from all your home entertainment with the kit you have? STOP! Look no further; suffer no longer because Linn Sneaky DSM has it all in one exceptionally neat package. Linn Sneaky DSM plays music from all sources at exceptional ear pleasing quality! Listen to CDs, downloads, online content, internet radio – without the performance compromise of a disc playing mechanism. With loads of inputs for all kinds of home entertainment, Sneaky DSM makes movies, games and TV all sound better than ever too. Built on the well-proven and trusted Linn DS technology, the Linn Sneaky DSM is an all-purpose digital streamer that fits easily into any space in any room. Simply add speakers to get started and expand later with separate amps or more rooms or areas such as patios or gardens. The sky really is the limit! Control is childs play and can be from your favourite gadget or a more generic house control system that everyone uses. But if you love your toys then you can control your Linn system from an iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, Android phone or tablet, PC or Mac. Browse artwork, create playlists and control all your music from a laptop, tablet or phone with free apps including Linn’s Kinsky control software. Sneaky DSM also comes supplied with our new simplified remote control that looks and feels great. The Linn Sneaky DSM is available in three beautiful finishes: Black, Silver and White, giving you the colour choice you need to match your interior design style. Features Plays digital music over a standard Ethernet network Fully integrated pre-amplifier and power amplifier Streams internet radio, podcasts and ‘listen again’ broadcasts Decodes FLAC, WAV, Apple Lossless (ALAC), MP3, WMA (except lossless), AIFF, AAC and OGG audio formats with up to 24-bit 192 kHz native sample rate Plays computer audio via Linn Songcast app e.g. iTunes, YouTube, Spotify, BBC iPlayer Songcast support allows synchronised playback of audio around the home 6 inputs (RCA Phono, HDMI, S/PDIF, Toslink) for connection and up-sampling of additional sources HDMI, S/PDIF and TOSLINK inputs, plus HDMI pass-thru Linn Dynamik Switch Mode Power Supply (SMPS) 2 channels of 33 W power amplification (stereo) or 4 channels of 33 W power amplification (bi-amped) High quality 4 pole Neutrik speakON connectors Compatible with UPnP™ media servers and UPnP™ AV 1.0 control points

Read More

Echoes of the French countryside

  We’ve been privileged over the years to work with some exceptional ensembles: The Avison Ensemble, Phantasm, Retrospect Ensemble and the multi-award winning Palladians. We are happy we can now add Trio Sonnerie to this esteemed list with the release of its new album ‘La Gamme’. Trio Sonnerie is one of the longest established and most highly regarded chamber groups working in Europe today. Led by the brilliantly talented violinist Monica Huggett, Trio Sonnerie presents an all-French programme for its Linn debut. In addition to the titular work, Marais’ La Gamme, the Trio takes on Forqueray’s fiendishly virtuosic Suite No. 1. Each performer has the opportunity to shine; the clean, crisp lines leave no room for anything other than top notch playing which the players deliver in spades. Download here: http://www.linnrecords.com/recording-la-gamme.aspx Towards the end of the first decade of the 18th century in Paris an unusual and ambitious project was under way for an imposing monument, surrounded by equally elaborate gardens. Le Parnasse Français, brainchild of the highly cultivated man of letters Titon du Tillet (1677-1762), was to be a celebration of the glorious succession of poets and musicians during the reign of Louis XIV. Increasing artistic ambition and rising costs lent the project an air of a mad folly and eventually it was abandoned. But even if the physical representation of such artistic giants as Corneille, Molière, Racine and Lully proved impracticable, Titon du Tillet set down his work in word. For this we can be grateful, for he provided us with vital biographical information about composers such as Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe, Louis Couperin, De la Lande, Bernier, as well as Marin Marais. Titon du Tillet tells us that, born in Paris on 31st May 1656, Marais studied first with Nicolas Hotman, then with the renowned viola da gamba virtuoso and pedagogue, Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe. According to Titon du Tillet, this opportunity was short lived for after a mere six months the older man realised that his pupil had surpassed him. In 1676 Marais became a member of Lully’s orchestra, L’Académie Royale de Musique; three years later he was appointed the Ordinaire de la chambre du Roi pour la viole, and remained in royal service until his retirement 46 years later in 1725. Marais’ five books of Pièces de Viole, covering the period 1686-1725, demonstrate the pervasive and incremental influence of Italian style, highlighting the threat to French cultural autonomy expounded in Le Parnasse Français. Whilst his Premier Livre (1686) respected the classical sequence of dances following a prelude, the Quatrième Livre (1717), published six years prior to La Gamme, significantly includes a section entitled Suitte d’un Gout Etranger containing 33 pieces of diverse character, titles and keys. It is therefore not surprising to find Marais’ continued exploration of Italian taste in his next publication. In 1723, two years before relinquishing his post to his son Vincent, and five years before his demise, Marais published three works in a single volume (presented here in its entirety): La Gamme et autres morceaux de simphonie pour le violon, la viole et le clavecin. In scope and instrumentation they are unique in Marais’ output. To be performed on the same instruments throughout- violin, viola da gamba and harpsichord – they explore the extraordinarily varied musical language of a mature composer. La Marésienne is a violin sonata with movements from the French suite mixed in equal measure with Italianate compositional idiom; Sonnerie is a chaconne on 3 notes – D, F, E – with a now emancipated independent viola da gamba part; and La Gamme, an ‘Opéra’ of some 35 minutes of continuous music, alternating between trio and duo textures. Titon du Tillet cites two works by Marais in Le Parnasse Français: ‘a pièce from his fourth book entitled Le Labyrinth, which passes through various keys, strikes various dissonances and notes the uncertainty of a man caught in a labyrinth through serious and then quick passages; he comes out of it happily and finishes with a gracious and natural chaconne. But he (Marais) surprised musical connoisseurs even more successfully with his pieces called La Gamme, which is a pièce de symphonie that imperceptibly ascends the steps of the octave; one then descends, thereby going through harmonious songs and melodious tones, the various sounds of music.’ In some ways La Gamme is, at nearly 900 bars in length, as unusual and unexpected to our ears as it must have been to contemporary audiences. Given Marais’ increasing predilection for character pieces, it was a short step from the classical French suite to creating a larger canvas from contrasting musical units. In Le Labyrinth he had found success following a programmatic scheme; in La Gamme an ascending harmonic scale, while less harmonically adventurous, provided a unifying element, both in figuration and long term structure. The 45 sections of over half an hour of musical thought, in the key sequence C, d, e, F, g/G, a, b, C/c/C, b, a/A, G/g, F, E, d/D, C, contain a myriad of changing characters, metre and tempi as well as instrumental textures. Dances and forms explored include an allemande, gigues, chaconnes, fugues, and rondeaux. The viola da gamba is by turns an obligato virtuoso – witness the extended F Major chaconne during the ascent – and a reinforcer of the continuo bass line. Transitions, often merely a single bar in length, ease us from one ‘holding pattern’ tonality to the next position, or foothold, on this musical colossus. Acknowledging in his Avertissement (notably also given in Italian) the very considerable length of La Gamme, Marais suggests possible divisions of the work into two, three or even four sections, ‘so as not to bore the listener’. Whilst not anticipating ennui in our listeners, we have however transplanted his advice to our modern age by dividing the work into four separate tracks for ease of listening navigation. Written on two staves, Sonate à la Marésienne comprises seven clearly delineated sections or movements within a continuous whole: prélude, allemande, courante, sarabande, chaconne, gravement, and

Read More

Playing Classic Recordings in Public: the Ways and Means of Intellectual Property in Music

Anyone who takes a look at a record has probably seen a warning that states that the recorded material isn’t intended for public performance. That means that permission has to be gained from the record company to play most vinyl in public. Getting this permission can be difficult, but it isn’t impossible. Most record companies that are still in existence can be contacted by phone or through the Internet. Giving them a call usually won’t help with granting performance licensing however. Writing a missive may be the best bet if the situation isn’t urgent. Fortunately, most professional DJ organizations and radio stations have departments that help people get permission to play some of their classic vinyl. Public Domain Recordings Public domain materials are not under copyright, and therefore can be used pretty freely. Records that were never copyrighted, like those made by some very underground groups as well as homemade albums, are generally in the public domain. Copyright expiration is putting large numbers of records into the public domain. When copyrights get very old, they wear off. That means that exceptionally old albums may carry with them no demand for royalties, so these can be played publicly without any real concern. When in doubt it’s always good practice to check against a database to ensure that a recording truly is in the public domain. It’s always best to err on the side of caution when one wants to avoid potential legal problems. Disc Jockey Licenses While it might sound completely absurd, some jurisdictions actually require licenses for disc jockeys. These usually once again involve ensuring that all appropriate copyright laws are followed. In some cases, authorities have actually enforced these laws. However, it should also be noted what public performance is not. When people sit around and listen to records, this isn’t a public performance. People who put a record on the stereo when they hold a party at their house aren’t in any danger. On the other hand, many jurisdictions consider playing copyrighted records over the loudspeakers at stores to be problematic. Interestingly enough some old background music services are still in business. These are worth exploring for those who enjoy that kind of thing. Some adventurous sorts have actually created a service that streams music straight off vinyl records from a background music system used in the late 1950s. This is another option worth checking into for publicly playing some old records for those who are in jurisdictions that would be legally acceptable. Of course, there are other reasons people have been weary of these services. After all, no one ever said background music records were interesting. Nevertheless, fans might be pleasantly surprised to know that a pretty heavy version of Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells was once publicly played through these records. Featured images:  License: Creative Commons image source Eric Blair writes about 60′s rock and vintage albums like Bob Dylan vinyl from www.SoundStageDirect.com.

Read More