{"id":2009,"date":"2024-06-15T11:45:36","date_gmt":"2024-06-15T11:45:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/?post_type=review&#038;p=2009"},"modified":"2024-06-15T11:45:36","modified_gmt":"2024-06-15T11:45:36","slug":"gershman-acoustics-grande-avant-garde-loudspeaker-2","status":"publish","type":"review","link":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/index.php\/review\/gershman-acoustics-grande-avant-garde-loudspeaker-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Gershman Acoustics Grande Avant Garde Loudspeaker"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\"><strong>Gershman Acoustics<br>Grande Avant Garde Loudspeaker<\/strong><br>Hi Fi + issue 187<br>By Roy Gregory<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cGershmans bring living, breathing performers to<br>your room, with body, presence and a natural<br>ability to engage and entertain\u2026<br>\u2026 they perform beyond price and beyond<br>expectations\u201d<br>Gershman speakers don\u2019t look like other<br>loudspeakers \u2013 but surprisingly often, other<br>loudspeakers come to look like the Greshmans.<br>Estalon\u2019s striking XB caused a stir when it was first<br>launched a few years ago \u2013 but followed firmly in the<br>footsteps of the Gershman GAP-828, already an<br>established model when it was reviewed way back in<br>Issue 44. Likewise, at first glance, many people will<br>mistake Gershman\u2019s Grande Avant Garde for<br>Wilson\u2019s Sabrina \u2013 even though the original Avant<br>Garde (sans base \u2013 which makes it look even more<br>like the Sabrina) predated the Wilson model by almost<br>two decades. It would be a mistake to read too much into these aesthetic<br>coincidences, but they do illustrate something of the Gershmans\u2019<br>individualistic and innovative streak. The company\u2019s speakers break more<br>than just aesthetic moulds \u2013 and have done so for years \u2013 with conspicuous<br>musical success, success that has imbued them with long working lives and<br>eventual acceptance (and even adoption) of their \u2018different\u2019 cabinet shapes<br>and appearance.<br>These days, the Avant Garde\u2019s tapered, truncated cabinet and sloping baffle<br>looks almost familiar, so widely has it been imitated. It\u2019s tempting to surmise<br>that the distinctive oblong base added to create the Grande Avant Garde was<br>a response to this general acceptance of the speaker\u2019s looks, but in fact it<br>simply illustrates another essential aspect of the Gershman credo, an attitude<br>that might best be describes as, \u201cNever stop experimenting\u201d. Even so, this<br>developmental imperative has always been harnessed to a stable core<br>philosophy; for all their distinctive looks, acoustically and electrically, the<br>different Gershman speakers share common and consistent DNA. What<br>defines a Gershman? Extended low frequencies at the expense of<br>overall efficiency and an extremely low system signature. As wildly<br>different as they might look, one to another, all Gershman speakers<br>have two things in common \u2013 inherent musicality underpinned by<br>surprisingly deep bass. The Grande Avant Garde (or GAG) reviewed here<br>stands a little under a metre tall (plus cones or feet) but its tapered cabinet<br>appears smaller and less intrusive than that. The bottom of the cabinet proper<br>is roughly 300mm square, the oblong base extending back behind it to almost<br>twice that depth. Its form factor is neat and discrete \u2013 yet the specs quote a &#8211;<br>3dB point of 22Hz and 89dB sensitivity. It\u2019s the sort of number that has you<br>assuming that the small enclosure contains a heavily equalised, active bass<br>unit \u2013 probably pointing downwards. But actually, the GAG is an entirely<br>passive design, its prodigious and clearly audible low-frequency prowess the<br>result of clever acoustic design.<br>The driver line up in the GAG looks pretty standard, consisting of a 25mm<br>Peerless soft-dome tweeter, a 90mm Audax carbon-fibre coned mid-range<br>and a proprietary, 180mm aluminium bass unit. What\u2019s not obvious is that the<br>bass-driver is a Gershman-designed, dual voice-coil unit, making this a three\u0002and-a-half-way speaker. The tapered main cabinets, with their divided,<br>sharply sloping baffles arrive packed separately from the oblong bases. Their<br>bottoms feature heavily rebated shoulders and these sit into a square opening<br>in the top of the base, the junction sealed and decoupled by a neoprene<br>gasket. Stability is aided by a large, circular weight set into the cabinet\u2019s<br>underside that also helps create a distributed vent between it and the air<br>volume enclosed by the base element. Gershman describe this arrangement<br>as the BCT (Back-wave Control Technology) and as the name suggests,<br>along with the resistive line in the main bass enclosure, it is designed to trick<br>the bass units into \u2018seeing\u2019 a larger volume than is actually there. The<br>combination of tuned venting and the interior matrix constructed within the<br>oblong base helps create a pressure differential between the main cabinet<br>and the base. That draws the back-wave energy into the acoustically and<br>mechanically separate base element where it is dissipated, reducing both<br>intermodulation distortion and re-radiation through the cone.<br>Despite the not insignificant 40kg weight, the GAG is easily handled and<br>assembled, not least because of its two-part structure. I have only two<br>practical complaints. The most serious is that the ball-bearing tipped Delrin<br>cones supplied lacked long enough threads to allow for proper adjustment, or<br>locking nuts for proper stability. Instead I used Track Audio feet, which raised<br>the speakers by a couple of cms (necessitating a small forward rake to<br>compensate) but made levelling and angular adjustment simplicity itself.<br>Longer threads and locking collars on the original cones would have solved<br>this and would be well-worth Gershman instituting (spikes and lock-nuts are<br>already an option) as height off the floor and attitude are crucial to the<br>speaker\u2019s performance. My second observation (complaint is too strong a<br>term) concerns the supplied grilles. These are magnetically attached, slatted<br>MDF and the best thing that can be said about them is that they are easily<br>removed. In place and to my eyes at least, they rob the speaker of its<br>unobtrusive elegance as well as impairing transparency, focus and<br>immediacy. Despite their robust nature, I\u2019m not sure they even provide that<br>much protection; isn\u2019t a partially obscured driver, peeking through the slots<br>even more fascinating to the enquiring juvenile mind? I listened to the<br>speakers with them; I listened to the speakers without them; I consigned them<br>to the packaging where they remained for the duration.<br>Set up was completely straightforward, the bass being deep enough and<br>clean enough to let you clearly hear the impact of any positional shifts.<br>With the speakers positioned slightly closer together than normal but with<br>minimal toe-in, I drove them with the Levinson 585, the VTL S-200 or the CH<br>Precision A1.5, all you\u2019ll note, capable of delivering a healthy 200W\/Ch. That<br>really is the one proviso to a happy, long-term relationship with the GAGs.<br>They like power and lots of it, but provided that you feed them their preferred<br>diet they\u2019ll respond with some serious musical gusto. Unusually for these<br>days, the speaker is also bi-wirable. That means including a set of decent<br>jumpers in your cable budget, although it does allow for bi-amping, which<br>given the Gershman\u2019s bandwidth and modest sensitivity, could be an<br>attractive option.<br>I opened the original GAP-828 review with the comment that, \u201cIf hi-fi should<br>be about music rather than the system delivering it then these<br>Gershmans are a great place to start\u2026\u201d It\u2019s a sentence that can simply be<br>recycled for this review, over 10-years later, the GAGs exhibiting exactly the<br>same natural warmth, musical presence and easy, unforced dynamics that<br>have come to characterise the brand. In that, the Grande Avant Gardes are<br>(almost literally, given their shape) a real chip off the old block. But that<br>doesn\u2019t really help if you\u2019ve never heard their other speakers and nor does it<br>explain how, or how successfully, those qualities have been translated into<br>such a compact and domestically friendly design.<br>Listen to familiar recordings \u2013 pretty much regardless of genre \u2013 and<br>you should immediately notice how the music steps away from the<br>speakers. Despite their small size, the GAGs throw a huge acoustic space<br>that extends out beyond, behind and well above the speakers. Voices<br>are set at a natural height and the speakers seem to unearth a<br>soundstage from within the most unpromising of recordings. Not since<br>the Audio Physic Virgo have I heard a speaker that makes everything image,<br>but this Gershman gets close and, in many ways does it less spectacularly but<br>more convincingly. Modern studio mixes, like Michael Kiwanuka\u2019s Love And<br>Hate (Polydor 4783458) or Vampire Weekend\u2019s Father Of The Bride<br>(Columbia 19075930141) take on an open, dimensional quality, with<br>natural spatial separation of voices and instruments, layers and over\u0002dubs. Indeed, voices are one of the GAG\u2019s party pieces, whether it\u2019s<br>unearthing meaning from Steve Earle\u2019s slurred lyrics, or the realisation,<br>courtesy of Vampire Weekend\u2019s \u2018We Belong Together\u2019 that Danielle Haim<br>really can sing.<br>But to achieve these results, you are going to have to be prepared to use the<br>volume control. It\u2019s not that the GAGs need to be played loud, but in common<br>with many moderately efficient speakers, you\u2019ll find that each album has a<br>precisely preferred volume level. Too quiet and they sound overly warm and<br>shut in, too loud and they (or the system) start(s) to flatten and congeal. But<br>get it right and the sound blossoms, growing away from the speakers to<br>spread beyond them and fill the end of the room and, if the recording<br>supports it, pushing out the back wall. Voices breathe, instruments fall<br>into place and the sense of the song and the sense of performance lock<br>in. Get the system and the set-up right and these Gershmans bring living,<br>breathing performers to your room, with body, presence and a natural<br>ability to engage and entertain. It\u2019s only when you really start to analyse the<br>sound that you realise just how uncannily natural it is. Playing the Sayaka<br>Shoji\/Gianluca Cascioli recording of the Complete Beethoven Sonatas for<br>Violin and Piano (UHQCD\/DGG UCCG 90824\/7) the relative scale of the<br>instruments is beautifully captured, the weight and body of the piano, as its<br>phrases flit from playful to authoritarian, the body and intensity of Shoji\u2019s<br>Strad. And that\u2019s when it dawns on you; it really is Shoji\u2019s Strad \u2013 from its<br>concentrated tonality to her powerful technique, this is an instrument and its<br>voice that are remarkably reminiscent of her live performance. Not just that,<br>the Gershmans get the height just right. Shoji\u2019s seriously petite. The first time I<br>saw her I assumed that she was playing barefoot \u2013 only to discover that she<br>was perched on five-inch heels. And she still looked like a schoolgirl \u2013 which<br>made that massive musical power and the sheer authority in her playing all<br>the more arresting. Listening with the GAGs, the speakers project all of that<br>power and musical intensity and do it from an instrument placed just where it<br>should be \u2013 left of the piano and lower than you\u2019d expect. Getting those<br>voices at the right height was clearly no accident\u2026<br>This sense of natural perspective, combined with the weight, body and<br>presence that come with extension into the low 20s and 200 watts doing<br>the driving is the essence of Gershman DNA. It also defines the speakers<br>overall balance and presentation. That feeling of warmth and substance<br>translates to what has euphemistically become known as a \u2018mid-hall\u2019 balance<br>and that too is reflected in the perspective. The GAGs display none of the<br>shut-in character that bedevils some other traditional soft-dome \u2018hold outs\u2019,<br>but they do lack a bit of top-end bite, texture. So listening to the Shoji<br>Beethoven Sonatas, you are not doing it from the front row, but several rows<br>back. Likewise, familiar recordings like Natalie Merchant\u2019s Tiger Lily (Mo-Fi<br>MFSL 2-45008) present a holistic and slightly distant performance, lacking<br>some of the separation and stark immediacy that comes with higher-end<br>pretensions. Is that a bad thing? In no way: in fact, in many cases it\u2019s the<br>complete opposite, bringing a welcome sense of coherence and musical<br>integrity to proceedings. Barbirolli\u2019s legendary Enigma\u2026 with the<br>Philharmonia (UHQCD\/EMI UCCG 28019) presents an impressively coherent<br>soundstage and sense of acoustic space, to go with its natural string tone and<br>lively orchestration, the different instruments all bound into a single purposeful<br>whole by their almost physical relationship. ..<br>The Peerless tweeter is certainly sweet enough, but with a stated -3dB point<br>at 22kHz, there\u2019s no escaping the fact that a little more extension would help<br>with focus and transparency. I can absolutely understand Gershman\u2019s<br>reluctance to trade in the tweeter\u2019s considerable virtues in search of sonic (as<br>opposed to musical) gains, but as a purchaser, you need to appreciate that<br>it\u2019s a decision that you also are buying into.<br>By now it should be pretty obvious that the Grande Avant Gardes do big, do<br>bass and do imaging. They also do natural and naturally expressive. It\u2019s<br>a particularly impressive overall performance and balance of virtues. It<br>ain\u2019t hard to get big bass out of modest boxes \u2013 if you are prepared to accept<br>a crippling electrical load, low efficiency and the sort of constipated dynamics<br>that result in a total failure to emote. The fact that the modestly proportioned<br>GAGs achieve the scale and bandwidth that they do, while neatly side\u0002stepping the practical and musical pitfalls that so often result is testimony to<br>the efficacy of their chosen solution(s). The explanation offered for the<br>operation of the separate bass enclosure is either disarmingly or<br>disingenuously simple \u2013 but there\u2019s no ignoring the speakers\u2019 low frequency<br>performance. Likewise, the small, non-parallel and heavily braced cabinet<br>panels suggest a low-storage enclosure, its reluctance to contribute to the<br>sound or interfere with the music ample recompense for the cost and<br>complexity of construction. Building a two-part cabinet this shape is never<br>going to be cheap or easy, but in the end the results justify the means, results<br>that certainly stand out from the crowd. Just listen to a pianist shape a phrase,<br>accelerating through it or pausing for affect and the absence of slurring, lag or<br>hesitation in the notes tells its own story. This is one speaker system where<br>the music doesn\u2019t have to drag the cabinet with it. Instead, performances<br>proceed at their player\u2019s pace, fast or, just as importantly, slow. Unlike a<br>speaker or amp that leans on the leading edge to add pace to proceedings,<br>the Gershmans allow notes freedom of passage, without editing, cropping or<br>giving them a push. This lightness of touch is especially apparent in slow<br>movements, with poise, grace, delicacy and pathos all equally part of the<br>GAGs musical vocabulary. They deliver the full emotional range, whether<br>its expressed reflectively or explosively \u2013 and they transition from one<br>to the other with an enthusiastic fluidity that makes most other speakers<br>at this price level sound stilted and constricted. It\u2019s a sure indication that<br>as a design, they are sorted, both electrically and acoustically\/mechanically.<br>If you have tired of hi-fi hyperbole and audio\u2019s obsession with ultra\u0002resolution, the Gershman speakers are (and always have been) the<br>perfect anti-dote. Never less than engaging, they wrap you and your<br>recordings in the warm substance of their musical embrace, celebrating<br>the sense and the whole rather than the specific (and the all too often<br>disjointed) parts. Great music comes from musicians working in harmony,<br>the whole greater than the sum of the parts. The Gershman Grande Avant<br>Gardes have that happy knack of preserving both those parts and the<br>relationship between them. It\u2019s the very essence of high-fidelity \u2013 and<br>it\u2019s a rare draft. Not without their flaws or challenges, the GAGs demand care<br>and understanding \u2013 and a serious dose of serious power. But the<br>combination of musical quality and unobtrusive domesticity places them in an<br>extremely select group, right alongside the taller, similarly demanding and not<br>quite as wide-bandwidth Vienna Acoustics Liszt. Like the Liszt, they perform<br>beyond price and beyond expectations. Compared to your average big\u0002brand box, the Gershman Grande Avant Gardes do something quite different,<br>are doing it differently, and doing it really well. In this instance, it\u2019s very<br>much a case of Vive la difference\u2026<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Technical Panel:<br><\/strong>Type: Three and a half way dynamic loudspeaker<br>Loading: BCT composite enclosure with resistive venting<br>Driver Complement: 1x 25mm soft-dome hf<br>1x 90mm carbon-fibre mf<br>1x 180mm dual-coil aluminium lf<br>Bandwidth: 22Hz to 20kHz<br>Sensitivity: 89d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":758,"template":"","categories":[],"class_list":["post-2009","review","type-review","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/review\/2009","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/review"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/review"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/758"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2009"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/gershmanacoustics.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2009"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}