
Listening to Garcia’s fatty guitar intertwined with Pigpen’s organ work is almost a religious experience for me. It’s as if I am sitting in a pew listening to these guys in a cathedral of sound. Coming down from my musical high between a book-perfect Dark Star, and a fun, but hard driving St. Stephen, I thought, “I gotta write a review of these room treatments!!”
So here I am. St. Stephen still playing in front of me makes me feel like a kid doodling during a church service, on a laptop.

It’s been a while since I’ve reviewed anything, and I’ll be honest, it’s been a while since I’ve made any changes to my system at all. After two or three years, a couple dozen amps, more digital front ends than I can remember, and many preamps, I’ve found pretty much what I was looking for. So I disappeared into the music for several months just enjoying the sound.
I’ve been keeping up a bit here and there, but not really playing the game lately. Nathan at Eighth Nerve convinced me to get off my rear and upgrade my room. Seems like perfect timing since I don’t really have anything else I want to upgrade. Nathan hadn’t steered me wrong in the past, and the Response treatments I had were great, so I placed my order.
What seemed like an eternity soon passed, and after playing FedEX’s version of “Where’s Waldo” with my package, I was ready to get down to business.
The Adapts arrived in a huge outer box with each treatment neatly and individually boxed. I pulled them all out and lined them up on the stairway to the listening lair. After reading the directions, which you DO need to do first, I sat down to listen one last time to the Response treated room.
People in the biz who have visited my room with measuring equipment have said that my in room response is one of the flattest they have seen, which surprised me, and really reinforced how good the Response series of products are. I was getting great sound, but at times, I was really not getting the vocals as nice and focused as I would have liked. I knew it was my treatment configuration because I spent quite a bit of time moving them around with different results. I could never find the right combination, however, and Nathan assured me that Adapts were the answer to all my problems.
Jumping back in time, I was pretty heavily into room treatment before I got the Response products. I had about $2,500 worth of Michael Green’s top of the line PZC’s for a while. When I moved into my new house, I had my own dedicated room instead of the huge vaulted, screwy shaped living room I was in previously. Once I put my PZC’s in place, I just felt like there was WAY too much absorption. I took all my PZC’s out except for three, and when I would add the fourth, I’d go from a big grand piano to a small upright, which was very frustrating.
I ordered the Response on faith, and I was handsomely rewarded with something that did exactly what I needed without the incredible absorption making my room dull and lifeless.
Back to the topic at hand.
After I removed all the Response products, I gave a listen to a few discs with no treatment. Putting it mildly, I threw up in my mouth just a little bit.

In all seriousness, I have absolutely no idea how anyone can listen with NO treatment at all. What was once a religious experience became a sort of preschool finger-painting exercise with sound smeared all over the place in such a chaotic manner. It was quite stressful going from Response to nothing, so I was happy to continue with my install.
Eighth Nerve has done a superb job engineering these products, and I can say that before even listening. The method of installation was just genius. The clear, acrylic brackets are no larger than they have to be, and are as unobtrusive as possible.

The Triangle product has a genius mounting that just screams out innovative. These are held in place by three springs attaching to a single point, and hanging onto one point of the ceiling. With the plastic bumpers installed, the mounting system makes them very easy to adjust perfectly so that the spacing is even all the way around.
I won’t waste a lot of words describing the install process because the instructions are pretty comprehensive and detailed. A couple of things deserve mention. First, wear gloves or something when you’re handling the springs and installing the triangles. You don’t want to touch the front of the piece with the same hands because you will transfer some of the grease from the spring to the face of the product. This doesn’t matter on black, but sucks on white. The grease is just a lubricant to keep the springs from rusting, so make sure you keep it off the face of the Triangles.
Secondly, be very precise when mounting them. Have a friend available, and take your time. I rushed a couple of them, and quickly found out later that the spacing is critical. My mounting job wasn’t that precise on the difficult horizontal one over my equipment rack, and I had to go back and adjust it later. And remember, you’re walls aren’t straight. Very few are straight for the length of the Rectangle, so make sure you measure each mounting point individually.
After I installed the Triangles and the vertical Rectangles, I took a break to listen a bit. The first word that came to my mind, less than a minute into the first track, was “eerie”. The sheer amount of detail, and decay I was hearing was unlike anything I had ever heard in my room. There was just so much more there. The decay and sense of space was just astonishing! So I quickly got busy mounting the remaining four Rectangles.
With the install complete, I sat down for my first serious listening session with the new treatments. I started with my old reliable title track off Alison Krauss’ New Favorite disc. I have always loved this track, and the first thing I notice is the massive amount of decay/delay on Alison’s vocals. Her voice just kept going, and going, and going. . .

Again, it was a bit eerie because it was nothing I had experienced before, and defied all logic. It just didn’t seem possible that the boundaries of my room would allow that type of natural decay.
Even better than that was the fact that the vocals, which I had previously complained to Nathan about, were perfectly focused and dead center. The soundstage was quite a bit deeper than before, and interestingly enough, the sound seemed quite a bit more detached from my speakers. The Piegas image very well and present a very holographic picture. With the new treatments, they really are able to throw sound into very precise locations within the room.
I was surprised at this because I had no idea how it could happen with just room treatments. Before, I think that some of the sounds were a bit confused or distorted, and never really pinpointed in space because of my room’s acoustics. Again, it doesn’t make any sense, but as I am now learning, these things are doing quite a bit that defies my understanding of what a simple room treatment is capable of doing.
I next played some Tony Rice Unit off Unit of Measure. I was immediately struck by the palpable feel of track 6 on this disc. Again, this doesn’t make any sense to me, but I actually am not only hearing a lot more of the music, but I am feeling it as well. The McIntosh gear is so incredibly dynamic, and has lots of impact. But it seems now as if I am feeling a lot more of the sound. I know it sounds strange, but this adds a high degree of realism for me, and is one of the reasons I like efficient single driver/horn speakers that move a lot of air. Physics dictates that my ribbons can’t move a ton of air, but I am still feeling a lot more of the high frequency and mids than before.
Tony’s guitar seems to have a more accurate timbre than before. I have actually played the Santa Cruz Tony Rice model, and I am very familiar with the sound, as I have seen TR in concert several times. The extra decay and detail I am getting probably plays a huge part in this area.
The size of the instruments on this disc is so much more realistic as well. That’s a big dreadnaught he’s playing on track 7, and it sure seems a lot more accurately portrayed with the new treatments. The mandolin jumps right out in front of the speaker, and I can hear a lot more of the subtle cues in the recording, like breathing, than I did before.
I saw the Steve Kimock Band in Charlotte on January 21st, and thanks to DSBD.net, I was able to get a soundboard matrix of this show a couple days later for $12. I sat front and center at that show at stage level, and I clearly remember being so excited by Steve’s first song. My friend and I were joking that we should just leave now b/c it couldn’t get better from here.

The track is called A New Africa, and with Steve’s new keyboardist and bassist, it is incredible!
In my room tonight, it’s really good. In some ways, it’s better than the show, but not because of my system. It’s because there aren’t 700 people smoking and drinking in my room while talking at 115dB. I will never understand why drunks will pay $20 to go to their favorite spot and drink. I mean if you just want to get drunk and be loud, go to a bar where you don’t have to compete with the music.
Anyway, the scale of the performance is really good with the new treatments. I am very impressed with the soundstage. It’s very deep, and the instruments are precise in their location. Again the decay is so amazing, and it’s so much better than before. It really does add a lot to the experience.
Firing up the Reference Recording of John Rutter’s Requiem really allows the new treatments to shine in a big way. This was recorded in a large cathedral, and I am hearing spatial cues like never before. The size of the choir is probably 80% larger than it was before with the Response treatments. The organ now fills the entire acoustic space, whereas previously it was more front and center. It is fascinating the amount of information coming from behind and around me. I saw a girl’s choir inside Notre Dame in Paris last year, and it was a transcendental experience. With the new treatments, I am much more convinced that my room is a small slice of that very large cathedral. The boundaries simply do not exist. I cannot get over this.
One thing I notice on this recording too is that the bass seems to be much more tightly controlled with a better leading edge. I know that sounds silly because these things aren’t suppose to affect bass, but I am telling you what I hear now versus with the Response.
I am absolutely dumbfounded at how these things take my room out of the equation. My volume is on 75 right now, and before, anything above 60, the room simply took over and it didn’t get louder, it just got more confused and stressful. I can listen to any disc now, louder than before, and it just gets louder, as it should.
I could go on and on, but I have pretty much given you a summary of what these things do for my room. They remove the boundaries, versus with the Response, where the boundaries were simply extended. They bring things into focus, whereas before, the vocals, and instruments were not as clearly defined. They present a massive amount of new detail that just simply was washed away before. This includes decay as well as quite a bit of spatial information, and instrumental timbre. They keep my room from taking over at higher volumes. That is a WELCOME change from anything I’ve had in the past. They tighten up the bottom end, interestingly enough.
One thing that you will need to know with these is that the spacing between the product and the wall is critical. One eighth of an inch can make a MASSIVE difference. The other night I was playing with the spacing. At 1/4”, things are precisely focused, and exactly how I want my system to sound. If I go to 3/8”, the freaking soundstage plummets really far out, which is awesome. The depth just increases a LOT. The only thing I don’t like is that in addition to this, the sound seems to smooth quite a bit, and the leading edges aren’t quite as clearly defined, or focused. Which I guess is how the real world is as well. When we’re further from the acoustic source, this is how it would be. I went back to ¼”, and it’s perfect.
Make sure you measure precisely with something. The best way is to take something that is ¼”, or 3/8” or whatever distance you want to try, and slide it along the wall to make sure the spacing is correct. Do this on both sides before AND after you tighten the thumbscrews. When you tighten them, the treatment will pitch in that direction.
These garnered my highest recommendation even before I listened. They are gorgeous compared to the Response, and even if they hadn’t sounded any better, they’d have been well worth the money. But upon listening for the past week, I’ve gotten quite a bit more than I bargained for. I cannot imagine how you are listening without treatment, and even if you have treatments, you should try these. They are several generations beyond anything I’ve ever used, and with a 30 day trial, you haven’t much to lose.
Associated equipment:
McIntosh C2200 preamp
McIntosh MC402 amplifier
Piega C3 Limited speakers
Audience Au24 speaker cable & interconnects
Audience PowerChords
Scott Nixon TubeDAC+ with 3XAC
Aloia 11.01 CD Player
PC transport with SPDIF out
DIY Balanced Power conditioner
Wattgate Outlets on dedicated lines