GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Equipment" Archives

Published October 1, 2001

 

JMlab Chorus 707 Loudspeakers

JMlab is the largest of the French speaker manufacturers and famous for its very upscale and high-end Utopia line, which consists of cost-no-object models that many reviewers consider among the best in the world. JMlab's US distributor told GoodSound! that sometime last year the engineers in France received samples of the most popular affordable speakers in Europe with succinct instructions to create something better for less. This condensed design goal became the raison-d'źtre for the recently introduced Chorus line with which the company hopes to attract entry-level buyers.

Trickle-down effects benefit affordable line

As a vertically integrated manufacturing house, JMlab, under the Focal brand name, designs and fabricates its own transducers for all its speaker products. As with Danish loudspeaker firm Dynaudio, some of these raw drive units end up in highly regarded products by the competition. The most recognizable of these drivers is Focal's inverted-dome tweeter. The Chorus series benefits from its own iteration, a concave 1" treated titanium unit that appears in all the other nine Chorus models, subwoofer excepted. In different configurations, seven of these models also share the identical 6.5" polyglass midrange/woofer cone.

The two-way JMlab Chorus 707 under review breaks this mold. It introduces a dedicated dual-voice-coil 7" version that is not used in any other Chorus model. The 707's stout 9"D x 19"H x 12"W dimensions turn it into a maxi-monitor and suggest that its designers were going after bass performance and loudness capabilities -- a safe guess as we'll discover. Nominal impedance is 8 ohms, with 25 watts of minimum recommended amplifier power. Rounding out the specifications is bass extension to 54Hz and a surprisingly high 91.5dB sensitivity. The 707s are front-ported and sport two pairs of gold-plated binding posts for biwiring. Available high-grade vinyl options include black ash, cherry, and the very attractive calvados of the review pair. This classy new finish is grained like curly maple, colored like medium cherry and a welcome break from the common oak, rosewood and mahogany finishes.

The review system consisted of Marantz and Denon CD players, the Outlaw 1050 receiver in analog-direct mode and our customary blue Cardas Crosslink cabling. The in-house Axiom Millennia M3Ti reference pair served as a comparison speaker.

Misleading first impressions…

Cold out of the box, the famous titanium tweeter acted like a windowpane ablaze with reflected sunlight -- it was blindingly bright. To reach its specified bass extension, the mid/bass driver required time to fill out as well. Taken together, these pre-break-in conditions at first caused a predictably top-heavy and aggressive tonal balance. For example, the new La Cubanita album [Atoll 91134A] by Los Niņos de Sara (the core group of Alabina without female vocalist Ishtar) was completely unlistenable -- hard, edgy and in your face.

…mellowed by time

One hundred hours later, the same album transformed into a carefree, high-octane celebration of Gipsy rumba. Cuban-style horns, percussion, up-tempo rhythms and impassioned vocals begged for party levels to transmit the inherent joi de vivre of this Gipsy Kings-style material. Soundstaging, particularly outside the speakers, proved very impressive, possibly aided by the wide-dispersion geometry claimed for the unique tweeter shape. The large-diameter port was clearly custom tailored to vent high amounts of air without chuffing or distortion. The designers of the Chorus 707 seem to also have considered high-output home-theater applications.

Emphasized leading edges and an energetic envelope around the vocals proved that even after prolonged break-in, nobody would ever accuse the Focal tweeter of lacking air or extension. While no longer inherently hot or spitty -- and now properly balanced by defined and extended bass -- the high-frequency demeanor of the 707 created an enhanced sense of resolution, with sharply focused placement of performers on the stage. In this respect, it recalled the previously reviewed Triangle Titus XS with its carefully contoured minor treble emphasis.

In the Chorus 707, this phenomenon could either be a function of an equally rising top-end response or the result of optimized in-room power response if the dispersion of this tweeter was as broad as claimed. Whatever the engineering reasons, this JMlab speaker is not a polite-sounding one in the British tradition. It doesn't project a warm and shaded tonal balance but instead entices with a lit-up, highly resolved, exciting and animated profile that brings out liveliness and detail.

On Deva Premal's Love is Space [prabhu music 2000], this manifested in staggered reverb echoes that trailed the vocalist and remained intelligible and resolved far into an extended decay before receding back into silence. Certain emphatic string attacks on Jai Uttal's accompanying dotar (a kind of neck-worn mini sitar favored by the itinerant North Indian Bauls) showcased a steely edge that speakers with a warmer voicing wouldn't resolve to the same extent. What prevented such details from appearing unnaturally highlighted was the 707's excellent reach in the bass. This acted as the appropriate counterbalance for the open treble. The JMlabs retrieved more than just a hint oft the very low synthesizer pedals and foundation ambience that anchor these ancient mantras and sacred hymns but are really out of reach for regular monitor speakers.

Glancing at the specs for a quick reality check, the listed -3dB point of 54Hz seemed rather conservative and surely derived from anechoic measurements that discount bass boost generated by real-world wall and floor reflections which an anechoic chamber absorbs. (The dual 6.5" three-way Chorus 725, rated only slightly lower at 47Hz, appears equally conservative in its specs.) We won't argue with the manufacturer but rather applaud them for restraint in a game that often bamboozles consumers with unrealistic claims. Still, my listening impressions indicate that the actual bass response of the 707s, in-room, reaches comfortably into the 40s. For comparison, Polk Audio rates the previously reviewed 6.5" two-way RT35i to 50Hz, with a published in-room response of 39Hz. Unless my aural memory deceives me (which is well possible and a good reminder not to rely too much on memory when one compares audio components at different times or locations) the JMlab speakers seem the Polks' equals in that regard.

Further music samples

Jai Uttal's retrospective, "I won't ask for more" [Spirit Room, Triloka 8068-2], received an injection of air and illumination that created a distinct and spacious aura around Uttal's voice. His masculine timbre had uncommon sparkle and highlights. The attacks of hand-struck drum skins were crisp, the bite of the muted trumpet sharp. The ominous and mysterious quality of Don Cherry's damped instrument, the eerie synth washes and melancholy chord progressions projected with less emotional weight than I'm used to. Not only is the Focal tweeter very extended and detailed, but the glass-bead-injected poly cone of the mid/woofer seems equally tuned for articulation. This makes for a midday-sun clarity that favors resolution over romanticism.

On Gilberto Gil & Milton Nascimento [WEA 857382810-2], this resolving power clearly portrayed the distinct vocal touches of the Brazilian songwriter super stars. On their ode to Rio de Janeiro, "Sebastian," first singing alternately, then together, their voices remained clearly unique and separated even in tandem. The accentuated underpinnings of the bass guitar had just the right substance to avoid the subdued or recessed bottom-end quality of smaller monitors that can sound lightweight by comparison. As expected, the background chorus on "Ponte de Areia" was not only beautifully layered into the farthest reaches of the soundstage but even the specific locations of the singers were indicated with accuracy.

The French-Canadian connection

Using the aforementioned La Cubanita album again, the Axiom M3Tis de-emphasized the recording's inherently tilted-up tonal balance to sound creamier and smoother. The JMlabs were more vivacious and energetic and sensitive, requiring less amplifier gain for equivalent volume levels. Roll-off in the low frequencies kicked in later with the French monitors. This prevented attenuation of certain low bass notes that, via the Axioms, were still reproduced but diminished in output. However, the leading edges of the same bass notes were more precisely rendered with the M3Tis. Their unique cabinet architecture with its non-parallel walls seems to prevent interior standing waves, as claimed. This gives the Canadian contenders a minor advantage in bass line precision and attack.

Where the Axiom and nOrh speakers were close to identical siblings that epitomize smoothness, the soul mates to the JMlabs are really the Triangles. The major differences between them are bass reach and dynamics -- the larger woofer and cabinet clearly give the Chorus a head start for those qualities. Conversely, the Titus XS edges out the Chorus in the very bouncy and taut mien of its midbass that recalls the recoil of a tightly stretched drum skin.

When mini is maxy

While not diminutive by any stretch, the JMlab Chorus 707s are monitors that require 20" stands or shelf/table-top placement. This puts them visually into a category distinctly different from floorstanders. Sonically, though, that difference is less pronounced. Bass, especially for smaller to mid-sized rooms, is so expansive that the addition of a subwoofer becomes purely optional. Realistically, subwoofer augmentation would become a worthwhile improvement primarily with blockbuster movie soundtracks or music material like trance/ambient grooves that feature electronically derived low bass.

If bookshelf placement is desired (and front porting makes this a very viable option), be sure to have the speaker baffle line up with -- or even protrude from -- the actual shelf ledge. When the mid/woofer receives boundary reinforcement from the shelf, the tonal balance of the 707 turns bass-heavy. A simple floor or table test placement confirmed this instantly.

The JMlab Chorus 707, from one of Europe's most respected manufacturers, is a highly refined yet affordable loudspeaker that plainly benefits from high-tech driver design and trickle-down engineering savvy. Because of their prowess during high-level listening sessions, we feel compelled to recommend them especially for dual duty music/movie systems. They'd serve the music-only listener equally well who values the precision, detail and soundstaging acumen of superior mini monitors but also wants the added bass and output capabilities of larger-volume tower speakers. The only proviso concerns the lively treble that, under the wrong conditions (such as brightly voiced electronics or very lively rooms) could turn unbalanced.

In the final analysis, the more-for-less directive -- said to have spawned the entire JMlab Chorus line -- has paid off with admirable success. Just be sure to audition the JMlab Chorus 707 after it's fully broken in!

Price of equipment reviewed


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