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Ron Carter
‘Talks Tetra’ with Mike
Quinn of JazzTimes
Last year, bass legend Ron Carter
admitted in this column to having
become a new convert to audiophilia. He
had just purchased a new pair of
speakers that allowed him to hear his
own playing as never before. Recently,
the night after celebrating his 70th
birthday in a gala concert at Carnegie
Hall, Carter invited me over to his NYC
apartment to hear his newly updated
system, including an entirely new pair
of speakers, the Tetra 606s ($33,333;
tetraspeakers.com). I thought it would
make a great opportunity to hear how a
musician, respected as much for his
hearing as for his playing, might
listen to his own work via a new tool
such as these Tetras. His remarks were
telling.
The system was set up in his bright,
spacious living room punctuated by
tasteful artwork. Carter positioned me
in the "sweet spot," front and center,
in a comfortable chair, sat himself on
a nearby sofa, and began to play disc
after disc, about half of which
featured himself on bass. The sound,
needless to say, was spectacular. "This
will be my last upgrade I hope. It's
measurably better than the last one,"
said Carter. He pushed the play button
and we listened to Stanley Turrentine's
"Let it Go" featuring Carter on bass
and Shirley Scott on organ. "It's a
totally natural balance," Carter
pointed out. "Her organ is there, more
present than on other stereos. It's not
louder; there's just more of it. And
listen to that hi-hat-it's more crisp.
Sometimes on other systems, it just
isn't there at all."

We switched gears at that point to
pianist Glenn Gould playing Bach.
"These speakers show how uneven his
touch was … he sort of misses
some notes," Carter attested. "Without
these speakers, you couldn't hear that.
These are so articulate, they let so
much more music through. For example,
for me, his right hand is too loud, but
that's my musical taste. … I
don't think most speakers would reveal
that."
Carter then went on to comment on
recording techniques in general: "The
problem with recording is there are so
many processes between the player and
the listener. You're not always hearing
the music in your home the way I played
it in the studio. The engineers tend to
pay more attention to the dials than to
the music." He then confessed that,
with good equipment, the music might
finally come through. "I tend to listen
more with these better speakers," he
said. "Other systems didn't usually
represent what I was playing in the
studio, but these come closest to
revealing what I was actually
doing."
"Then it was time for the classic Kind
of Blue by his old friend Miles Davis.
As the music played, pipe smoke circled
his head and Carter's long fingers
plucked imaginary strings somewhere in
front of the sofa. "I can hear Bill
Evans' accompaniment behind Miles
perfectly," Carter proclaimed. "And the
bass sounds darker, more real. Plus, I
can hear the room they recorded in. I
spent a lot of time in there and know
what it sounds like."
From there we went to Carter's
recording of Bach's "Brandenburg
Concerto No. 3." A low C-note caught
his attention. "I can hear that note
properly now; I couldn't before. You
can hear the whole length of the note.
Other speakers cut it off about
three-quarters of the way through its
length. And my bass sounds darker,
closer to what it actually sounds like
to me," he surmised.
Carter seemed genuinely pleased with
his selection of the Tetras, the same
speakers owned by his
former-collaborator Herbie Hancock.
Though he may not be a full-fledged
audiophile at this point, Carter is the
musician's musician and has the ability
to hear music with an acuity most of us
can only dream about. If better
speakers improve this icon's ability to
hear himself and others, to enhance his
enjoyment of even his own recordings,
then there is likely a benefit for all
of us in upgrading our audio gear. Said
Carter at the end of the session: "I'd
have been famous a lot sooner if
everyone had speakers like this."
©1999-2007 JazzTimes, Inc.,
October 2007. All rights reserved.
Visit Ron Carter's website at: www.roncarter.net
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