Stereophile

Totem Acoustic Skylight

Reviewing a new loudspeaker from Totem feels like destiny—as if a formative moment 30 years ago has come full circle. That’s because the first genuine audiophile speaker I ever owned was Totem’s now-iconic Model 1, a product whose arrival altered many audiophiles’ expectations of how much great—and wide-range—sound a small speaker can deliver. It’s still being made today, at least in spirit.1

Thirty years later and I’m reviewing for Stereophile the Totem Skylight ($1000/pair), a two-way ported standmount similar to the Model 1, but closer in kinship and appearance to the marginally larger Sky model, whose sound impressed me so at the 2017 Montreal Audiofest, especially in the bass.2

Description

According to the manufacturer, the new Skylight shares with every other Totem loudspeaker a similar genesis: It was developed mostly by ear, from beginning to end. That doesn’t mean that Totem founder and owner Vince Bruzzese has no use for cutting-edge measurement instruments and techniques. Rather, he’s among the speaker builders who believes that no measurement technique can beat the human ear and brain in capturing the micro information that makes real music like real music. That’s a logic I subscribe to.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Stereophile

Stereophile2 min read
Associated Equipment
Digital sources dCS Vivaldi Apex DAC, Vivaldi Upsampler Plus, Vivaldi Master Clock, and Rossini Transport; EMM Labs DV2 Integrated DAC, Meitner MA3 Integrated DAC; Innuos Statement Next-Gen Music Server; Small Green Computer Sonore Deluxe opticalModu
Stereophile1 min read
Stereophile
EDITOR JIM AUSTIN JIM.AUSTIN@STEREOPHILE.COM TECHNICAL EDITOR JOHN ATKINSON MANAGING EDITOR MARK HENNINGER SENIOR CONTRIBUTING EDITORS HERB REICHERT, KALMAN RUBINSON, JASON VICTOR SERINUS WEB PRODUCER JON IVERSON COPY EDITOR LINDA FELACO FOUNDER J. G
Stereophile16 min read
Octave V 70 Class A
It may be strange to read what I’m about to say in the pages of Stereophile, but it’s the cold hard truth so here goes: Audio reviews are inadequate. They don’t tell the whole story. They come up short and can even misdirect. It’s not their fault, or

Related Books & Audiobooks