Jump to content
  • The Computer Audiophile
    The Computer Audiophile

    dCS Rossini DAC Review

    We've all had those weeks that never end, stress us out, and leave us feeling shattered by the time the weekend rolls around. This has been one of those weeks for me. I'm not complaining, there are many worse jobs and places to live in this world, rather I'm leading into the antidote to stress and exhaustion. Some people sooth with substances, but I've found a reference HiFi system can be much better. Right now my reference system is quarterbacked by the dCS Rossini digital to analog converter. 

     

    This evening I sat down in my listening chair for a final listening session with the dCS Rossini. All the lights were out. The blue glow of the power indicators on my Constellation Audio amplifiers could be seen as well as the front panel of the Rossini. Other than those items, the room pitch black. I leaned back in my chair and tapped play through Roon on Bob Dylan's The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan album. 

     

    As soon as the unmistakable acoustic guitar began in the right channel, my body eased up and started to unwind. Dylan's unique voice emanating from dead-center between the TAD CR1 loudspeakers put a smile on my face. The antidote was kicking in. By the time Dylan played the track out with his harmonica I was in a much better place physically and mentally than when I walked into my listening room. 

     

    The MoFi DSD remaster of The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan ripped to dsf files and played through the dCS Rossini sounded so organic, so realistic, so full, so lush, that I listened to the first 11 tracks without as much as a volume adjustment. When something sounds this great I don't make changes. Why fix what's not broken? 

     

    Perennial skip-over tracks such as Down the Highway had me sucked-in. Dylan's acoustic guitar through the dCS Rossini had incredible depth and dimensionality down through the lowest frequencies. As Dylan strums and plucks, each string can be heard as it should be heard, as a distinct different sound with unique tonal characters and richness. And to think I usually skip over this track. I guess hearing it in all its glory, as it was meant to be heard, can change one's mind. It's a great song that sounds great through the Rossini. This experience gives me pause, to think about why I skip certain songs when listening on other components. 

     

    The dCS Rossini has made previously skipable tracks part of my must listen regimen. Yes, my listening regimen. The audio antidote to stress is a great HiFi system with great music. It's capable of restoring one's health after days and weeks we'd rather forget.

     

     

     


    regimen | ˈrejəmən |
    noun
    1. a prescribed course of medical treatment, way of life, or diet for the promotion or restoration of health.

     

     

     

     

    Still in a folky mood, I queued up the Audio Fidelity version of Peter, Paul and Mary's 1963 album In the Wind. Some of the tracks on this album aren't typically what I'd consider in my wheelhouse, but damn they sounded great. I couldn't stop listening. Again, the music continued reduced my anxiety and stress from the week by transporting me into another era. The song All My Trials was nothing short of amazing through the dCS Rossini. The full bodied and rich vocal harmony sounded so good it was like a drug of which I couldn't get enough. Listening to each individual vocalist when I wanted and listening to the magical blend of the group together most of the time seriously set me at ease. I don't know that I've ever heard a more touching version, a version that got to me this much, or a better reproduction of this track on any component or system I've heard to date. This is what HiFi is all about for me, listening to music and letting it get to me on many levels. The better sounding the system the better I feel. 


    A few weeks ago a good friend sent me an email suggesting I listen to Melody Gardot's new Live in Europe album. I gave it a digital spin at the time and wrote back that I was underwhelmed. Fast forward to this afternoon while I was driving in my car down I394 listening to Jazz 88 FM radio. The track My one and Only Thrill from this album came on and I was hooked. Upon returning home I email my friend back to say I was now onboard with the album. 

    Pressing play on this album through the dCS Rossini, connected to the direct input of my Constellation Audio Inspiration amplifiers, brought me much enjoyment. Listening to My One and Only Thrill through this system rather than my aftermarket car system gave me an even better feeling. The track opens with a piano but it's the very emotional sounding cello that sets the tone. Through the Rossini this cello sounds rich when out front, and mystically airy when backing Melody's vocal throughout the song. About 6:50 into the track the cello comes back to prominence and has this incredible smooth yet gritty sound that's extremely haunting. It's amazing that this is a live recording and it sounds so good considering it was released in 2018. Kudos to Melody Gardot for delivering the album and to dCS for enabling us to hear all of it as it was delivered by the artist. 

     

     

    A Bit About Hardware, Software, and Filters

     

    Before continuing with my listening experiences, I should at least get into the hardware and software of the dCS Rossini. This DAC is the opposite of typical DACs that use off the shelf parts assembled according to application notes. dCS uses its proprietary Ring DAC, custom user selectable filters, custom mapping algorithms, and custom software platform all developed in-house.  In addition, when many manufacturers of storied HiFi brands are cutting corners, dCS has managed to improve the quality of its products both inside and out. 

     

    dCS continually improves its products via software / firmware updates. With custom "everything" onboard, the company is free to add features and extend the life of its products until the hardware just doesn't have enough horsepower. During the review period I upgraded the Rossini with the click of a button that checked for the upgrade over the internet and automatically installed the newest version.

     

    Certainly (in some circles) the most controversial part of the latest upgrade was the addition of MQA decoding and rendering. However, the Rossini isn't just another MQA capable DAC. But first a little about filters. The Rossini features six dCS PCM filters, one MQA filter, and four DSD filters. All "designed" by dCS. I put the word designed in quotes because it isn't entirely true but it isn't entirely false. dCS (Andy McHarg) worked with MQA to develop the first implementation of the MQA Reference filter.  What this means is the dCS M1 MQA filter perfectly meets all 16 possible MQA filter coefficients exactly without having to be tailored to offset limitations or errors in the D/A converter.  Because of speed, linearity, and frequency response of the RingDAC dCS was able to exactly match the ideal MQA reconstruction filter coefficients all the way up to 768k.  So in other words, MQA came up with the theoretical ideal filter coefficients, and the flexibility of how dCS does things allowed the company to code those in to allow ideal filter responses.

     

    There are two other aspects to the dCS MQA implementation that are different from most other manufacturers.  First, with many other implementations, if MQA encode is turned on then all audio passes through the MQA filter.  With the Rossini and all other dCS devices the DAC or streamer determines whether MQA encoded music is playing before applying the filter.  Second, having a choice of filter responses is in the dCS DNA. From he very beginning, when the company approached the MQA project it was important that dCS users still had the ability to select traditional dCS filters with MQA material. Again, it's about flexibility and personal choice for dCS customers. 

     

    Control of the Rossini's features, including filter selection, can be accomplished most easily via the dCS iOS app (an Android app will be explored down the road). The app also enables the user to play music from a UPnP/DLNA server, Tidal, or a USB stick connected directly to the Rossini. In the true dCS spirit of flexibility for its customers, the company has also enabled AirPlay and Sotify playback.

     

    During the review I used Roon for playback much of the time because of the tight integration between Roon's iOS app and the Rossini. Adjusting volume within Roon also adjusted the volume directly on the Rossini and vice versa. Two-way communication between the Rossini and Roon is a very nice feature.  

    The analog outputs of the Rossini, like all dCS DACs, can be set at 2V or 6V. I used the Rossini at 6V output connected to the Direct input of my Constellation amplifiers. This Direct input bypasses a gain stage inside the amp and is to be used with Constellation preamps or a limited number of DACs. Some DACs work well with this input, but most sound pretty flat. The Rossini is a great match for this input. Other DACs connect to the XLR input of the Constellation amps and carry on without any issues. 

     

    The Rossini has a complete menu of options and features that most DACs can't come close to matching. The user can customize it until content or have a dealer set it and forget it. Like the Vivaldi, the Rossini is one of, if not the most, versatile DAC in the industry.

     

     

     

    img-0384.jpg

     

     

     

     


    Back to Listening


    Finishing up my listening session I put on some classical music, Michael Stern and the Kansas City Symphony. The Reference Recordings release of Britten's Orchestra (out of print) is a favorite of mine and is capable of transporting me into another world through a transparent audio system. Don't get me wrong, I could enjoy this album on any system. However, it takes exceptional components to reproduce all of this Keith Johnson 24/176.4 recording in a way that enables me to get completely lost in the music and hear each instrument individually as I drift through the performance in my listening room.

    At times I can be a stickler for good transient response in the audio components I use in my system. When listening to 176.4 kHz classical music such as this album I prefer the dCS filter number 5. This filter has a Gaussian response with no overshoot on transients and relaxed roll-off. As a side note, I prefer filter number 4 for 16/44.1 music because of its good transient response. 

     

    The opening track on this album, The Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra, is a 17 minute mix of loud crescendos and soft sweet violin followed by violent percussion and stern yet smooth horns. This track touches all the bases and all frequencies for those listening to judge a playback system. Fortunately I listen to this for enjoyment as I really love the music (this coming from a Pearl Jam type of guy who'd rather not listen to much classical). 

    The dCS Rossini didn't disappoint throughout this track and the entire performance. The opening transients weren't memorialized, the violins were wispy yet rich in tone and texture, and the horns were brash when appropriate. The Rossini reproduced the complete performance with a full, rich sound that made it possible to hear the entire symphony as one or each individual instrument as a single piece of the larger whole. 

     

    Closing out the first track, with about 1:30 remaining, the symphony picks up steam enabling one to hear the whole sound much greater than the some of the parts. With about 30 seconds remaining the musicians are firing on all cylinders with loud transients, soft yet audible flutes, and crashing yet controlled cymbals. Through the Rossini this performance is reproduce at a level second to none. OK, second to nothing I've had in my listening room in recent memory. 
     


    Conclusion

     

    This wonderful hobby of ours isn't often about restraint but rather excess. The Rossini DAC is the sweet spot in the dCS lineup. It's $23,999 price tag doesn't scream moderation to many music lovers, but I assure you the Rossini is much more capable than the dCS Debussy ($11,999) but not up to the level of performance that's possible with the dCS Vivaldi ($35,999), the Rolls Royce of digital to analog conversion. 

     

    Given the complete control that dCS has over hardware and software, the digital wizards of Cambridge, England continue to find ways to improve the Rossini's capabilities and level of performance. Through software and firmware updates, available at no cost, new features have already been added to this fairly new DAC. These updates and product enhancements extend the life of dC products as far or further than any other digital product of which I'm aware. 

     

    The bottom line for many enthusiasts is performance. The dCS Rossini offers high performance, in addition to build quality, that's as good or better than anything I've heard in my system in recent memory. Whether one listens to folk, rock, vocal, jazz, or classical the Rossini is completely capable absolutely stellar music reproduction. I've had and continue to have more DACs come through my system over the years than I care to admit. Based on performance, support, and future upgradability the Rossini is one of two or three DACs that I'd really love to keep. When dCS finally comes calling for this one, at least I can keep it on the C.A.S.H. List for a long time. 

     

     


     

     

     


    Products Informtion:

    • Product - dCS, Rossini DAC ($23,999)
    • Product - Link
    • Product User Manual - Link

     

     

     

    Associated Music:

     

     

     

     

    Associated Equipment:

     

     

     




    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    4 hours ago, amir57bs said:

    f you listen to dCS with living voice or audio note speaker then you will find dCS is not good .

     

    It’s possible that one could listen to LV and AN speakers with dCS and find that LV and AN are not good, for that person.   A lot of nice sounding systems out there with either of them. 

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    5 hours ago, kaka said:

    Hi Chris

     

    I read through your review waiting for the section on what happens when a DCS (or other) external clock is added to the dac, but it wasn't there. Are you intending doing that at some point?

     

    Not at this time. 

     

    @miguelito has a Rossini and clock. 

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, amir57bs said:

    dCS is good if you have low sensitivity speaker/high power high feedback solid-state amplifier . dcs is good for lean clean/High resolution systems not for live loudspeakers like living voice.

    I know between dry sounding DACs the dCS sound is more open than many other DACs but it will not shine in dynamic systems.

    if you want to be close to analog the digital as its best is combination of CEC TL0-X Transport with Bit-Perfect R-2R Kondo/Audionote UK/CEC DACs with a really good AC Regenarator and good SPDIF Cable .

    but even at those level properly setup Analog is better . 

    quality of media records is also different ,many CD records are not good in comparison by old LP records.

    long story short :

    we should judge audio equipments in a system that do not mask micro information of records.

    dCS is perfect if the loudspeaker/amplifier mask the micro information but dCS is not good if Loudspeaker/Amplifier reveal the micro information.

     

    Amir

     

    Thanks alot, guess I'll keep looking

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    8 hours ago, fand1 said:

    Chris any thoughts or memories as to how the McIntosh D1100 compared to the Rossini?

     

    One is capable of playing an album without muting out the beginning of songs in an album.  The other isn’t.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    7 hours ago, kaka said:

    I read through your review waiting for the section on what happens when a DCS (or other) external clock is added to the dac, but it wasn't there. Are you intending doing that at some point?

    I purchsased the clock based on recommendations of people I trust. I have not done on/off test, not interested in A/B that sorry. These days I am super busy with work and when I am home I want to relax, not tinker. Maybe some day...

     

    If you have a fairly high end and well set up system, I strongly suggest you try and evaluate a component in your system for a few days at least.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    From the review....

    'As soon as the unmistakable acoustic guitar began in the right channel, my body eased up and started to unwind.'

    Chris,

    Thanks for the nice review and sharing the music used during listening sessions.

    A small point but after reading your above statement I had to double check my speaker connections as I hear the guitar sound in the left channel, maybe you should double check your connections too. :))

    Best.
    Mev
     

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    1 hour ago, mevdinc said:

    A small point but after reading your above statement I had to double check my speaker connections as I hear the guitar sound in the left channel, maybe you should double check your connections too. :))

    Not in either my Mofi DSD rip nor my redbook flac; the guitar that begins Blowin In The Wind is clearly, as Chris states, in the right speaker. 

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, ted_b said:

    Not in either my Mofi DSD rip nor my redbook flac; the guitar that begins Blowin In The Wind is clearly, as Chris states, in the right speaker. 

    Just purchased the DSD album from AcousticSounds. Dylan is on my "to learn" list. 

     

    Yes, guitar is on the right. Interesting that the DSD version is clearly a slightly different mix from the one on TIDAL. Sounds amazing btw...

     

    Anyone willing to teach me or point me to the way into Dylan? Thx!

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I will give you my impression of Rossini... I moved to Rossini+Clock from an EMM Labs XDS1-v2. EMM was ok, but it is a bit of a sterile sound. And I am saying that with a Kondo Ongaku and AvantGarde speakers, definitely not a sterile sounding chain compared to others. 

     

    Compared to this, the Rossini had depth, decay, richness in the notes (especially solo piano), and female voices sounded real (they were a bit metallic on the EMM). 

     

    But the way I tend to make up my mind about gear is by how it pulls me into music, how it just grabs my attention. I was cooking one night and playing Bill Evans' "Everybody Digs Bill Evans" (XLD rip from the XRCD version) and I had to stop and listen to the music. That's it.

     

    Maybe I shoulda made space for a Vivaldi... Ha! :)

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    5 hours ago, ted_b said:

    Not in either my Mofi DSD rip nor my redbook flac; the guitar that begins Blowin In The Wind is clearly, as Chris states, in the right speaker. 

    This is really strange and I now find the right/left channel thing very confusing. :)
    I even played the Chesky Records channel test sample to double check, and from my listening position the left channel is on left. So, the beginning guitar sound is in the left channel.
    Maybe the left channel is referred to as the right speaker from the system's position but Chris did say 'the right channel'.
    Sorry to carry on but I just want to make sure I don't have my channels/speakers swapped.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    8 minutes ago, mevdinc said:

    This is really strange and I now find the right/left channel thing very confusing. :)
    I even played the Chesky Records channel test sample to double check, and from my listening position the left channel is on left. So, the beginning guitar sound is in the left channel.
    Maybe the left channel is referred to as the right speaker from the system's position but Chris did say 'the right channel'.
    Sorry to carry on but I just want to make sure I don't have my channels/speakers swapped.

    Swapping channels happens accidentally when producing and album or remaster. There are many more examples of this one including Led Zeppelin. 

     

    My guess is these versions of the album or at least the track are different. Both our systems are fine :~)

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    See the latest from Stereophile article by JVS on the music show where he writes about a new Rossini Transport which will play both CD and SACD. 

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    4 hours ago, miguelito said:

    The Rossini player, ie the one with a transport, does not. I seem to recall that a review on Stereophile had the Rossini playing with a Paganini transport which would work just fine and play CD & SACD.

     

    The big issue with high end transport mechanisms such as the Teac VRDS is that they stopped making them and the chipsets a few years ago. My understanding is dCS spent a small fortune buying a bunch of Teac transports for the Vivaldi. 

    Was surprised by his comments as well...

    dCS General Manager John Quick unveiled a prototype of the Rossini transport (approx. $22,000, coming to the Munich show in May), 
     

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    18 hours ago, ShawnC said:

    Do you have any affiliation for a particular audio company or audio store?  You seem to have very strong convictions for a positive review that effects noone.

    I am From iran , my weblog is hifi.ir and i have been around 15 years in audio writing.

    i have listened to many systems in tehran and i am not dealer or distributer.

    i have bought my system from some dealers in tehran.

    if you have listened to Living Voice room in munich 2015 then you will know my ideas about good sound.

     

    Amir

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    2 hours ago, BMCG said:

    And Amir bravo on your opinion...but I will  counter that dcs can muster microdynamics....indeed I have such in abundance from a Vivaldi stack feeding spectral and Avalons....

     

    you must fettle / craft a system to evince such nuance..

     

    hence generalizations about single components are very likely to be too broad...a point Chris alludes to with respect to the Yggy

     

    music alights from a system NOT individual components...

     

    Thanks for comment

    I have heard dCS Scarlatti in Vitus 50w Class A Kharma Exquisite

    http://www.hifi.ir/2009/10/kharma-exquisite-midi-vitus-ss-101-dcs-scarlatti/

     

    I  have heard dCS Scarlatti in Vitus 100w Class A Kharma grand

    http://www.hifi.ir/2010/02/kharma-grand-exquisite-virus-sl-101-pre-sm-101-power-dcs-scarlatti/

     

    I think I know how dCS sounds. 

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    What might be absurd is 90% of what you wrote justifying the other 10%.  I don't need to live with a friend's wife to know her cooking is better than I get at home.  It might, and probably does, get better the more one experiences it.  Doesn't absolve that first bite  of merit.  (I get both sides married well outside this analogy.)

     

    This of course assumes taste.  Which I won't go so far as to comment on the surplus or starvation ranks of those possessing it attendant to this discussion.  x-D

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    I'm with Chris on his approach -- lights out and listen.  Don't let other senses (especially visual) get in the way of the music and how it overtakes you.  And like partaking of a fine wine, it's about the moment, a sensual snapshot in time.  His reviews are that way, and unlike many others, not predicated on some scale or comparison with other components, but more about how the current experience moves him.  

     

    Each of us has our own "tastes" in musical experience and listen for often very different things.  Some for soundstage, some dynamics, some purity and articulation, etc.  And it would appear that our choice of speakers often is the most revealing in what turns us on, as it is often the most colored component (apart from the room itself).  

     

    I've got three different systems of varied components and value propositions and in varied "environments".  There's the downstairs "reaching for the stars" system, the "hand-me-down" home theater (bits and pieces of prior systems), and desktop iMac/3-way speaker/DAC-receiver type.  All driven by Roon on the network.  I enjoy each, though they clearly present a different musical experience.  

     

    I liken reviewers I return to again and again, like Chris, to those in film and music and the other arts.  Over time, if I find a high level of congruency with one based on my own personal experience, they gain my trust.  However the caveat, as others have said here, is that these are just components in systems, so its always best to bring one home for a try-and-buy in your own environment.

    Share this comment


    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now




×
×
  • Create New...