INTERVIEW | The Editors |30| DAVE CLARK | „POSITIVE FEEDBACK”
Position: MANAGING EDITOR |
INTERVIEW
Interviewer: Wojciech Pacuła |
No 198 November 1, 2020 |
⸤ Dave Clark and Carol Clark in their listening room hen I interviewed David Robinson, Editor in Chief of Positive Feedback in 2012 to publish an article as part of "The Editors" cycle (№ 9), the magazine's title was still "Positive-Feedback Online", which made it clear that it belonged to the online domain and was different from printed publications. Let me just remind you that "High Fidelity" also began as "High Fidelity Online". So, it would be hard to conceal the fact that the American magazine was one of my points of reference when I was redesigning HF. Who would have thought that several years later I would become its Senior Cooperating Editor (more HERE)… However, the magazine originated much earlier than one might think where David and his wife Lila Ritsema were the driving force and owners of Positive Feedback when it was in print. Today, with the current iteration of Positive Feedback, there are now the addition of current partners, Dave and Carol Clark, working in the back office of the magazine, dealing with stuff that readers needn't know about, guaranteeing the magazine can be read. They are the ones who edit my (and not only my) tests and prepares them for publication, and coordinates the work of the remaining back office staff. What is more, it is thanks to them that PF looks and functions as it does. DAVE CLARK, an artist, music lover, audiophile, cultural animator, and one of the founders of the "audioMusings" magazine and co-founder of Positive Feedback in its current iteration is being interviewed by WOJCIECH PACUŁA.. WOJCIECH PACUŁA: Tell us something about yourself. So, with our retirement, we had thoughts of traveling pretty much anywhere and everywhere, though I hate sitting on a plane for more than a few hours, but yeah… let’s go and see the world which would be the opposite of our usual vacations. Those involve the wine county here in California and various audio shows in the US. We love spending weeks in several of the wine regions, sampling reds and eating well at the local restaurants. We do have a decent “inventory” here of wines we like, as well as beers from the US. We also love to eat well and know a handful of the local chefs who own the better establishments here in Long Beach. ⸤ Carol Clark and Dave Clark at their exhibition entitled Pieces at the Long Beach Museum of Art Downtown But now we have been staying in for the past 6 months… limiting our excursions due to our age and possible health issues. We spend our time listening to music, hanging around the house doing projects and making improvements, gardening, dealing with art, and keeping PF up and running. We miss hanging out with friends, eating out, visiting local breweries and the like… but the US is pretty much screwed with our current leadership. And traveling to audio shows is not happening either; they are either canceled, on hold, or simply dead. Though even if they were happening, they have grown for us from needing to see the latest and greatest, to now just wanting to see our friends that we only see at shows… The previous excitement of wanting to see all the gear has evaporated and been replaced with us now thinking, “Oh wow, another black box with knobs” or “Gee, who in their right mind would buy that gigantic robot-in-disguise speaker?” Yeah, audio shows are just not that interesting anymore… other than as I said, seeing old friends while staying up way too late, drinking and eating too much, and then paying for it the next day as we cover the show for PF. But I sort of jumped too far into the present here. Let’s regress a bit. Where did this all start? WP: So, where did it all start? WP: What was your first “serious” system? All through this, I was a music junky, buying whatever I could find and afford that fit my musical tastes at the time – which was more of the “progressive rock genre” than anything else, though hard rock was a part as well. Actually, all of it was sort of “the weirder, the better”. And then I heard Iggy Pop and that was it! This opened me up to music that I had never imagined and led me to Roxy Music, Bowie and so on, down the rabbit hole of more alternative artists. ⸤ Carol’s and Dave’s audio system WP: What did you expect from an audio system? I also listened to what I would hear at shows and concerts… or at the club I worked for free, doing their graphics. Loud. Presence. Engagement. Immersive. Live. (Working there, I was lucky to see any and all of the punk/alternative acts traveling through SoCal, for free.) After college, I met my future wife. We had pretty much the same LPs, loved the same bands and wanted to get as much from the music as we could. We married in 1981 and, with her first paycheck, after moving to a new city, she said we needed a better stereo system. At the time, it was a basic Pioneer receiver, some mismatched stacked generic speakers, a cassette deck and the same tried and true AR turntable. Well, I had been reading various audio magazines and the “LA Times” classifieds section contained several pages of audio dealers in LA, as well as people selling whatever… So, I had a few thoughts on what was affordable and would work for us. Off to Los Angeles the following Saturday with our list to buy ADS 810 loudspeakers with NAD electronics. After a few stores, we realized the ADS 810 were not for us… So, while we ended up with the NAD 3140 amplifier, we came home with DCM Time Windows instead of the ADS. We were in heaven. Heck, the electrical technician that worked with our department at the University hooked me up with silver platted copper wire to connect it all together. Over the years, the turntable went from the AR to a top-of-the-line Sony, then to a Linn and to a Transrotor, to our current Fern & Roby. The electronics went from NAD to Adcom, then to Blue Circle/Clayton, to our current PS Audio. Loudspeakers went from DCM to Apogees, then to Reimers, to our current Vandersteens Quatro Carbons. I will say that we prefer full range over anything else… The music we listen to possesses deep bass, so the system had better go to the low 20s while playing loud. Carol has been part of the journey from the beginning. The Apogees were her thing so much that when our son, while learning to walk, put a remote control through one of the woofer panels, she called Apogee as quickly as she could, spoke with Jason, explained what had happened and he arranged not only to fix the panel, but said that if we paid some more cash, he would upgrade both speakers to the latest and greatest Signatures – and make them child-proof! I could only say: Yes, please. Which is why we hate and refuse to use the term WAF (wife acceptance factor). Sorry, my wife, my partner, has as much say into what we buy and how we set things up as I do. This is why we have been happily married for 40 years this February. We are both into design, looks and sound… and still more or less the same music. Today, Carol prefers to listen to the Notwist, Gary Numan, New Order, Joy Division, Mogwai, the Cure and so on. While I am right there with her, I also like quirkier bands like Lambchop or Low and more experimental noise or ambient artists. And I am a big fan of Brian Eno, too. You won’t find much jazz or classical music here – it is not our thing, unless it is more different than normal. We had season tickets to the Symphony here for a few years, but it grew boring. But we did try. Same with female jazz vocals or what is considered or labeled “audiophile music.” People like what they like and that is what it is all about. We would never ridicule or criticize what others like to listen to, it is just not our thing. But if you play Keith Don’t Go at a show, Carol and I both will go, but in a nice way. Another reason audio shows have grown so tiresome: the same old music all over again. That is why we will more or less black list a room if they refuse to play our music, or if they agree to play it, but say something that is more or less insulting about what it is… no room for that in the world. Respect others and be polite to them. ⸤ The Vandersteen Quatro Carbon loudspeakers And all along on this journey, we have gone from wanting the bits and pieces (as reviewers), the soundstage and whatnot, to just wanting the music as a whole (as listeners) and not really wanting to put out the energy to listen hard. We are more about engagement through the system playing our music the way we want it to sound, the whole experience heard as a single entity. A sum of the parts, for sure… though having to listen to the parts has grown rather tiresome. WP: What is your favourite format – LP, CD, SACD or files, perhaps? I never really got into DSD or SACD, as the artists we like are simply not being recorded in that format or resolution. Yeah, we own a few DSD and SACD titles, same for PCM 24/192, but I would say that it is perhaps 2% of what we own. The other 98% are simply 16/44 files which, when prepared right, work for us. While we do own a fair amount of poorly recorded music, it is the music we are after and not necessarily the sound… though having that too is great. WP: Do you believe that streaming is the future of audio? But the issues of paying artists are paramount in making it viable for their livelihood. Even so, is streaming equal to what we get from playing back directly from our own library? Have yet to test that out. WP: Do you know any new, promising audio technology? With that in mind, our system is pretty much set. We have little, if any interest in changing things, in updating, or whatever… That means we are scaling back our reviewing to a product or two a year. So, what is new? What is different? What will dramatically change our music to more than it is? Not sure. I really don’t read audio magazines, so while there might be some breakthrough technology on the horizon, what I have experienced over the years is more of a refinement or evolution. Will there be something dramatic that changes everything? Perhaps data storage? Perhaps transmission from A to B? Perhaps speaker technology? Some day for sure, but not soon enough for it to matter to either of us. I would like to add that we have no idea what any of our music should sound like. We only know what it sounds like to us and how we want it to sound. So, we have a system that does that… for us. We really have zero interest in what our music sounds to anyone who comes here and listens. If you like it – great! If you don’t – great! It really doesn’t matter. Not trying to be an ass or anything, but for us it is personal. There is no “absolute sound”, as we all hear differently, interpret differently and value things differently. For each person, it is their own absolute. |
⸤ Electronics with a PS Audio amplifier, the AURALiC Aries G2 file player, etc. We have built a system for us that makes our music engaging and fun to listen to. So, to repeat myself here… Yeah, the bits and pieces are there – all the audiophile stuff people strive to create in their home – but for us it is more about the whole. We just aren’t listening to the bits anymore. WP: Tell us something about yourself as an artist. What is your main concern? What do you want to show people via your artistic activity? Is an artist responsible for current problems, or is it something for politicians only? When we married, my art (outside of my job) was working in sculptural constructions consisting of metal, wood, paint, tape… and so on. Clearly mixed media. I had a handful of shows in SoCal and even had an agent. Then we moved away from the University where I had access to all the shops, to be a teacher in Los Angeles. Without access to the tools I needed to work in metal, I started building furniture that was influenced by the Memphis movement of design out of Italy. I got myself into a couple of design centers for the trade (one here is SoCal and its sister store in Miami) where I did sell enough to make it rewarding – both financially and as an artist – while establishing myself as an educator and raising our only son. Of course, the shocker with this was when I found out that the piece I was paid $200 for was then sold to a designer for $400, who then sold it to a client for $800. Uh, yeah, the world of art. This sort of soured me, along with the request for making 4 more pieces identical to the one they just bought. Sorry, not a factory, but a father, husband, educator and co-founder of the Greater South Bay Audiophile Society (more on that later), and I did not have the time or ambition to assume that role. So, with all the demands of life at the time, I put my art on the back burner and I took 29 years off till I retired where I found that instead of doing whatever, I wanted to return to my art. So, where to start? How about meeting as many artists as I could – here, in Long Beach? All the artists we hung around with back then had moved away like us… I was alone in the art world with no one to turn to. Now, Long Beach is an extremely diverse city and is home to more artists per capita than anywhere else in SoCal, so we became very active in the art community, attending openings, hosting events, meeting new people and eventually collaborating with other artists, as well as buying as much art as we can afford from local artists, while eventually becoming a co-founder in Art Clout LB (more HERE; date of access: 27.09.2020). And so here I am as an artist. Upon returning to my art, the first pieces were simply to see if I could re-create a few of those I had done 29 years prior. That would be works 5 and 6. Since then, my art has evolved into less “furniture” or “functional”, but more sculptural stuff. I like to say that “Dave constructs sculptural things that might tell a story, cause one to think of a story, serve some practical purpose, or maybe none of these.” ⸤ The Fern&Roby Montrose turtable with the Soundsmith Zephyr MIMC cartridge All the pieces are mixed media, and, for sure, I like to play with materials, colors, etc.. I am not out to make a statement or to create controversy. What I make is what I make. If the piece speaks to you, great. If you see things in it, nice. But, in most cases, they are what they are. Inspiration comes from seeing shapes and patterns, materials, and colors… and what can I do with these? I like to play with things and see what happens. Sometimes it ends up in the trash, sometimes it is repurposed, most times it ends up as something I was not expecting – oh, this worked! And while I know a number of artists whose work does make a statement to make change in the world, or make you reflect on events… that is not me. Having never taken an art class other than in the 7th grade, perhaps graduating from art school has allowed them to create art on a different level – with a purpose, whether it be political or whatever. My garage is now my studio and with some 90 pieces, I now require a storage place to keep them safe. I do have an audio system in the studio, one that harkens back to my beginnings – a simple integrated amplifier and loudspeakers. I can also stream music to an Audioengine DAC from my phone, so that the music follows me whether working inside or outside the studio. I will note that the art world is not what it was 30 some years ago when shows were rather easy to come by and having an agent was a combination of a phone call and here is my portfolio. Today it is pay to play and agents expecting you to pay them upfront… Well, unless you are one of the bigger players, which I am not. While I see myself as “upcoming”, I also see myself having enough years and shows under my belt making me perhaps less so. Established? Maybe, people tend to know me and I have had a piece in a show at the Long Beach Museum of Art. But I am what I am and my art is what it is… I have no pretense or ambitions where I am thinking “Look at me, I am an artist!” I want to go back to something that I pretty much skipped over, but did hint at. Back in the late 1980s, Carol and I started an audiophile society named the Greater South Bay Audiophile Society with a neighbor couple who lived on our street. Our meeting sort of went like this… And that was the beginning. Phone ringing off the hook with people wanting to know how soon we will meet and where. Within a few years, we had over 140 members with a monthly “newsletter magazine” of 16 pages, a table at various “Stereophile” shows and recognition within the industry. But then our partners moved to the East Coast for work and we soured running the Society by ourselves. And so we left to start the publication of the “audioMusings” magazine with a few like-minded members. I mean, why not? We were publishing a 16-page newsletter every month, why not a proper magazine? The Society floundered for a few years until it was taken over by Bob Levi who rebranded it into the Los Angeles and Orange County Audio Society . Well, after a few years of publishing the “aM” print journal (I was responsible for the layout, design and so on via PageMaker), all the while being an educator, father and husband… Yeah, that was not going to last. We had published 14 issues in three years and while we were very well respected, in all respects we were just a blip on the radar of audio magazines. Sure, you could find us in various Tower Records (the one in Tokyo was our biggest seller) and, yeah, we had subscribers and most people in the industry knew us… but we really were not going to go anywhere. And the candle was burning out. While I found a creative outlet in publishing, it simply could not last – just so much work for no return. We never made a dollar, as we always broke even, nor did we ever lose a dollar… other than our initial collective investments to get it rolling. ⸤ Carol’s and Dave’s listening room, a view of the CD shelf Over the years of doing “aM”, we had met David and Lila (our partners now in PF) at various shows and learned that they felt much the same about publishing the print version of “Positive Feedback”. So, after working out an LLC and whatnot to join David and Lila with PF, ending its print days and going online, we approached our partners in “aM” with our plans (they wanted to continue in print, as the web did not interest them), and severed our part in the magazine which ultimately closed up shop. I mean, who was going to take over our roles? It was quite amicable with the “aM” partners joining us here in the web version of “PF” (actually, it was initially the merging of “PF” and “aM”, whereas today it is just “PF”, as it has evolved over the years). At the time, Carol and I handled the backend of the webzine (html via FrontPage), but over time we saw the need to go from Web 1 to Web 3 and switched to a dynamic site via WordPress. And here we are today some 15 years later. Carol and I still handle the overall look and feel of the site, as well as editing and managing certain duties, but as for the heavy lifting in terms of the backend and coding, uh… we have a guy. WP: Tell us a few words about your audio system. ⸤ LOUDSPEAKERS: Vandersteen Quatro Wood Carbon ⸤ Carol’s and Dave’s listening room, a view of the LP rack WP: Could you tell us what 10 records my readers should listen to right away and why?
WP: Thank you for the interview! | THE EDITORS series
|29| ERIC TEH, “Eric’s Hi-Fi Blog”, Editor-in-chief / Publisher | SINGAPORE |
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