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Göbel High End Divin Comtesse

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The Divin Comtesse had been introduced by Oliver Goebel at last year's High End show: The two speakers, which are petite by Goebel High End standards, filled the large room impressively with sound in conjunction with a subwoofer. Series production has now taken off, so a pair also found its way into my listening room – but it had to wave farewell soon.

The Comtesse is the smallest model in the Divin series and thus marks also the entry point to the entire loudspeaker portfolio from Goebel High End. The company owner explained that his distributors in non-European countries had wanted a less bulky loudspeaker, since some of the customers there had the audiophile demands, as well as the financial means, but not the space for larger sound transducers. Therefore, the main focus in the development of the Comtesse was to size down a large part of the sonic capabilities of the other representatives of the Divin line into a smaller cabinet volume. The crossover of the Comtesse is just as elaborately constructed as that of the next model up, the Marquis. The 8-inch long-throw woofer is similarly costly as the 12-inch chassis of this next larger model, while the midrange driver and the tweeter are identical and the savings due to the slightly smaller cabinet are almost negligible. This puts the Comtesse in the position to offer an unusually large amount of Goebel High End technology at a comparatively moderate price.

The midrange driver of the Divin Comtesse is an 8-inch chassis specially developed for the Bavarian high-end manufactory, into which, according to the product brochure, the patented Goebel® bending wave technology has been implemented. This is based on the principles of sound generation as known from musical instruments and is the result of over 15 years of development work, invested to achieve the most natural sound possible. The high-frequency spectrum is reproduced by an AMT chassis – or Air Motion Transformer – to which a waveguide milled from a solid block of aluminum has been adapted. The specific curve of this waveguide ensures that all drivers are flawlessly combined to create a homogeneous and natural sonic image. The low-frequencies are handled by a Goebel® 8-inch long-throw woofer, which has been designed to achieve perfectly homogeneous sound dispersion and equally homogeneous stimulation of room modes. This driver, specially manufactured for Goebel, was placed on the front baffle constructed according to the concept of “Constraint Layer Damping”, in which layers of different materials damp each other, in such a way that an absolutely smooth transition from the 8-inch midrange driver to the long-throw woofer’s low frequency band is achieved. The use of multi-layer, tropical-proof materials in the enclosure is intended to guarantee the ideal stiffness-damping behaviour ratio, and the chosen, purely functional form is said to eliminate any flexion, resonance or energy-storing effect.

The top-model of the Divin series, the Majestic, is delivered in six flight cases, as I once learned during a visit to the company headquarters. Even with Goebel High End's most affordable loudspeaker to date, the Comtesse, a flight case made in Germany is included in the scope of delivery. Oliver Goebel kindly brought an electric stair climber along to aid the delivery, so that the two speakers could be transported to the listening room without being carried by human hands. After they had found their approximate position in the tried-and-tested places and had been connected to Einstein's The Poweramp using Goebel speaker cables, I entrusted Oliver Goebel to the listening room with an iPad and access to the Qobuz streaming service. He simply needed a bit of peace and concentration to play his test tracks, as well as plenty of time to set up his speakers enabling them to develop their full potential. Well, another reason for my temporary retreat could, of course, be that there was a series of vocal tracks among his test files coming along...


When I returned to the listening room and listened to the first short excerpts from my favourite musical pieces, I was surprised not to miss anything in the first place – even though I had been enjoying the Børresen 05 SSE, which are several times more expensive, for quite a while: In terms of timbre, dynamics, resolution and spatial imaging, the Comtesse left nothing to be desired. What particularly amazed me is that the Comtesse sounds so much bigger than it really is: It’s an easy task for the Divin to reproduce sound events also occurring above its cabinet. I usually close my eyes automatically when I concentrate on listening. With the Goebel speakers, however, this is almost obligatory: otherwise, the visual impression reduces the sonic image to the height of the speaker itself. Without eye contact, however, you feel as if you are facing a much higher sound source. This is really awesome.

But that wasn’t the end of the line. Oliver Goebel insisted that I also took a closer listen to one or two female singers. And that was much more pleasant than I had fearfully expected. You could say that voices are the Comtesse's prime discipline, if it didn't perform at the same very high level in all other areas as well. Here, I make a short leap to when the 05 SSE had returned to the listening room, playing a few songs through them during which the Comtesse had excelled in the reproduction of vocals. My highly esteemed Børresen, however, could not reproduce female vocals as homogeneously and holistically as the Goebel speakers. But let’s jump back again.

The reason why the Comtesse didn't stay in my study for too long, despite all its merits, was that after the initial euphoria it became increasingly clear that it wouldn't be able to perform miracles and solve the acoustic problem of my listening room. The sonic advantages and disadvantages of the room, I recently described in detail to some extent: It has almost no anomalies, behaves neutrally and allows the sound to completely detach from the transducers. However, the frequency response of most loudspeakers comes up with a very narrow-band, quite low dip around 64 Hertz. As with all transducers with woofers on the baffle near the floor alone, this is also noticeable with the Comtesse. I have found this increasingly annoying since the Børresen 05 SSE, with the upper of its four woofers only being positioned a short distance from the sloping roof, stimulates the room in such a way that the gap in the bass range disappears: It can neither be perceived nor measured.


Since the Comtesse didn’t take very long to make a lasting impression on me, either when it came to joyful listening or when taking the gloves off with the relevant test tracks, I really wanted to offer them better acoustical conditions. As I noticed after moving my Goebel Epoque Aeon Fine from the study to the living room, latter makes it much easier for speakers to perform, especially in the lows: There is neither a gap in the low frequencies nor do room modes disturb the bass range. Since the left speaker is closer to the sloping ceiling than the right one, the balance shifts a bit to the left, especially with tall speakers like the Acapella Violon VI – an effect that was, however, less pronounced with the less tall Epoque Aeon Fine. That's why I suggested to Oliver Goebel that he should set up the Comtesse in the living room. He didn't think twice and agreed without hesitation. It, however, then took much longer to persuade the perfectionist to get the Divin moved out of the study. Although I had already dismissed the issue of the listening room, he insisted on spending over an hour there experimenting with the placement of the Comtesse to minimize the effect of the low-frequency dip. He succeeded in doing so by placing the listening chairs very close to the back wall, but in my opinion this lead to a negative effect on the sense of space.

Perhaps I should add that moving to the living room should not be considered as an audiophile descent, as the system there has improved significantly in recent years: Einstein's The Preamp and The Poweramp are in charge of amplification here. They are connected with a balanced Swiss Cable Reference Plus, while an Audioquest Dragon Bi-Wire connects the power amplifier and the loudspeakers. The room is connected to the network via Media Converters fed by linear power supplies and a single-mode Duplex optical fibre cable. Digital signals are processed by Chord Electronics' M-Scaler and converted by a Hugo TT 2. Usually, a 2GO and a 2YU – originating from Chord Electronics as well – serve as network transport. But I didn't want to impose these little boxes on Oliver Goebel and the Comtesse. Since I made best experiences with the Lumin U2, I asked Krey Baumgartl for an exciting alternative. He suggested the brand-new T3X, which I could use as a network transport before it would move to a colleague for testing afterwards.


The already burnt-in Lumin T3X then completed the system when Oliver Goebel and I set up the Comtesse in the living room. Here the set-up was much easier to realize than in the study. The developer slightly varied the distance of the speakers to the listening position and experimented a little with the angle, and lo and behold, it was perfect – at least for me. Oliver Goebel still had to find out for himself whether, and if so, how negatively the placement of the sofa directly in front of the wall affected the sound. He finally suggested moving it 20 to 30 centimetres further into the room, which I tried with success with a couple of records. However, since I don't have the last word in the living room when it comes to hi-fi, this set-up didn’t become a permanent solution, even though the Comtesse played with a bit more definition in the bass range in this position. Regardless of this “adjustment”, I cannot remember to have ever heard music this good in the living room. The large distance of the Comtesse's tweeter from the sloping ceiling on the left side meant that the first reflection occurred later: The sound detached itself perfectly from the loudspeaker cabinets. The position of the Divin in the sonic image could no longer be located, while the balance between the channels now happened to be so equalized and stable that the playback was enjoyable even if you weren’t sitting in the centre of the sofa.

Of course, I did listen to all the relevant test files: Keith Jarrett's “God Bless The Child” confirmed the enormous rhythmic abilities of the Divin Comtesse, Patrice Heral's “Improvisation” on Michel Godard's Le Concert Des Parfums and Shostakovich's Symphony No. 15 underlined the excellent spatial imaging of the Comtesse. The latter also showed the rich timbres that the smallest Goebel speakers are capable to reproduce. “Heavy Hour”, taken from Misha Alperin's Night, underpinned the outstanding performance in terms of fine resolution and dynamics, and on “Malinye”, a track taken from the album Codona 2, Don Cherry's pocket trumpet once again demonstrated that the speakers are able to reproduce instruments in full accuracy, even displaying them at the correct height. If the Divin hadn't been so convincing in the listening room – except for the small, room-related weakness in the lows – I would have thought that they and the living room happened to harmonize perfectly by pure chance. But no, it is solely due to the enormous qualities of the Comtesse that it seems as if they had been developed for the living room!

However, I'm not going to single out a particular record that would allow me to make a critical comment to relativize my enthusiasm for the Comtesse. I'd rather tell you about an equally fascinating new musical acquisition at Qobuz – and what the Comtesse makes out of it: Fulsome X's Impermanence, Live At Porgy & Bess. Fulsome X are Wolfgang Puschnig, alto saxophone and flute, Asja Valcic, cello, Jon Sass, tuba, and Reinhardt Winkler, drums. The quartet was recorded by Quinton owner Andreas Rathammer at the Vienna Porgy & Bess on the evening of 19th November 2023, the last day of the Finest Fidelity Show 2023. And it’s truly surprising what he has done with the digital multi-track recording: The only thing it has in common with what I was able to experience that evening is the joy of playing and the exciting interaction between the musicians. Even though the sound in the club was quite good, it does not come close to the sound so typical for Quinton recordings. The last three songs serve as a good example: the title track, “Second Heaven”, which fans of Wolfgang Puschnig know from the magnificent Quinton album Chants, and “Another Step”. “Impermanence” begins with the cello in front of a deep black background in a supposedly medium-sized room. Then the tuba sets in very sparingly, with the notes seemingly bursting out of it. Rim shots are heard in a much larger space before the saxophone joins in: the calm piece develops an irresistible groove. All of this has little to do with the live on-site experience, but it fascinates every second – not least thanks to the speed, timbre strength and bass capabilities of the Comtesse.


In the track “Second Heaven”, the short rhythmic riff from the tuba and the snare beats are joined by a fat bass drum that makes you think you can literally see the drumskin. The cello and saxophone contribute short melody lines in unison. The sparse, reduced musical action takes place in a spacious virtual room, and the sound is enormously detailed, airy and transparent. What a delight! The powerful lows and the seamless integration of the Comtesse's three drivers make the multitude of transients in the rhythmically exciting track “Another Step” sound very realistic. Even the short drum solo is electrifying. Despite performing top-notch in the various hi-fi disciplines, the Goebel speakers don't miss out on the fun of music. For the living room, the Comtesse is – and will remain – our new dream loudspeaker.

STATEMENT

As the proud owner of an Epoque Aeon Fine, I am convinced of the tonal merits that Goebel bending wave sound transducers toss into the balance. I was all the more surprised by how well Oliver Goebel has managed to achieve almost the same seamless playback and speed with his new loudspeaker model using rather more conventional transducers. In addition, the Comtesse shines with an even more solid bass foundation and a seductive voice reproduction – and at a price that is high in absolute terms, but customer-friendly for what is offered. Extremely recommended!
Listened with (Listening room)
Turntable Brinkmann LaGrange with tube power supply
Tonearms Thales Symplicity II, Einstein The Tonearm 9“, AMG 12JT
Cartridges Lyra Olympos, Wilson Benesch Tessellate Ti-S, DS Audio DS-W3
Tape recorder Studer A80
NAS Melco N1Z H60/2 with external Audiaz linear power supply
Streaming bridge Auralic G1
Up sampler Chord Electronics Hugo M-Scaler with Ferrum Hypsos
D/A converter Chord Electronics DAVE with linear power supply
LAN switch Ansuz PowerSwitch D-TC Gold Signature
10 MHz Clock SOtM sCLK-OCX10 with Keces P8
Preamp WestminsterLab Quest
Power amp Einstein The Poweramp
Loudspeakers Børresen 05 SSE
Cables Goebel High End Lacorde Statement, Audioquest Dragon HC, Tornado (HC) and NRG-Z3, Dragon XLR, Swiss Cables, ForceLines, Ansuz Digitalz D-TC Gold Signature and Mainz D2
Accessories AHP Klangmodul IV G, Audioquest Niagara 5000 and 1200, Degritter Mark 2, Synergistic Research Active Ground Block SE, HMS wall sockets, Blockaudio C-Lock Lite, Acapella Bases, Acoustic System feet and Resonators, Artesania Audio Exoteryc, SSC Big Magic Base, Finite Elemente Carbofibre° HD, Harmonix Room Tuning Disks, Audio Exklusiv Silentplugs, ADOT media converter (2x) with KECES P6 and SBooster MKII, Single-mode Duplex optical fibre cable, Ansuz Sparkz, Darkz Z2S, div. Sortz, PowerBox D-TC SUPREME, Thixar Silent Feet 20, Waversa WLAN-Isolator-EXT-1 (2x), Arya Audio Revopods
Listened with (Living room)
Turntable Brinkmann Avance
Tonearm Breuer Dynamic 8
Cartridge Lyra Titan i
Phono preamp Keces Sphono
Streamer Lumin T3X (used as renderer)
Up-Sampler Chord Electronics Hugo M-Scaler with Ferrum Hypsos
D/A converter Chord Electronics Hugo TT2 with Ferrum Hypsos
NAS Melco N1Z H60/2 with external Audiaz linear power supply
Preamp Einstein The Preamp
Power amp Einstein The Poweramp
Loudspeakers Göbel Epoque Aeon Fine
Cables Audioquest Dragon Bi-Wiring, Swiss Cables Reference (Plus)
Accessories Einstein The Octopus, HighEndNovum Multivocal Resonator, Sieveking Quantum Noise Resonator, ifi Silent Power Lan iPurifier, Media Converter, Single-mode Duplex optical fibre cable
Manufacturer's Specifications
Göbel High End Divin Comtesse
Principle 3-way symmetrical loaded bass-reflex alignment
Drivers 1x Goebel® High End proprietary long-throw bass driver (8”), 1x Goebel® High End proprietary midrange driver (8”), 1x significantly improved AMT tweeter with solid aluminum wave guide
Housing Acoustically optimized, constrain layer dampening, tropical room proof, resin bounded composite board with max. 50 mm thickness
Finishes real piano lacquer black with aluminum parts in black ultra-matt soft touch, finish with silver coloured highlights, any finish possible upon customer request!
Efficiency 89dB / 1W / 1m
Frequency response 28Hz - 28.000Hz (-3dB)
Impedance 4 ohms
Impedance minimum 3,3 ohms at 100 Hz
Dimensions (HxWxD) 100/30,5/45cm
Weight 75kg (excl. packaging)
Packaging professional flight case
Price 60,000 euros
Manufacturer
Göbel High End
Address Roedersteinstr. 9
84034 Landshut
GERMANY
Phone +49 87197511657
Email info@goebel-highend.de
Web www.goebel-highend.de

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