Displaying items by tag: fezzaudio - StereoLife Magazine

Fezz Audio Titania MK2, Titania Power Amplifier MK2 & Mira Ceti MK2

Fezz Audio has refreshed its Evolution series with three updated tube amplifiers - the Titania MK2 integrated amplifier, the Titania Power Amplifier MK2 stereo power amplifier and the Mira Ceti MK2 single-ended Class A design - marking a broader technical step forward rather than a routine generational update. Based in Poland and closely linked to transformer specialist Toroidy, the company has built its reputation on combining traditional tube topologies with modern usability, and the latest MK2 versions clearly continue that approach. All three amplifiers introduce redesigned signal paths, revised driver stages and upgraded operating stability, while sharing a common set of practical improvements including automatic bias control, electronic tube protection systems, optimized warm-up sequences and support for FEBS expansion modules. Together, these changes position the new Evolution models as more mature and more system-flexible successors intended to retain the musical character of classic tube amplifiers while reducing the complexity typically associated with everyday ownership.

Fezz Audio Titania MK2

In the world of audio equipment, it is not hard to find stories that sound compelling on paper, only to lose their charm the moment they collide with reality. Someone has an interesting idea, solid technical backing, a clear vision, even the right moment to enter the market, and yet after two or three years all that remains are a few mentions in the archives of specialist websites and a handful of products remembered by their owners with a certain fondness, but little real conviction. With Fezz Audio, things were different from the very beginning. Of course, one could look at the brand with caution, as it was entering an industry that loves a good new story on the one hand, but remains deeply conservative and distrustful on the other. When somebody appears on that scene with an original tube amplifier, many music lovers inevitably ask whether it really makes sense. Is this merely another attempt to offer something that looks familiar, glows in the dark and is meant to lure customers with promises of magical sound, without necessarily being backed up by a mature design?

Fezz Audio Luna

When Fezz Audio, then a small, unknown domestic manufacturer, unveiled its first amplifier ten years ago, very few people believed it stood a chance. Yes, the company was connected to a respected producer of transformers used by prestigious audio brands, but as its own label it simply did not exist in the consciousness of audiophiles. At launch, Fezz brought only a single product to market. It was not a compact digital-to-analog converter, not a lavishly equipped solid-state integrated, but a modest tube integrated that, from the customer's perspective, distinguished itself mainly with its reasonable price and a handful of available color finishes. How was this oddity ever supposed to shake up the tightly sealed hi-fi world? And yet, within just a few months, Silver Luna was on everyone's lips. Reviewers and music lovers quickly took to it, drawn by its honest, fully tube-based sound and its raw, minimalist, slightly industrial styling. It was a straightforward, sensible piece of gear with no gimmicks, no cosmetic frills, no wooden ornaments - just engineering focused on doing one job well. It turned out you really could build tube amplifiers in Europe that didn't cost as much as a new car.

Fezz Audio Mira Ceti 300B

If I didn't know what Fezz Audio and Pylon Audio have in common, I would think they share the same owner. The two brands openly support each other, exhibit together at major industry events, hold joint photo shoots, and have the same distributor in some countries. In reality, however, these companies only share what one would call a path to success. Not easy, bumpy, risky, based on ingenuity, diligence, and young energy drawing on the experience of the older generation. Pylon Audio began as a small carpentry shop making loudspeaker cabinets. Later, it began producing its own loudspeakers, raising the bar pretty much every year. Fezz Audio, on the other hand, is a side project of a family-owned company specializing in manufacturing toroidal transformers, or at least that's how it began. Many experts say that toroids are moderately suitable for tube amplifiers, but the Lachowski brothers had a different opinion on the subject. They developed a transformer that performed brilliantly, and since it was a successful project, they decided to follow suit and build a complete amplifier around such transformers.

Fezz Audio Titania

Fezz Audio is an example of a brand that has kicked-off fairly recently, but the onset of the launch of their very first product, it has already had a considerable baggage of accumulated experience, facilitating a strong, heads-on jump-start. From the very beginning, it seems that the manufacturer has not only embarked upon the right concept when it comes to the design of the device itself, but he has also pointedly targeted an extremely attractive price range. The tube amplifier in question, called Silver Luna, has perfectly blended into the demands of audiophiles, a product trait which we have witnessed only very rarely in recent times. From the outside - it holds the traditional looks of stereo tube amplifier, made available in a range of intriguing color schemes. From the inside - a respectable powerhouse built of components stemming from the companies in-house production. And all of this comes at a price that would, under normal conditions, restrict us solely to a product range comprised of middle-class solid state amplifiers or, possibly, to some Chinese tube amplifiers, of questionable quality at that.

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