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Denon DVD-A1UDCI Universal Blu-ray Player:
1080p/24 playback with the standard DVDs I watched—especially Star Wars: Episode IV—worked well, without loss of cadence or image breakup. And on top of that, the image quality on Star Wars was as good as I’ve seen from that DVD in my system. Even problem-child clips from DVDs like Gladiator that give some players fits were highly detailed and as gorgeous as standard def can be to an HD snob like myself. Even hard-core high-def addicts might find that this player rekindles their love affair with catalog titles that haven’t gone Blu yet.
Use and Interactivity: The Need for Speed
Overall disc access and reaction times with navi-gation and other interactivity was also on the slow side, including Bonus View PiP and BD-Live. As with so many other standalone players, if Denon’s looking for an area to improve upon this player’s formidable performance, interactivity and disc speed offer the biggest opportunity.
Comparisons and Sweet Sounds
However, over its analog audio outputs, the Denon is far more singular. It smashes the sound quality of the OPPO and every other BD player I’ve yet heard by a degree that’s nothing short of astonishing. Saying it’s night and day is only the beginning. The OPPO’s analog audio playback is very respectable for a $500 player, but the Denon goes much, much farther. When you listen to CDs on these two players, you’ll never guess they were playing the same format. On the Denon, Neil Young’s Live at Massey Hall CD wasn’t merely good playback; it felt like a live performance. The size of the venue and the energy of the audience were both evident and palpable. The guitar sounds weren’t merely strings anymore. I could hear the body of the instrument and Young’s hand-slapping interaction with it to an uncanny degree, and it was clearly apparent when he moved closer to or farther from the microphone. These details sound small, but they add up to an experience that’s entirely different in total. On the Denon, the jump from CDs to SACDs expanded as well. The difference in clarity and detail when the higher-resolution discs were spinning wasn’t just noticeable, it was dramatic. Going further, and perhaps more surprising, I preferred the Denon’s analog output’s sound on both CDs and audio-oriented Blu-ray Discs over a digital connection from that same player to Anthem’s D2v surround processor, which retails for $7,500. The Anthem is no slouch at all. The Denon is that good.
Conclusion
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