There is a review up on 6 Moons written by Srajan Ebaen, the editor.
"The G4, in the exact off-white of the review loaner, would be the final desert island speaker I'd personally aspire to. It's gorgeous to look at. It's built to high standards despite a form factor that suggests quite the manufacturing nightmare. It's small per se and very small for its bandwidth and SPL stability. It's studded with can't-get-elsewhere drivers purpose designed to work together. This avoids the usual transducer mash-up sourced from various suppliers. Its design DNA traces back to B&W's Nautilus project for well-proven maturity. The crowning glory of course is the sound. It subtracts all of this impressive tech from the ears to be unusually bereft of reminders of artifice or limitation."
His different writing style does not obscure his ability to explain the importance of our technologies. He gave the Giya G4 a Blue Moon award.
This review is well worth a good read.
http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews2/vivid2/1.html
"The G4, in the exact off-white of the review loaner, would be the final desert island speaker I'd personally aspire to. It's gorgeous to look at. It's built to high standards despite a form factor that suggests quite the manufacturing nightmare. It's small per se and very small for its bandwidth and SPL stability. It's studded with can't-get-elsewhere drivers purpose designed to work together. This avoids the usual transducer mash-up sourced from various suppliers. Its design DNA traces back to B&W's Nautilus project for well-proven maturity. The crowning glory of course is the sound. It subtracts all of this impressive tech from the ears to be unusually bereft of reminders of artifice or limitation."
His different writing style does not obscure his ability to explain the importance of our technologies. He gave the Giya G4 a Blue Moon award.
This review is well worth a good read.
http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews2/vivid2/1.html