Last month, the label not only gave us this, but also very accurate replicas of the 12″ editions of Let’s Pretend We’re Married, U Got The Look, Cream, If I Was Your Girlfriend and Kiss. Raspberry Beret is one of a whole stack of reissued Prince vinyl that’s come from Warner Music this year.
So, for latter-day audiophiles, a brand-new reissue of the 12″ of Prince’s Raspberry Beret and for archive rippers, a very well-loved (ie, tremendously scratched and crackly) original edition of Stevie Wonder’s Hotter Than July, aka ‘The One With Happy Birthday’.
The two test discs we used for this review couldn’t have been been more different and were plucked from the Long Live Vinyl office collection, with the LP5’s two main uses in mind. They’re very similar price-wise and, for a comparison to other vendors, this deck sits right between Rega’s Planar 1 and Planar 2. It’s an interesting stay-at-home dad, compared to the refusing-to-grow-up uncle that is Audio-Technica’s more DJ-focused AT-LP120. I dispensed with the included-as-standard Perspex cover and instantly found this to be a reassuringly heavy, nicely engineered deck. When I tried to replicate the sound when going inland on another of the test discs, it was, of course, entirely absent. One thing I did notice, though, was that it is quite a microphonic deck, so it amplified my (rather less than gentle, I have to admit) thudding of the arm lever when I lowered the tonearm down to play my first test disc: though it has to be said that the volume was up very high and it was noticeable only on the intro’s silent grooves. With a firm twist of the start/stop knob, the turntable was up to speed almost straight away. The first thing that struck me about this deck was the high torque of the drive belt. We used the Rega amp to test the Planar 3 turntable in Issue 2, but this time, I took a moment to sit back and use a feature I overlooked last timeand enjoy the remote control to trigger its powered, motor-driven volume knob. Likewise, rather than listening back through computer speakers or headphones, we treated it to some very complementary speakers in the form of a pair of Classic 2s from the team at Essen’s ALR Jordan – and these were given some room to breathe viaa pair of very striking RS 203 stands by Custom Design. Outweighing the turntable on price (it comes in at £598), the Brio 3 put this deck on the highest sonic pedestal available – clearly a far cry from simply plugging the USB output into your laptop. To put the LP5 through its paces, we combined it with a tried-and-tested amp, the Brio 3 from Rega. With a reassuringly minimalist design (and a nice, thick 5mm composite rubber mat), 33 1/3 and 45 RPM speeds are selected with a combined power/stop knob on the front left. It’s a direct-drive turntable with a cast-aluminium platter and comes ready-fitted with the AT95EX Dual Moving Magnet cartridge (available exclusively on this model) mounted on a lightweight headshell, the AT-HS10, with its very fetching gold-plated connections. The AT-LP5 has a J-shaped tonearm (far more adept than a straight arm at reducing tracking errors, it’s claimed) and outputs either via phono, line stereo or USB. Website If you want to sit back and enjoy new vinyl releases on a strong, audiophile deck, or if you require a reliable, accurate playback system for ripping all your old records to digital files, then this system aims to please on both counts.
The first one, while not where the instructions said, apparently is simply the Norton Utilities.exe file used to install the application (and I suppose simply opening it is the same as installing it).High-fidelity playback and modern bells and whistles are combined in this turntable, aimed at those of us who are rediscovering our passion for some needle time, says Ian Peel.Īdditional equipment ALR Jordan Classic 2 speakers & Rega Brio amp If its helpful, that solution is at:įor that solution, the three files identified are: NU.exe, RMReg.exe, and RMScrn.exe. I could not do that procedure because the three files necessary to find were not where they were supposed to be, and in a search of my entire computer, two of them did not even exist.
I note, while I could not find it in a search here at Norton, in a Google search I found a solution here at Norton (Norton, fix your search tool!), but it was for Norton Utilities 14 and on Windows XP and Windows Vista.
How can I fix this and get the application to open?
I have used it before, but when I try to open it today, it will not open, instead it gives me the message:Įrror while unpacking program, code LP5. I have Norton Utilities 16, on Windows 10.