Most cities of respectable size have a few respectable places to have a romantic meal or entertain important guests. Expect these system to act like a maître d’ to help you find the music you want and deliver it in a refined and enjoyable fashion.
Some gourmet systems will be user-installable, but often systems like this will benefit from a professional who knows how to tweak it best.
Gourmet music servers come in several varieties, but overall they’re focused on quality and experience. Usually they have high-quality DACs (digital to analog converters) from companies like Burr Brown or Cirrus Logic and overall better audio components. These systems are designed not just for gathering your files together, but for making them easier to get to. They have much more refined user interfaces and often can be integrated with complex control systems. A gourmet server takes most of the work out of finding your media by easily sorting it into genres, letting you (or your installer) customize some features as well.
One server brand that’s really caught on with audiophiles is Olive. The company makes several server models, but they’re all distinguished by the high-end components that go into their manufacture. The Olive O3HD is a good example, offering music lovers the ability to store 1,500 CD recorded losslessly on a 500 GB hard drive. You can load CDs via the built-in TEAC drive or load files through a USB port or your network. A 192khz/24-big Cirrus Logic DAC makes sure the music is far better than just hooking your MP3 player to your A/V receiver.
The Nuvo Music Port Elite offers a healthy buffet of entertainment. The internal hard drive will store a user’s Windows Media Player and iTunes libraries and also access to cloud content from Pandora, SiriusXM and TuneIn Radio. Users can navigate their options with Nuvo’s color touchpad, an iOS app or via a control system such as Crestron, AMX or UMC. One thing that makes Nuvo stand out here is that’s it’s made for multiroom distribution. The server integrates with the company’s Renovia system which distributes up to six sources to eight zones.

1. How many rooms do I listen to music in?
2. Do I enjoy background music or critical listening?
3. What’s most important, quality (stored lossless files) or quantity (streaming services)
4. Can I hook this up myself or do I need professional installation
5. Do I have lots of music or movies I don’t use because it’s too hard to organize?
6. How much time am I willing to put into loading and organizing my media?
Hi Grant, thanks for the review. My ultimate goal, and what I currently believe is missing, in the software end is one where as you build your movie database, and link to the content, a media server that can link to local content and web-based content (I.E Netflix/AmazonVOD).
I have large on site storage, with lots of content, however as the cloud gets better and access gets cheaper/faster, I’d much rather have someone else maintain the content. I want to browse all available content from one application/media server. Do you know any that work like this?
Thanks for reading!
I’ve been very happy with FLAC files on an external hard drive, feeding a Western Digital Media Player - it’s cheap, and varied playlists give me great control. But I’ve never been clear on where conversion is happening. The Media Player has an HDMI connection to my receiver. Do you have any idea whether this type of setup utilizes a DAC in the player, or in the receiver, or both? I’d like to take advantage of the strongest links in my data chain.
You’re right Eduardo, Request is a good product. There are lots of other companies too, but the article wasn’t intended as a list of all the products, just a general overview of the category. If anyone needs more information on Request, they can find it here http://www.request.com/. The F3 server is a nice multizone product that can play high-resolution files.
Why isn’t Request mentioned under any of the three categories? I think it is a great product that fits under the “Everyday Gourmet” group.
Alberta home is prepped with home automation and home theater to attract prospective buyers.
Alberta home is prepped with home automation and home theater to attract prospective buyers.
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I’m very happy with my DIY setup, which is fed by a NAS array (Drobo in my case) which houses video, audio and picture files. For a video server, I have Plex Server running on a Mac Mini which can serve multiple clients simultaneously (even remotely.)
Bonus: Plex Server and many Plex clients are free. It has a strong development community and it’s being ported to new hardware all the time.