Astell&Kern Just Killed the Touchscreen With Two Knobs and $2,000

Physical controls are having a moment. Volkswagen and Subaru are bringing back buttons and dials after years of touchscreen regret. Ferrari’s first EV was designed with Jony Ive’s studio around toggle switches and analog-style gauges. Across the design world, the message is clear: tactile isn’t nostalgia, it’s better design.

The Astell&Kern PD20 arrives right in the middle of this shift, and it might be the purest expression of it yet. This $1,970 portable digital audio player could have easily been just another black rectangle with a touchscreen. Instead, Astell&Kern built what it calls a “Sound Lab Control,” a device whose entire design philosophy revolves around physical interaction. Two wheels sit on top of the player, one for volume and one for sound tuning, positioned symmetrically like the controls on a vintage mixing console. On the side, physical slide switches let you toggle between amplifier modes and current levels without ever touching a menu. An LED ring around the power button glows different colors depending on the bit depth of whatever you’re playing. The whole thing is machined from aluminum and feels like something an engineer would be proud to leave on a desk.

Designer: Astell&Kern

The PD20’s signature feature, the Sound Master Wheel, offers 160 steps of EQ adjustment across bass, midrange, and treble. That means you can nudge your sound profile in tiny, precise increments while a song is playing, feeling each click of the wheel under your fingertip. It’s the kind of control that a touchscreen slider simply can’t replicate. You don’t need to look at anything. You don’t need to navigate a settings page. You just reach up and turn.

But the PD20 isn’t just a design exercise in retro appeal. Underneath all those physical controls is genuinely forward-thinking audio engineering. Astell&Kern partnered with Audiodo, a Swedish audio company, to build what they call Personal Sound, a system that uses included earphones to run a hearing test and then generates a custom sound profile matched to your specific ears. It compensates independently for left and right channels, which means the equalization isn’t generic. It’s calibrated to how you, personally, perceive sound. No other portable player on the market does this.

The hardware backs up the ambition. Four ESS ES9027PRO DACs run independently in a quad configuration, and a triple amplifier system lets you switch between Class A, Class AB, and a hybrid mode using a physical slider. Class A delivers that warm, rich analog texture that audiophiles love. Class AB is more efficient and dynamic. The hybrid splits the difference. You can even adjust the amplifier current across three levels to match whatever headphones you’re using, from sensitive in-ear monitors to power-hungry planar magnetics.

Storage won’t be a bottleneck either. The PD20 comes with 256GB built in, expandable to 1.5TB via microSD if you’re the type who carries around a lossless library. It handles everything from standard MP3s up to 32-bit/384kHz PCM and native DSD256 files: formats so high-resolution that most people can’t actually hear the difference, but audiophiles will appreciate having the headroom. There’s also built-in streaming support for Tidal, Qobuz, and other high-res services, which means you’re not locked into offline playback only. The touchscreen is there when you need it for navigation and track selection, but it’s deliberately kept secondary to the physical controls that define the experience.

It’s a lot of capability packed into a device you can hold in one hand. And I think that’s the point. The PD20 represents a growing understanding across the tech and design industries that physical controls aren’t a step backward. They’re a different kind of intelligence, one rooted in muscle memory, tactile feedback, and the human preference for tools that feel like extensions of ourselves rather than obstacles between us and what we’re trying to do.

The dedicated music player, as a category, has always been a niche product. Most people are perfectly happy streaming from their phones. But the PD20 isn’t really competing with your phone. It’s competing with the idea that every interaction with technology needs to happen on a flat piece of glass. For $1,970, you get a beautifully built object that invites you to touch it, turn it, and shape your music with your hands. In a landscape full of featureless screens, that feels like a radical proposition.

The post Astell&Kern Just Killed the Touchscreen With Two Knobs and $2,000 first appeared on Yanko Design.

Astell&Kern SP3000T is a modern music player with retro vacuum tube amps

It’s not unusual these days to see plenty of retro-themed designs and products, all trying to capitalize on the strong emotions that nostalgia can bring. Most of these simply slap on a facade that mimics the aesthetic from decades past, but some do try to also recreate the experience by using what would be considered vintage technology or components. Of course, it’s not enough to just use old-school technologies, they also need to be properly integrated into today’s features. That’s the kind of balance that Astell&Kern’s latest portable music player tries to deliver, bringing a modern device that not only looks retro on the outside but partly on the inside as well, blending the present and the past in perfect harmony.

Designer: Astell&Kern

It might come as a surprise in the age of smartphones, but there are still companies producing music-playing devices that do only that. It allows the brand to focus solely on perfecting the listening experience without having to worry about cameras, cellular networks, and apps. As far as those portable music players go, Astell&Kern’s existing SP3000 is already quite distinctive with its hard, faceted, and angular design, giving it an almost industrial aesthetic, especially with its stainless steel body and 99.9% pure silver plating.

The SP3000T, however, gives that design a retro twist by adding dual vacuum tube amplifiers on the back of the device. These aren’t just for show, though, as they actually function the way the tube amps did in the past, using modern techniques and materials, of course. The tubes bring not just an analog appearance but also an analog sound, delivering a unique audio quality that can be best described as warm and soothing, qualities that are difficult to achieve simply using digital sound.

What’s even more interesting is that listeners won’t have to choose between one or the other. Yes, the SP3000T lets you switch between these analog tube amplifiers and the digital op-amp mode, but there is also a third hybrid option that mixes the two together. What you get is a combination of the precision and high-resolution output of the digital amp mixed with the warm tonal qualities of the analog vacuum tubes.

The Astell&Kern SP3000T also carries the brand’s latest audio technologies, including a digital-to-analog converter that promises a complete separation of digital and analog signals for the cleanest sounds. It also has 8GB of memory, boasted to be the highest in digital audio players, for smoother operations. And, yes, it also has a touch display, almost like a smartphone, that lets you enjoy not only album art but also themes, adding a bit of joy to this retro-modern listening experience.

The post Astell&Kern SP3000T is a modern music player with retro vacuum tube amps first appeared on Yanko Design.

Astell&Kern’s Award-Winning SR35 Portable Hi-Fi Audio Player Delivers Sublime Sound on a Budget

The iPod may have died at the turn of the 2010s, but for audiophiles, Astell&Kern’s handheld Hi-fi Digital Audio Players (DAPs) couldn’t have come at a more perfect time. Since 2012, the company’s developed some of the most premium-sounding audio gear consumers could ask for, with the SR35 being a culmination of the company’s decade-long innovation in the audio category. Now in its fourth avatar (following last year’s SR25 MKII) the SR35 boasts even better specs, with 20 hours of continuous playback, Quad DAC, and two-step Gain control – all powered by Astell&Kern’s New Generation Amp technology, featured for the first time in their portable A&norma product range.

Designers: So Yean Kim, Ji Sun Kim, Jong Min Jeong, Dong O Hwang, Seon Mi Ko & Jong Seung Kim

Click Here to Learn More

The A&norma SR35 lives up to Astell&Kern’s lofty legacy. It delivers sound that rivals full-size players, ensuring you get the most out of your music on the go. At the heart of the SR35 is the Cirrus Logic CS43198 Quad DAC Chip, ensuring impeccable sound reproduction. What sets it apart is the inclusion of Astell&Kern’s TERATON ALPHA technology, which enhances dynamics, spatial perception, resolution, and separation, delivering true-to-life Hi-Fi audio that does your lossless music collection true justice.

The experience is powered by Astell&Kern’s latest amp technology. Pulling from its top-end A&ultima line, the SR35 is the first in the A&norma series to get this high-end amplifier tech, which effectively improves noise reduction at high power output. To ensure consistent operation with various impedance output sources, the output end of the SR35 is enhanced with increased current handling capability, thereby optimizing performance across multiple devices. The SR35 comes with two-step gain-matching (“Normal Gain” and “High Gain”) for different headphones and IEMs, and houses three jacks on top for wired connections including one unbalanced 3.5mm out, and balanced 2.5mm and 4.4mm outputs respectively.

Although the audiophile community expresses much disdain for wireless experiences, the A&norma SR35 does a compelling job of handling wireless audio well too. The SR35 embraces the future of music playback with Bluetooth v5.0, supporting LDAC and Qualcomm® aptX™ HD codecs. Additionally, its dual-band (2.4/5GHz) WiFi ensures uninterrupted streaming and Roon Ready compatibility, allowing you to enjoy HiFi music through various services. The BT Sink function connects the SR35 to external devices via Bluetooth, offering a cableless, wireless solution for music file management, and Roon Ready compatibility elevates your audio experience by delivering the best sound quality through network systems.

The A&norma SR35’s design is instantly memorable with its iconic slanted 3.6-inch HD display that’s carried forward from its SR15 in 2018. With perhaps the strangest bezels on the planet, the hi-fi audio player boasts a tilted UI that cleverly avoids accidental touches from your thumb or fingers while holding the device. The tactile experience gets carried forward to that large textured volume crown on the side, which becomes a defining element of sorts for the SR35’s design. The other defining element is its compact, chiseled form factor that Astell&Kern describe as ‘warrior-inspired’. The bezel on the left is shaped like a broad sword with a pointed tip, while the large volume knob almost doubles as a shield-like element. The angled surfaces also lend a rugged appeal to the hi-fi audio player, eliciting a comparison with Tesla’s armored Cybertruck. All this combined has earned the SR35 multiple accolades including the iF Design Award 2023.

But it’s not all about outer aesthetics; the user interface has received a thoughtful overhaul too. The SR35 boasts a redesigned Crimson-themed UI/UX for an immersive music experience while simultaneously offering intuitive navigation through music categories with simple gestures as well as a powerful search feature and integrated album art for a visually engaging experience. The dark black and red theme not only reduces eye fatigue but also prolongs the SR35’s industry-leading battery life. Built with a 3,150mAh battery on the inside, the SR35 provides an impressive 20 hours of continuous playback that comfortably gets you through long-haul flights, long workdays, vacations, or even lazy weekends when listening to great music can become somewhat of a ritual.

The A&norma SR35 weighs a mere 184 grams, despite its all-metal body that gives it a premium in-hand experience. It sports a USB-C port at the base that lets you charge your audio player or connect it to a Windows or macOS device for transferring files. For enthusiasts, the SR35 starts at $800, undercutting Astell&Kern’s A&ultima series (while still delivering all the power-features) as well as the competition.

Click Here to Learn More

The post Astell&Kern’s Award-Winning SR35 Portable Hi-Fi Audio Player Delivers Sublime Sound on a Budget first appeared on Yanko Design.