Cambridge Audio Azur 650BD review

Best Blu-ray player £300+, Awards 2010. The Cambridge Audio Azur 650BD's sound, price and competitive performance make it one of the most capable d Tested at £400

What Hi-Fi? Verdict

Best Blu-ray player £300+,Awards 2010. Offers a clear sonic improvement over its cheaper alternatives, and is especially superior with music

Pros

  • +

    Sturdily finished, extravagantly specified

  • +

    impressive cross-format performance

Cons

  • -

    Not quite the best Blu-ray pictures £400 can buy

Why you can trust What Hi-Fi? Our expert team reviews products in dedicated test rooms, to help you make the best choice for your budget. Find out more about how we test.

Enthusiastic adopters of new technology often have a number of players knocking about, what with Blu-ray, CD, HDCD, SACD, DVD and DVD-Audio discs to enjoy.

Cambridge Audio
wants to put an end to your multiple box/extravagant power consumption misery with the Azur 650BD. As well as all the formats, the 650BD will handle eight-channel decoding of all high-definition audio, and packs 1GB of memory for BD-Live access, and two USB 2.0 inputs.

The casework is hefty, the remote comprehensive (though unlit and a plasticky imitation of the original metal Azur Navigator) and the on-screen menus crisp and coherent.

Only the lack of wireless connectivity (the Ethernet port is for wired connection only) prevents a nap hand.

Fast disc loading time
Blu-ray performance impresses. The 650BD loads discs a sight faster than most – The Dark Knight was ready to go in around 20 seconds.

And the lustrous colour palette, bright contrasts, smooth edge definition, assured motion handling and torrential levels of detail are amirable.

A scene combining complex patterns with slow panning can provoke a smattering of picture noise, but, set against everything the 650BD does well, that's almost a gratuitous complaint.

Sounds punchy, expansive and exciting
Other aspects of home cinema performance are just as compelling. Whether sending undecoded audio to a receiver via HDMI, or taking care of high-definition soundtracks on board, the 650BD sounds punchy, expansive and exciting, with nicely judged bite at the top end and a richly articulate midrange.

It upscales DVD to 1080p with few alarms, and makes the most of Dolby Digital or DTS sound.

DVD-Audio and SACD sound clean, dynamically potent and spacious. It's the even-handedness and musical presentation that makes the 650BD's especially enjoyable here.

Even stereo CD playback isn't badly compromised – a degree more focus wouldn't go amiss, but, for detail retrieval and midrange eloquence, this has little real competition.

The 650BD may not be a ‘universal' player in that it's not a master of every format it can play, but its price and competitive performance make it one of the most capable affordable disc-spinners around.

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What Hi-Fi?

What Hi-Fi?, founded in 1976, is the world's leading independent guide to buying and owning hi-fi and home entertainment products. Our comprehensive tests help you buy the very best for your money, with our advice sections giving you step-by-step information on how to get even more from your music and movies. Everything is tested by our dedicated team of in-house reviewers in our custom-built test rooms in London, Reading and Bath. Our coveted five-star rating and Awards are recognised all over the world as the ultimate seal of approval, so you can buy with absolute confidence.

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