Meridian Sooloos Control 15 review

Other music servers can rival the Control 15's sound quality, but nothing, at any price, gets close to its extraordinary usability Tested at £4750

What Hi-Fi? Verdict

Other music servers can rival the Control 15's sound quality, but nothing, at any price, gets close to its extraordinary usability

Pros

  • +

    Wonderful music interface

  • +

    fluid sound

  • +

    impressive detail

  • +

    generous balance

Cons

  • -

    No provision for music streaming from Spotify or other services

  • -

    digital only

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.

The past decade has seen a major change in the way most of us consume music.

Increasingly, the ‘physical’ music collection, whether it's a cherished box of records or a carefully indexed rack of CDs, is an outmoded notion, a relic of a bygone, pre-internet age.

Even if the compact disc does still figure somewhere within that mix, it’s chiefly as a file from which to create an appropriate audio rip.

A 500GB music server
That’s certainly true in the case of the Meridian Sooloos Control 15. A self-contained 500GB music server complete with its own 17in touchscreen display, it intertwines cutting-edge modernity – it will store around 1000 albums in lossless form – with a more traditional ‘sound first’ hi-fi sensibility.

This might be a product aimed at the digital music generation, but there’s no need for any audio apologies here.

Remarkably, it’s also considerably cheaper than it used to be. The very first Sooloos combination we tested, in its pre-Meridian days, cost more than £11,000; the Control 15 is £4750.

And it’s ready to go out of the box, too: while you can expand both its flexibility and its music storage capacity with extra components, there’s no requirement for you to do so.

You’ll need to own either a DAC or a DAC-equipped amp, as the Control 15’s standard-fit audio outputs are digital-only, but in context that’s no great hardship.

Simplicity is the key
If you prefer – and for the ultimate plug’n’play convenience – there’s another option: Meridian’s digitally equipped DSP speakers.

These can be connected directly to the Control 15’s SpeakerLink output (a proprietary Meridian interface based on ethernet) with no additional components required, giving you a very elegant high-performance hi-fi system.

Connections aside, there’s little to challenge the unwary in setting up the Control 15, and that’s a key part of its appeal.

The slot-loading CD drive in its fascia gives it the ability to rip your discs, which it’ll do using both FLAC (for best quality) and MP3 (for compatibility with portable players).

Show it an ethernet connection, and it will pull in all the metadata it needs to both populate its 17in screen with album covers, and create a library of artist- and performer-related data that, as you’ll discover the more you use it, will greatly enrich your pleasure in using it.

Handles a variety of formats
As you’d hope, the Control 15 can also stream music from online radio stations, and it can be used to import a variety of different music formats from your computer too, with support for files up to 24-bit/96kHz quality.

That’s an irritation, because one of the great virtues of Spotify is that it makes it easier to discover new music, but in practice it turns out to be less of an issue than you’d imagine.

Once you spend time with the Meridian Sooloos, you'll find that it can pull off its own, almost equally impressive trick: it lets you rediscover the music you already own.

Flick through your collection
It achieves that by reinventing one of the great pleasures denied to most modern music enthusiasts: the simple, tactile enjoyment of flicking through your record collection.

Once loaded, indexed and presented on your Control 15, you’ll find your albums revive memories long lost in the mêlée of daily life, simply because, for the first time in (probably) years, you’ll be able to see all of them at a glance.

The company’s brilliant proprietary software lies at the heart of this interface: it lets you get to the song of your choice within 1/10th of a second, with album art and useful information refreshing just as quickly.

Searching made easy
Music browsing is made all the more enjoyable with the ‘Focus’ tool, which allows you to narrow your listening down to the songs that suits your mood at that moment, filtering by genre, artist, album, mood, recording quality and recording era.

Focusing on an artist can be an especially interesting exercise, revealing hitherto unknown tracks or collaborations, and if you want to take your musical exploration even further, you can instruct the Control 15 to 'Swim' (Sooloos-sea-style) through your music collection or, if you prefer, through a specific Focus.

It's one of those rare products that even hardened reviewers warm to (and covet) instantly.

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.


Read more about how we test