top of page

Eversolo Play CD

  • Writer: Manel Segarra
    Manel Segarra
  • Jun 1
  • 6 min read

The definitive All-in-One Amplifier? (It's even got a CD!)



To optimize this excellent analysis for search engines without losing that friendly, expert, and direct tone that characterizes your website, we will work on the structure under a SEO content strategy.

The goal is to rank for key terms like Eversolo Play review, all in one amplifier with CD, and Eversolo Play opinions, structuring the text with clear headings that facilitate both user reading and Google crawling.

Here is the proposal, optimized and ready to publish.


Eversolo Play Review: The Ultimate All-in-One Amplifier with CD Player?

At this point, little more can be said about the success of Eversolo products bursting onto the residential audio scene. It is a success based, above all, on offering more for less and always with a honesty that ensures the customer is not misled. The brand's products have understood that the average user relies on streaming as their main music source. They have also understood that the vast majority of enthusiasts do not want or cannot afford a large separate-component system due to a lack of space.


In this state of affairs, the Eversolo Play appears and, surprisingly, adds a side tray for CD playback to the aforementioned concepts. The most interesting and commendable aspect of the product is how they have managed to include so much functionality inside such a compact enclosure.



Specifications and Connectivity of the Eversolo Play

In essence, we are talking about an integrated amplifier with streaming, digital inputs, and the aforementioned ability to play compact discs. In reality, it lacks nothing, because it also allows you to connect another analog source and even a turntable thanks to its dedicated input. Not to mention very attractive functions such as multiroom capability, room correction via microphone, or parametric equalization.


The manufacturer's website lists all the device's specifications extensively and in detail. In this product review, what interests us is verifying whether so much compressed technology works in the real world and if the amplification section is competent enough to offer true musical quality. We want to know if we are looking at just another consumer electronics device or a true piece of High Fidelity equipment.


Mobile Application and Acoustic Configuration

Let's take it one step at a time, because the Eversolo Play, given its complexity and to take advantage of all those options, requires the use of an easily downloadable app on your smartphone. Having a dedicated tablet for these tasks can be a smart and comfortable option for everyday use. The application configures very well and links natively with whichever streaming service you have contracted. Because of its efficiency and ease of use, it reminded me directly of the WiiM Amp Ultra, which I consider an absolute reference in the current market.


During the tests, I tried using the room control with the smartphone's microphone, obtaining acceptable results. However, since I know the defects and particularities of my room perfectly, I preferred not to apply any correction or equalize for this critical evaluation, listening to the device completely unaltered.

On paper, the ideal companions for the Eversolo Play would be basic or mid-range monitors with good sensitivity. When I do this type of testing, I usually ask the manufacturer to supply the speakers as well, in order to avoid using my own, which are several levels above. But on this occasion, I decided to go all in and partner the amplifier with my Italian Sigma Acoustics T-11 floorstanders from the prestigious firm Extreme Audio.


Sound Performance: Streaming Test

The result has been, to say the least, unexpected and surprising. The Eversolo demonstrated a strength that seems impossible for such a compact device to generate. But what impressed me even more was the fineness with which it managed these floorstanders.


The album Martina Mia... (2004) by Mia Martini features orchestral musical arrangements of a certain grandiloquence, where the performer’s voice expands with emotion and an excelsior vocal technique. It seems hard to believe, but the first thing I noted was that this voice was expressed with a cleanliness, prominence, and timbral truthfulness characteristic of a much larger system. I continued the session with other jazz vocalists and I can say that, in that specific aspect of the midrange, it practically matched the performance of my main system. The integrated amp brings considerable dynamics and, above all, a very commendable cleanliness to the reproduction. At times, I came to believe I was auditioning some Sonus Fabers powered by valves.


We continue with one of my favorite genres: jazz fusion. Taking advantage of the fact that the album by the indefatigable Randy Brecker titled Espírito (2026) came out recently, we dive straight into listening to it. We continue using streaming, the app responds quickly, and we turn up the volume from the phone.

Here is where I began to sense the Eversolo's limitation in its ability to deliver a massive punch in the low percussion. It is not that it doesn't get there or that it falters, but it does not do so with the generosity of my usual monoblock power amp, which features triple the wattage.



Subwoofer Management and Room Integration

Pay attention, because at this point the device surprises us in a positive way once again. I partnered it with my active subwoofer and discovered another of the great virtues of this design: its ability to manage sub-bass. To do this, we connect it using the specific RCA output. A simple menu allows us to make the necessary adjustments without much need for applying too many trial-and-error cycles.


To put it briefly, what the Eversolo does is free the Sigma T-11 floorstanders from the lowest frequencies and send them directly to the subwoofer. We can set the crossover frequency wherever it suits us best. Apart from regulating the bass output on the self-powered sub itself, we can comfortably make additional fine adjustments from the application while sitting at the listening spot. Furthermore, with the Sigmas freed from the most critical frequencies, they work with greater ease in the mid and high zones.


I played the track Hot Sauce from the same Brecker album. From the beginning, we encounter a very powerful rhythmic foundation commanded by the electric bass. The power is brutal but, with everything being managed so well by the internal software, there are no boomy bass notes or unwanted reflections in the room. The integration is perfect, which leads me to an immediate conclusion: to optimize the Eversolo's performance, the best combination in the real world would be a small pair of mid-quality monitors supported by a self-powered subwoofer that complements the low end.



CD Playback: A Smart Solution

Before entering the analog section, it is worth commenting on another of the great successes of this small all-in-one amplifier. This is the front screen, which features a very well-achieved definition and contrast. In addition to displaying menus and providing information about the song being played by the streaming service, it can also display some very well-executed retro-aesthetic VU meters.


I mention the screen issue because that is the exact reason the compact disc tray is located on the side: quite literally, it did not fit anywhere else on the chassis. It is an unorthodox but highly effective solution to combine a compact overall size with a screen that is legible from a great distance, something that is appreciated compared to other displays on the market that are illegible from more than two meters away.

We insert the CD Blood On The Tracks by Bob Dylan (1975). There are no surprises here, as we confirm that all the virtues discovered in the streaming sound remain intact. We find excellent instrument separation and a great prominence of Dylan's voice, which appears forward and well-isolated from the rest of the instrumentation.


We keep testing with other discs, including recorded copies, and the reader plays them all without any complaints or playback skips. As a small usability anecdote, from the mobile application I failed to switch directly from streaming to CD, although from the front touchscreen it is done without any problem. A great detail is that it displays the album artwork of the disc we are playing on the screen, even if it is a copied disc. You can tell that the brand's engineers have thought about the needs of the real user.


Conclusion: Is the Eversolo Play Worth It?

In short, we are dealing with a product that exceeds its own initial design premise. From a baseline of practicality, compact size, and contained cost, it is capable of achieving a true high-fidelity sound that is comparable, at the very least, to separate-component systems that occupy five times more space in the room.


For this reason, this Eversolo Play, which a priori might be considered as an excellent second system for a secondary zone, establishes itself in its own right as a solution with enough substance to become the musical heart of any audiophile home.

 








Comments


bottom of page