Verdict
Affordable is a relative term – but when you stack up everything the Linn Majik DSM (5th Gen) does so well alongside the pride that comes with ownership, the asking price actually seems fair enough
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Thrillingly direct, articulate and coherent sound -
Thorough and thoughtful specification -
Splendid standard of build and finish
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Lack of a full-on display looks increasingly wilful -
Quite forthright at the top of the frequency range -
Control app could be more responsive
Key Features
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Power
50 watts of Class D power per channel (at 8 ohms) -
Audio
DSD256 and 24bit/384kHz digital audio resolution -
Turntable
Moving magnet and moving coil phono amplification
Introduction
It’s a sign of just how early Linn saw the writing on the digital audio network streaming wall that its entry-level Majik DSM (which first saw the light of day as the Majik DS-I back in 2009 and morphed into the original Majik DSM in 2012) is now on its fifth incarnation.
New ground can only be broken once, though, and this fifth-generation machine faces more, and more capable, opposition than any previous Majik DSM – so is the original still the best?
Design
- Crisp monochrome display
- Even crisper glass-and-LED control dial
One person’s minimal is another’s featureless, I realise – but for my money the broad strokes of the Majik DSM design work really well. It’s only available in one finish – black – and when it’s not operating, the fascia is equally black, with only a 6.3mm headphone socket and some small type confirming the brand and model of the device breaking the darkness.
The chassis is formed from a single sheet of powder-coated aluminium – it’s 2mm thick, finished to a satin-like sheen and is punched, cut and folded at Linn HQ in Glasgow. The standard of fit and finish is impeccable, and if anything it makes the Majik DSM look and feel like an even more expensive product than it actually is.

This impression of sophisticated understatement is enhanced by the company’s signature cut-glass control dial which sits on the top of the box (there’s a central foot of identical dimensions at the bottom, which makes it look like one continuous tube).
It features 100 LEDs that illuminate to indicate the amount of volume that’s been dialled in, and casually carries the company logo in the centre. Iconic is a word that gets overused these days, but I’m struggling for a more apt description.


About the only false note where design is concerned centres around the fascia display. Sure, it’s bright and crisply rendered, high-contrast and legible, and it hands over all relevant information – and it responds to commands from the full-system remote control handset rapidly and reliably.
But these days, streaming amplifiers use their display to, well, display other things too – album artwork from music streaming services or network-attached devices, say, or virtual VU meters. Nothing essential, I know, but definitely among the nicer of the ‘nice to haves’ – and it’s in this area alone that the Linn’s minimalism is anything less than welcome.


Features
- 50 watts of Class D power per channel (at 8 ohms)
- DSD256 and 24-bit/384kHz digital audio resolution
- Moving magnet and moving coil phono amplification
I’m moving away from minimal now. The Majik DSM is a thoughtfully specified device, one that has the hardware, as well as the inputs, that make it well capable of supporting an extensive system.
On the inside, Class D amplification built around TI modules and derived from the circuit developed for the much pricier Selekt DSM twists out 50 watts per channel into an 8-ohm load – and that figure doubles as loudspeaker impedance halves.
Digital-to-analogue conversion is based on the company’s Katalyst DAC that first saw service in the even-pricier-than-Selekt Klimax DSM – 24-bit/384kHz PCM and DSD256 resolutions are catered for. The technology in the latest Majik DSM has not so much trickled down as poured.


As far as inputs are concerned, the Linn is not short. There are wireless options, of course – dual-band Wi-Fi means internet radio, Apple AirPlay 2, and the Connect version of Spotify is available, and it allows the Majik DSM to be Roon Ready too.
Bluetooth is available too, in rather antiquated 4.2 version – but let’s face it, for a product like this Bluetooth is little more than a courtesy.
The physical stuff consists of an Ethernet socket, naturally, and there’s an HDMI eARC socket in case you want to involve your TV in your Linn system. There are further digital options in the shape of a USB-C slot, a digital optical input, and an S/PDIF connection that can be configured as an output rather than an input if you so desire.
A couple of line-level inputs are on RCAs, and there are two phono stages too – one moving coil, the other moving magnet. So don’t say you don’t have options.
Outputs consist of a line-level analogue output on a pair of RCAs, a couple of pre-outs for use with subwoofers, that headphone socket I already mentioned, the S/PDIF output if you’ve configured it that way, and binding posts for a pair of loudspeakers.


As well as the remote control handset (which features assignable shortcut buttons as well as headline functionality), Linn’s control app is available for iOS and Android. The app is comprehensive, clean in the way it’s presented, and allows integration of some of the better music streaming services out there as well as offering complete system control.
It can occasionally be forgetful, though, and equally occasionally will insist on having a long, hard think about what you’ve asked for before getting around to giving it.
Ownership of the Majik DSM (5th Gen) also gives access to Linn’s Space Optimisation software – and if there’s a more thorough way of making sure your system is as fully attuned to your listening area as possible, I’ve yet to encounter it.
Tell the software everything about your space (and I mean everything, from the type of speakers you’re using and the dimensions of the room to the space’s humidity and the materials used in its construction) and the system will automatically calibrate itself accordingly.
Performance
- Rapid, detailed and unified sound
- Great powers of control and resolution
- Direct and positive in all circumstances
Obviously it concerns itself with every aspect of music reproduction, but Linn’s major preoccupation concerns time-alignment.
Music sounds more convincing and more complete, goes the reasoning, if every scrap of frequency information in a recording is delivered to the listener’s ears at exactly the same time. If it doesn’t, the idea of unity and of performance goes, to a lesser or greater extent, out of the window.
Given that the Majik DSM (5th Gen) offers an extremely persuasive suggestion of togetherness, of performance and musicality, it seems reasonable to assume Linn’s powers where time-alignment is concerned are as strong as ever.


This impression of a unified presentation is apparent no matter what you’re listening to or from where you source it. During the course of this test I listen to vinyl via a Technics SL-1300G equipped with a Goldring 1042 cartridge, CDs using a Rega Apollo, and stream music from TIDAL and via a Buffalo NAS device.
I listen to music as varied as Andrew Weatherall’s Qualia, Michelangelo Dying by Cate Le Bon and John Coltrane’s My Favourite Things. And every time, the Majik DSM (5th Gen) delivers a confident and utterly convincing presentation.
The soundstage the Linn creates is spacious, properly defined and allows every element on it all the elbow-room it needs to express itself. There’s more than enough dynamic headroom available to make the numerous fluctuations in volume and intensity in the Coltrane recording absolutely apparent. And where tonality is concerned, the DSM seems more than willing to get out of the way of a recording and allow it to dictate terms.


At the bottom of the frequency range it’s capable of impressive extension, genuine weight and stunning rapidity – the Linn controls bass sounds with such authority that recording fairly blaze along, expressing rhythms with absolute positivity. Some may hanker after a little more meat on the low-end bones, but anyone who values momentum, impact and variation at the bottom end will find plenty to excite them here.
At the opposite end of the frequency range the Majik DSM (5th Gen) comes this close to overplaying its hand. Treble sounds are just as detailed, just as substantial and just as loaded with variation as every other part of the frequency range, but if handled carelessly where system-matching is concerned it’s not difficult to imagine them becoming rather too assertive and forthright. Avoid speakers (in particular) with a propensity to hit treble sounds especially hard, and you should be fine.
In between, the Linn communicates the midrange in the most decisive and eloquent way. It’s such an articulate, expressive device where voices are concerned that all of the secrets of tone and technique, of character and attitude and emotional state, are made absolute plain. The sensation of disclosure, of the whole story being told in the most explicit fashion, is extremely strong.
Should you buy it?
You’re after supremely positive and eloquent audio performance from a well-equipped streaming amplifier made by a brand with more credibility than most
If you own bright speakers
You have speakers that are notably lively at the top of the frequency range, and/or you expect some album artwork on your streamer’s display
Final Thoughts
It doesn’t come as any great shock that Linn’s newest and most affordable network streaming system is a top-to-bottom success, and I’m not even mildly surprised that it’s such an accomplished and consistent listen.
Yes, the price is creeping up – but that’s hardly a Linn-specific phenomenon, is it?
How We Test
I connected the Linn Majik DSM (5th Gen) to a pair of Bowers & Wilkins 705 S3 Signature loudspeakers.
Physical sources consisted of a Technics SL-1300G turntable with Goldring 1042 cartridge playing into the MM phono input and a Rega Apollo CD player connected to the Toslink. TIDAL Connect and network-attached storage were accessed via the control app, as was internet radio.
This gave me access to a lot of different types of music, stored in a variety of ways, and of various different file types and sizes. I lived with this system as a daily listen for well over a working week.
- Tested for a week
- Tested with real world use
- Tested with a range of sources
FAQs
No, there isn’t – black is your only option.
As far as plugging in and getting sound, it couldn’t be any easier. Use the complimentary ‘Space Optimisation’ software and you can set it up precisely to your listening space – although this is a slightly more involved process…
Something decent, obviously, but the Linn is capable of driving pretty much anything remotely realistic. It’s worth bearing in mind that buying a pair of the company’s own 119 standmounters at the same time as a Majik DSM (5th Gen) can get you a bit of a discount, though…
Full Specs
| Linn Majik DSM (5th Gen) Review | |
|---|---|
| UK RRP | £4300 |
| USA RRP | $5590 |
| EU RRP | €5095 |
| CA RRP | CA$7990 |
| AUD RRP | AU$9995 |
| Manufacturer | Linn |
| Size (Dimensions) | x 372 x MM |
| Weight | 5.7 KG |
| DAC | Linn 24-bit/384kHz PSM and DSD256 |
| Integrated Phono Stage | Yes |
| Release Date | 2025 |
| Amplifier Type | Network Streaming |
| Resolution | x |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi, Bluetooth |
| Colours | Black |
| Frequency Range | – Hz |
| Audio Formats | AAC, AIFF, Apple Lossless, DSD, FLAC, MP3, OGG, WAV, WMA |
| Amplification | Class D |
| Stated Power | 100 W |
| Apps | Linn |
| Inputs | 2 x speaker binding; 2 x subwoofer; line-level analogue; 6.3mm headphone; S/PDIF (configurable) Remote control: |
| Outputs | 2 x line-level analogue; MC phono; MM phono; USB-C; Toslink HDMI eARC; S/PDIF (configurable) |
