smaller speakers for critical listening?


I'm curious whether folks out here think that standmount speakers can reward "critical listening." 

I know that may be a ridiculous question; of course one can sit down with Radio Shack speakers and engage in serious listening, and of course the experience is subjective for all of us. I'm actually asking for subjective responses here. If your goal is a system for critical listening, do you think smaller speakers can do the trick or do you need the bigger soundstage and depth that can come with floor-standing, planar, or electrostatic speakers? 

I'm not asking which is *better* in a given speaker line, the small ones or the big ones, and I'm not thinking about $50k Wilson-Benesch Endeavours or the like. Before the pandemic I auditioned some highly enjoyable standmount speakers in the $5k-$10k range. However, listening for an hour in a store, I couldn't tell whether they crossed the threshold from "terrific sound for a small speaker" to pull-up-a-chair-and-tune-out-the-world bliss.

As you can probably tell, I'm struggling with my room; it's very hard to place big speakers in it. Otherwise I'd buy Maggies or Vandersteens or JA Perspectives, etc, and be happy. And, to repeat, I know that the threshold for critical-listening speakers is subjective. I'm asking for opinions and experiences!
northman

Showing 1 response by big_greg

I've had some rather large speakers in my main system - Legacy Audio Focus 20/20, Klipsch (modified) KLF-30, Harbeth Super HL5 Plus (not that big and worth looking at) to name a few. 

I recently purchased KEF Reference 1 speakers and they hold their own and sound better than any of the others.  They are more detailed and can create an amazing soundstage if it's there in the recording and imaging is excellent.  I have 4 subwoofers in my system, which you probably won't be able to do if you have space issues, but they sound amazing in my rather large space even without the subs.  They do not sound "small" in any way.  

I also have Harbeth P3ESR.  I use mine in a nearfield setup for my computer system.  I have heard them in a larger listening space and they sounded wonderful, but I think you'd definitely need a sub (or more) with them.