Advise for new speakers for my basement exercise room


new member. I would  appreciate your expert advise for new speakers for my basement exercise room 15x25. Hard floor and walls with  4 windows and 9' ceiling. I am using near mint JBL 112s but hi frequency sounds are not realistic. Lows are great.  System is Nak CA7 pre, PA7 Nelson Pass 200w amp, and Sony ES707ESD CD player, AQ and Morrow cables.  Like upbeat music for exercise. Don't have time and do not want to go and audition and comfort level is about 5k or less.  My Mission 770s sound better than the JBLs there, but are needed elsewhere.
Thank you everyone for your advise and time.
johnmabaltimore
Speaker sound is probably the most subjective ideal in the audiophile realm. If you like Mission 770s and the JBLs, then you seem to enjoy a deeper sound with a bass bias. 
My advise is to listen to a "brighter" speaker (B & W 603 s2 Anniversaries come to mind) and match them with a subwoofer that can be adjusted to fit your preferred sound signature for a 400 square foot room. A REL T/9x would give you the deep bass you crave while having the B & W's with their decoupled (37htz) tweeter and continuum mid-range provide a full spectrum sound. This set up with proper cables and wiring would be about $3,400.00. The B & W's also require solid power so that might require more investment.  I realize that may be beyond the budget of the OP, but a room that size, can easily cost $10,000 to fill it with proper sound. Test listen as many speakers as you can with and without a subwoofer accompaniment to hone in your preferred sound signature. Good luck.
In a gym environment it will be tough to really dial in anything. Just too much reflection. That is unless you do treatments. If you have mirrored walls at all, plus windows you are 2 steps behind the curve. I own a gym, sound quality needs to “get it done” but a high end system is sort of pointless in the type of environment. One thing you might be able to do to help, is ceiling treatment. Another option is simply try moving your speakers around a bit. Personally, I would do the above before spending too much more $$$ on different speakers. Your are hearing your environment, not your gear…
I'm with hilde45; treat the room....It must be so 'live' as to make crumpling paper resemble a bass line...😬

Then try a little eq to taste....good luck.