Boutique or Big Brand?


Good evening everyone! I am looking at new speakers in the $5k, maybe $6k range. My electronics and room dimensions are on "my system" posted on my profile so I won't repeat them here. I currently have Tekton Impact Monitors, but feel they do not have a good low end (I posted my review on another post so won't bore everyone here). That said, they were the best I could afford at the time and above 40Hz sound good to me.

Now I am ready to upgrade and am faced with a decision... Do I go boutique with a bigger pair of Tektons, or maybe the Salk Song3 A or BeAts; or something from Zu or Devore? Or do I go with a Big Brand like the Sonus faber Sonetto V, B&W 702, or Focal Arias?

I have heard the Tekton, Sonetto V, and B&W 8-series (not the 7 in my price range). I want a slim tower because I feel a lot of them have the same footprint as a pair of standmounters and have better bass extension.

So, what are the benefits of boutique over big brand and vice-versa? It seems in my price range boutique may be the way to go? Thoughts? Any other recommendations?

Because of the pandemic I had to move to a place that doesn't have the audio stores that N.Y.C. and Columbus, Oh. did when I lived there, so I am asking your opinions. Please keep it positive and constructive, thank you.

l1975r

yesterday's boutique is today's big brand, it's a vague definition to me. If you want to find the best for 5 or 6K I would create a spreadsheet and come up with some criteria besides price with at least 6 speakers to avoid just validating your desire. I would include British and Danish brands too, many options in this price range

If you don’t know exactly what you want buy from someplace with a proven good return policy.  That’s all. 

Listening to speakers before purchase is really important. They need to speak to you… not just have lots of detail and bass.

After decades of planar speakers… I was with a friend while he auditioned speakers.. I was really touched with the incredible organic - real musical sound sound of Sonus Faber. I couldn’t get them out of my mind. A few years later I finally gave in and bought a pair as an experiment. That was it… they were way more natural than other speakers… no chance of me switching brands after that. I traded up twice. I optimized my electronics around the speakers… now have the best system I have heard, tailored to my tastes. My earlier mistake was concentrating on details and slam and not on musical. Do I really need to hear the bassist move his foot? Don’t get me wrong, you can hear that in my system,  but it does not detract from the music. 

There are a lot of advantages to established high end brands. There top level speakers push what is possible, and the technology trickles down (good speakers you will constantly discover strengths you didn’t know about over time) to less expensive models. Higher resale value. Once you have found the sound you want,,, upgrading becomes much easier, just move up a couple levels. I remember all too well swapping speakers I thought sounded great at store and once home they sounded vastly different. Had to tweak all my electronics to achieve the sound I heard.

 

Choosing audio equipment… each piece is hard. If you can find an established speaker company then electronics that complement them… each upgrade can be much easier and more predictable. My system under my ID.

 

Of course, you have to know what you like. That probably took me thirty years to figure out.

Good post OP.  I am quietly shopping but with a wider price range and instead just focusing on what appeals to my ear in relation to cost.  There are many brands online but hard to find them local to listen to, and ordering and return shipping is too much work for me if I don't like them since the speakers can weigh over 60 lbs each.  I am trying to focus on the brands that I can listen to before I buy, which is hugely important for speakers.  I seem to be leaning to the known brands for resale and repair, but those are less of a concern.  Sound is the most important consideration and hearing is knowing. IMO, once you verify something is well made and will last, just focus on what sounds good to you regardless of if it is a large brand or boutique based listening.  I think the bottle neck will be what you can find to listen to.  When we/I go on vacation, I always try to visit a store or two to expand what I can listen to.  

To the other posters, great input and made me think of a few new things and reinforce some others.