@soix , I’ve heard those Josephs too and wholeheartedly agree. They are fantastic. Would be on my short list.
$35000 to $40,000. speakers what would you buy and why?
I am contemplating purchasing my End game speakers. The ones that catch my eye are the Magico M3, Magico M project, Stenheim Alumine 5se, Rockport Cygnus and the Songs Faber Amati Homage G5. My system consists of An Aurender N20 feeding a MSB Technology Premier Dac with Premier powerbaye. Preamp duties are handles by An Audio Research Reference Anniversary and amplification is a pair of Lamm M 2.2 mono blocks. I currently have Magnepan 3.7i's. I love their transparency and inner detail but they do not play in the low registers. I do not want separate subs.... My room is mediums sized. I listen to mostly soft pop, classical and some light rock. I am trying to walk the thin line of tranparency vs musicality. I would enjoy some suggestions and some sound reasoning behind members choices in speakers. I do not want this to morph into a bashing thread. Please stay on topic.
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Very comprehensive summary of comparisons. I’m looking at the sonus amati g5 and maybe the Supreme. I biamp with solid state for the bass and tubes for the other drivers. I really like that a lot. So assessing vocals is very difficult unless you have this type of set up. Curious if they focused on any of this in any of the listening rooms you were in. Also what are your thoughts on biamp approach. I currently use MC901 monos and Bowers 802D3 speaker. I think it sounds really nice but I’m thinking of upgrading speakers. I like your commentary because it provides a lot of interesting ideas, and maybe I need to explore other possibilities. Mostly use my setup for home theater and also for stereo listening but mostly home theater.
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This thread is a great example of individual, subjective preferences -- we all have them. And that's as it should be! Because we're participating in the subjective pass time of attempting to insert & recreate (as if they were there) instruments, musical performers and their performances into our homes. That obviously can't be done, but I often find myself being happily immersed in the illusion. In this thread, there's speaker after speaker being described and recommended. And that's why measurements in general are pretty useless, when our subjective ear/brain connection computes what we like and don't like. We learn to like what we like and that changes, as we subject ourselves to different experiences...audio and everything else in life. In this case, different components...speakers, etc., provide different presentations which we then classify as OK, poor, good, neutral, jaw dropping etc. And the one overriding factor is that we tend to disagree as much, or more than we agree. But that's not a negative, it's just a fact. So many speakers, so little time. That's why I previously suggest to choose a type - e.g. enclosed cones & domes and hybrid designs with ribbon tweeters, and full-range planar/ribbon dipole loudspeakers and electrostats, horns/hybrid horns, open baffles/hybrid baffles etc. I suggest this in order to prioritize one's focus and I believe we tend to prefer one type over another, but also, it's never prudent to rule out one type over another, until they've been experienced, because no matter how they look, or what others say pro or con, we may like them, or not etc. But picking components, particularly speakers, based on their aesthetics...how they look, from factors, what other people say, is just throwing darts at a dartboard while blindfolded with 2-blindfolds (could that be a form of double blind testing
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