SO PLEASED that you are a Maggie fan. As I have posted many times on this forum, until I opened my shop in the early 1970's, I thought as a person who played in various bands--marching, rock, jazz, etc. (NOT a real musician) that I knew everything there was to know about how music should sound. HAH!
After setting up 25 different brands of speakers in the showroom, I started listening to them one at a time after closing. Everyone's fav back then, Advent (thank-you Henry Kloss), was pretty bad when compared to others, but still better than some. Speaker after speaker tried and evaluated against my live bass, guitar, trumpet, and several woodwinds (not me, a buddy who played them), against every source in the shop (Nakamichi, Sequerra, Thornes, Transcriptor (remember that hot mess??), Linn-Sondek, etc., etc. We used SME arms, Thornes arms, cartridges from Supex, Satin, Dennon, Decca, Audio Technica, the entire B&O line, the entire McIntosh line, Phase Linear, on and on and on. As a "high-end" shop we were able to try pretty much everything on the market back then, including Audio Research and Magnepan.
It was only when we paired those items with a quality source that it all came together for me, and these were Tympani I through IV models mostly. While setting these up in a customer's home was a real challenge for us in some rooms (this was when things like traps, room acoustic products, etc., were just coming out) but when they were right, nothing was even in the same universe, including the Levinson HQD system that we made stands for at some point.
This does not mean nothing else sounded wonderful. MANY speakers were just fine and some very good--Bose direct reflecting a major exception--and many sets of electronics were just fine. BUT, like first time I put on a REAL suit, the differences were so obvious that there were no disagreements.
Obviously, life has changed a lot in the last 50 years, and MANY quality electronic and speaker products are available now that were never considered back then. SO, buy what sounds best in YOUR ROOM and enjoy. I think over time you will love your Maggies more than any other speaker you have owned. I do suggest changing your amp. Back then, Mc amps were built like tanks but sounded pretty bad. I would assume all that has been corrected by now, but when you are ready, try out a bunch of new amps and see if you find one you like better. You may, or you may not. As long as YOU are pleased, your dealer will be too!
Cheers!
After setting up 25 different brands of speakers in the showroom, I started listening to them one at a time after closing. Everyone's fav back then, Advent (thank-you Henry Kloss), was pretty bad when compared to others, but still better than some. Speaker after speaker tried and evaluated against my live bass, guitar, trumpet, and several woodwinds (not me, a buddy who played them), against every source in the shop (Nakamichi, Sequerra, Thornes, Transcriptor (remember that hot mess??), Linn-Sondek, etc., etc. We used SME arms, Thornes arms, cartridges from Supex, Satin, Dennon, Decca, Audio Technica, the entire B&O line, the entire McIntosh line, Phase Linear, on and on and on. As a "high-end" shop we were able to try pretty much everything on the market back then, including Audio Research and Magnepan.
It was only when we paired those items with a quality source that it all came together for me, and these were Tympani I through IV models mostly. While setting these up in a customer's home was a real challenge for us in some rooms (this was when things like traps, room acoustic products, etc., were just coming out) but when they were right, nothing was even in the same universe, including the Levinson HQD system that we made stands for at some point.
This does not mean nothing else sounded wonderful. MANY speakers were just fine and some very good--Bose direct reflecting a major exception--and many sets of electronics were just fine. BUT, like first time I put on a REAL suit, the differences were so obvious that there were no disagreements.
Obviously, life has changed a lot in the last 50 years, and MANY quality electronic and speaker products are available now that were never considered back then. SO, buy what sounds best in YOUR ROOM and enjoy. I think over time you will love your Maggies more than any other speaker you have owned. I do suggest changing your amp. Back then, Mc amps were built like tanks but sounded pretty bad. I would assume all that has been corrected by now, but when you are ready, try out a bunch of new amps and see if you find one you like better. You may, or you may not. As long as YOU are pleased, your dealer will be too!
Cheers!