The D7s were burned in. I heard the A7s and they had a similar off-putting top end. I never auditioned the D9s, only heard them very briefly at a show. They simply made a quick impression on me of a vivid, realistic sound playing some Jazz/R&B. So I really wasn't in a position to take stock of how they sounded with familiar music.
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@prof : I see what you mean regarding the D7 tweeter, I didn't like it very much either but it could very well have been the cables, the insufficient burn in etc. What surprised me was the fact that you did like the D9 - and they have the same tweeter. This is what I was inquiring about, why such opposite reactions to allegedly similar sounding speakers?
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pops,I couldn't get the Thiel out of my system, which is why I will not sell my Thiels :-)
I can find speakers that do this or that thing that I like a bit better, but nothing is quite as even-handed as the Thiels.
I wrote my impression of my brief listen to the Gibbon X in this thread.In a nutshell: big sound, similar organic/vivid "woody" midrange as the O speakers, but more "standard" without the extra body, size and lushness as the O speakers. Very clear, great soundstaging. But in the set up I heard the bass was overbearing and not well controlled. And it was in a fairly wide open room.
I found them promising. The speaker I really want to hear are the Devore Super 9s! Very close to the same size as my Josephs. Thanks prof - reread your post. I would love to hear the Gibbons but still leaning towards the O/96. I have the room to experiment with placement and the price isn’t life changing. And I can always slip the Thiels back in because like you will never sell them. Thanks for. a great thread. |
@prof Fascinating. Your comments about your EICO HF-81 could almost be overlaid upon my own review thoughts of our LEBEN CS300F. But I must add that with the right speakers - a very big disclaimer, admittedly - the LEBEN is fast and staunch in the bass. [
Our CS300F uses JAN6197 tubes in the output role; not EL84 tubes... So, I make these observations purely and specifically based upon long-term ownership of the LEBEN CS300F. Please note that this may not apply to other CS300 models, as I have not heard them.] Many thanks for the link to this Stereophile review of the EICO HF-81. A great read. I particularly appreciated the following statement in the review: We know that recordings from the 1950s and '60s can sound spectacular. If the electronics gear back then could get so much into the recording, it makes sense that it can get it out on playback just as well. -Peter Breuninger | Jul 2, 2006 | First Published: Jun 2, 2006
EICO HF-81 integrated amplifier review STEREOPHILE In support of the above, we have many of the original first runs of late 1950s/early 1960s LPs on the EMI "Nipper" [Shaded Dogs], COLUMBIA STEREOPHONIC and DECCA FFSS labels etc. and there is no denying that engineers and technology of the day managed to get some of the best sonics (ever) on to those records. So this insight speaks volumes - particularly as it relates to your little EICO HF-81 and (a few of) its ilk. I remain very grateful that you are prepared to share the results of your many speaker test-drives, as they relate to your current amp in service. Appreciated. Sorry to highjack your excellent speaker thread with this diversion. So back to the speaker hunt...! |
sondeknz I have the famous Eico HF-81 integrated tube amp. This review was part of what made the HF-81 so coveted (although it was already well regarded): https://www.stereophile.com/integratedamps/606eico/index.htmlI had an SS amp fail on me at one point about 10 years ago and when I asked my pal if he had a spare amp he said "take this one, got it from a garbage but it's supposed to be a classic." It was the Eico. When I put it in the system I was astounded. I couldn't believe how gorgeous the system sounded - huge, rich, vivid, organic, punchy. I had to have one, so I got a nicely refurbished unit that I've owned since then. The Eico HF-81 is just 14W per side. But it's driven every speaker I've put in front of it, including even the notoriously inefficient MBLs (121 model). I wasn't playing at super loud levels though. Also, the Eico doesn't quite have the bass control of a better modern amp, so there is a bit of overhang. However, this actually serves to make most speakers actually sound bigger and deeper in the bass. My Eico makes small speakers sound like bigger speakers! So it's the kind of thing where if you are smitten enough with the midrange and highs of the Eico, and don't mind that your speaker (if it's a bigger speaker) won't quite show it's full bass prowess, then...yeah...the little Eico can sound great on many speakers. Ultimately I use it now and again, but go back to my CJ premier 12s, which do the tube richness thing but with excellent power and control over any speaker. The Leben amp sounded excellent with the Devore O/96s last I heard them. Not the last word in tight bass, but wonderful sound overall. |
@prof
This thread has been a very interesting read - and the journey continues!
I hear what you are saying about SS versus Tubed amp. We own several great SS amps - and they do some nice things - but we always experience the same feeling of "home-coming" - almost relief, to be frank - when we return to tubes.
I wanted to ask which EICO amp model you are using? How much power does it output? And importantly, has it been able to drive your many speakers to satisfying volumes?
My own agenda, is finding suitable new speaker options for our 15W LEBEN CS300F. That is to say that our (budget) KLIPSCH RP-160M speakers sound really great on 15W, but I'm always curious how more expensive speakers might fare. |
Well I threw the Bryston amp in to the system and since I had the little Spendors already set up, listening to them last night using my Eico tube amp, I listened via the Spendors.
The upshot is that initial listening indicates that I’m experiencing the same thing I always have putting SS in to my system: It helps re-enforce and clarify why I love my tube amps so much :-)
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pops,
I couldn't get the Thiel out of my system, which is why I will not sell my Thiels :-)
I can find speakers that do this or that thing that I like a bit better, but nothing is quite as even-handed as the Thiels.
I wrote my impression of my brief listen to the Gibbon X in this thread.In a nutshell: big sound, similar organic/vivid "woody" midrange as the O speakers, but more "standard" without the extra body, size and lushness as the O speakers. Very clear, great soundstaging. But in the set up I heard the bass was overbearing and not well controlled. And it was in a fairly wide open room.
I found them promising. The speaker I really want to hear are the Devore Super 9s! Very close to the same size as my Josephs.
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Prof, I will be curious to hear your findings as well. You and I have similar tastes in speakers. I am a long time Thiel owner and still use 3.6 and CS6.
I also have a love affair with the Devore 0/96 and JA Perspectives 2. I heard the JA’s at the Capitol Audio Fest last year - they were among best in show IMO. I spent alot of time with the O/96 a few years ago as well. The were using low powered tubes and my amps are big beefy mono SS - that has been my pause so for. My current speaker path that I will eventually take subject to change is the following. Although not sure I can get Thiel out of my system!
Orangutan 0/96 Devore Gibbon X Joseph Audio Perspectives 2
Anyone heard the Gibbons?
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I'm now sitting at about 7 feet from the Perspectives, with the speakers almost 9 feet apart. This gives a wide-screen level soundstage, where everything feels more life-sized, yet the Perspectives maintain great center fill, solidity and image specificity. What an amazing design!
However, as I just mentioned above, one of my CJ premier 12 mono blocks had to go in for repair. After 22 years of me turning on the power switches with my foot (easier than bending down) one of them stopped working.
I'm borrowing a Bryston 4B from my pal until my CJ gets back from the shop. It's been a long time since I bothered testing a solid state amp in my system. (And I used to own a Bryston 4BST for a while, many years ago). Usually what happens once I switch to solid state from the CJ is "wow...the clarity and precision! The grip on the bass! This sounds more accurate, more hi-fidelity!" And I listen amazed for a while. And then slowly I feel less inclined to listen. The CJs go back in and it's like "aahhh, this is why I've stuck with these amps."
My pal who is something of a tube guy moved from audio research to using this Bryston (he went through one of his "I'm sick of tube amp hassles" phases), and he finally felt satisfied with solid state.
I've been very curious to hear the Joseph Perspectives on solid state in my home as they performed amazing with solid state (Sim Moon mostly) in the store auditions. The Joseph speakers have buttery smooth highs, so it's like they got the most out of solid state amplification - smoothness in the top end, power everywhere else. So I'll see how this goes....
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@donquichotteSorry, missed your post from a while back. I think I just didn’t get along with the Spendor D7 tweeter or something.Other people have had the same impressions I did when listening to that speaker. I would like very much to hear the D9.2, though. Thanks for the description of the Spendor Classic 100. Very interesting and I could "hear" what you meant through your writing. I continue to be bedeviled by my little Spendor S3/5s, which I hooked up again a couple days ago. They do voices like no other speaker I own, and have a balance that is incredibly satisfying and "right" sounding to my ear, despite the lack of deep bass. Having heard many Harbeth speakers and owned the Harbeth SuperHL5 plus, I can see why some people prefer Spendor, and others the Harbeth. The Spendors have their own magic in the mids that makes everything gorgeous. And to me it doesn’t sound merely like prettified gorgeous, but conjuring some of the organic ease and silky tone I hear from live voices and instruments in real life. They are hooked up to my Eico HF81 amp. This is because one of my Conrad Johnson Premier 12 monoblocks had to go in for repair. |
@prof : Hello, sir! First of all, thank you for the precious information you are sharing with the rest of us here, I find it really helpful especially considering the fact that your priorities (tone and timbre) match mine very well. I was wondering, do you have an explanation for your contradictory experiences with the Spendor D series? Judging by some reports I’ve read, the D7 and the D9 are cut from the same sonic cloth. A cloth I didn’t find particularly appealing on the only occasion I’ve heard the D7’s. Was it because of the partnering equipment? (if so, what exactly were the D9’s synergizing so well with?)
As for the current Classic line, I was very very curious as well. I’ve recently had the chance to listen to a pair of Classic 100 paired with some lower end Naim gear but also with my own Audio Analogue Maestro Anniversary integrated amplifier and my own source and cables. A bit underwhelming to be honest, at least compared to my very high expectations. The highs were OK, not as refined as those of my Harbeth M30.2 Anniversaries (I compared them directly) but nice and not "too polite" as I’ve fount the highs of the Classic 1/2 described on another forum. The bass was big (the whole sound had the scale I was expecting from such large standmounts) but, surprisingly, not deep enough for my taste - strong enough until, I don’t know, 40 Hz or so and then it plummets. My old Mackie HR824 monitors, which should be a joke compared to these in terms of size, price and reputation, go obviously deeper. Also, the bass was not very tight. The mids were their strongest point, sweet and musical with a natural, inner warmth that is unfortunately missing in my Harbeths. Because of this, the midrange piano notes were more natural, more convincing on the Spendors - piano is my favourite instrument as well as my main audiophile benchmark and I know the timbre very well, I grew up with a piano in house. Also, my Harbeths have a mild but audible dip in the presence region (the BBC dip I guess) that I’m not particularly found of - the Spendors don’t have it or maybe they do a little bit, but to a much smaller degree.
Overall, the sound was a bit unexciting I guess, to be honest I have a suspicion they were not totally burned in. The resolution could have been better too - the Harbeths were a bit better and my Martin Logans at home are in another world from this point of view.
Some Spendor A7 I’ve heard in another system though were really promising:: beautiful mids without a trace of a BBC dip as far as I could tell, silky and lively highs albeit a bit too pronounced, very nice upper bass detail, good timbre reproduction, good scale and bass extension considering their dimensions but ultimately trying too hard to descend where that 7 inch driver shouldn’t. This or it was the amplifier - a rather cheap Atoll I’ve never heard before or after so an unknown factor for me. If I were to move on from my electrostats, which I might eventually, I could live with some hypothetical improved A7’s with better bass extension, a bit better scale and, of course, higher resolution overall. Hence my interest in the D9 (.2) in spite of my discouraging D7 experience. |
Maybe the Audiogon servers kept crashing a few weeks ago because someone revived this thread! Thanks for this post Prof. Please share with the group some of your favorite synth albums please.
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Someone else who thought Magico were the best until he listened to the Spendor D9's ! He has a pair of Spendor D9's at this home now with.. Simaudio gear . They sell Magico speakers too. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-AIiZ_0ytk&t |
@highend666 I presume this claim is based on your personal auditioning of every speaker on the planet. |
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Yeah, that's why I've wanted to hear the updated classic line.
I was super impressed upon hearing Spendor D9s at a show. That was one reason why the 7's I auditioned on two occasions (and some A line speakers) were so disappointing.
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The D line is a very different beast to the Classic line. (BTW, the Classic line is excellent.) |
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In no way would I dissuade you from the Spendors. (I have Spendor S3/5s and love them!)
But I did not find the Spendor D7 a suitable substitute for the Joseph speakers to my ear. (And I heard them with Sim audio!). Not at all on the same level. But, that's a personal call. The Spendors may push your buttons even if they didn't push mine. (I haven't heard the 7.2s, but I doubt they are worlds different from the 7s).
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The new Spendor D7.2's are up there on the same level as the Perspectives Graphene's and cost a lot less money! They sound Amazing with Simaudio Moon gear! Perfect Match !! I'm saving my pennies now for this end-game system ! |
I really enjoy having more than one pair of speakers that turn my crank.
Months ago I put the Thiel 2.7s back in to the system - they did that dense, punchy, lush sound, more filled out from top to bottom. I enjoyed the sound so much the Thiels stayed in the system for many months. Long enough for me to re-acclimatize to the Thiel sound. Just switched back in the Josephs last night and again experienced being blown away. The level of clarity combined with smoothness in the mids and highs, and the juicy impact of the bass, along with the huge airy soundstaging and imaging, is just intoxicating. They are like emotion-machines, with their timbral beauty and the way they ebb and swell dynamically.
I’m in this quandary of weather to finally integrate subs in to my system that I own...literally had them for years and been too lazy!...or sell that stuff to afford an upgrade of my Perspectives to the graphene version.
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(I posted this in the Joseph Graphene2 thread, but figured it made sense to add to this thread too). Righto...
So today I dropped in to my JA dealer (who sold me my pair of original Perspectives a few months back), for a listen to the new Perspective2Graphene.
Before I get to that: taking user reports and show reports all together, the consensus seemed to be "stronger, tighter bass, more refined and resolved midrange and highs, though most of the changes noticeable in the bass. I love my Perspectives, though of course no speaker is The Perfect Speaker for me. For instance, I know I’d also love the fuller, bigger, richer sound of the Devore O/96 speakers as well. And my Thiel 2.7s are also a bit richer/fuller sounding toward the top end as well.
Since I’d consider upgrading my Perspectives to the graphene version when I have the money, I had a couple of concerns: Did the bass change so much that it would now overwhelm my room? My current Perspectives are just on the edge of doing this sometimes, though most of the time they are well controlled and I love the bass quality. Also, the new Perspectives measure flatter in the high end vs the uprising highs of the original. I wondered if possibly the descriptions of "smoother, more relaxed, easier on the ears" may have resulted in a darkening of the tone, less airy. And would they be a bit reticent dynamically in the upper mids/high frequencies?
Unfortunately one aspect I could not get a handle on was the bass performance. The speakers were hampered by being too close together and too close to the wall behind them, making the bass sound overwarm and exaggerated on tracks with deep bass. So that was a bummer to not get a good handle on that.
But aside from that, when the music wasn’t exciting the room bass nodes, the bass was nice.
What I heard generally speaking was, yes, what seemed to be a somewhat more refined, resolved, clearer sound. The clarity and cleanliness and that grain-free quality was remarkable. I heard bits and pieces, say an acoustic guitar part in a familiar mix etc, seem to be more vividly resolved and tonally separated in the mix. And the high end weren’t at all dark sounding - they kept essentially the same tonal signature of the original. But it just felt like the level of resolution and clarity had taken a step forward. This was especially evident in some tracks with layered electric and acoustic guitars where the highs were realistically extended, grain free and very present. The layers of shimmering harmonics heard between all the guitars and the guitar strings were the best I’ve heard. The sound had a sense of "luxuriousness" in it’s ease, clarity and gorgeous tone of each element in a mix.
To make sure they could rock I spun Rush’s 2112. The sound was rich, full and very punchy. All the track elements super clear and separated, and the tone of Geddy’s bass and especially Alex’s guitar, electric and acoustic, were rendered with a upper midrange/high frequency beauty...the guitar tone just shimmered with more complexity than on most speakers.
Also, the electric guitars did seem a bit thicker and more substantial than back home on my Perspectives (this is where my Thiels give a bolder presentation in the upper mids with electric guitar). Not sure if this was a trait of the new speakers, or the large Sim Audio amps driving them.
Back home, spinning several of the same tracks on my Thiels (currently in my system), the Thiels were as usual a somewhat richer, thicker sound, with very dense, round imaging, very organic and relaxing, but also dynamic. The main thing missing in the Thiels vs the Perspectives is the exquisite refinement of timbre up in to the higher frequencies. They miss that gorgeous sparkle and aliveness of the Perspectives. I love the Thiels’ bass which is both super in control, but dense and punchy. But the Perspectives (my Perspectives anyway) bass has even more roundness and punch/kick toward the listener, which makes bass guitar and drum kits (kick drum especially) feel more impactful and "in the room."
Anyway, my hour-long demo of the Perspective2s left me with the impression that they are a slightly more refined version, which seem to retain what I like in my Perspectives. I’m a bit haunted by some of the sound quality I heard today so I’ll certainly consider upgrading my Perspectives when I have the money. Though for me the jury is still out about the bass quality.
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keithr
Dunno.
I guess that's because my desires for a speaker tend to be limited to what I can afford. And also I have limitations in terms of what will be acceptable in my room.
Though mega-speakers are fun, I'm not chasing perfection so they don't appeal as real-world aspirations.
At one point though I did pine after the MBL 101E speakers. Not so much these days.
The Kef Blades might be a contender for a more expensive speaker simply based on hearing them once at a show. But they wouldn't work aesthetically in my room.
But you know how it is for many of us: we go to an audio show, hear crazy-priced gear, come home to our system which has been honed to our own desires and think "Actually, I like my system better than most of what I heard there."
If I had the room, the Joseph Audio Pearls would be intriguing. And I still wonder about the Devore orangutan speakers. If I had the room and more-money-than-I-know-what-to-do-with, the Devore O Reference system is very intriguing to me (would love to hear them).
I'm intrigued by various horn-based systems but haven't heard enough of them at length to know whether they are "for me."
I love listening to hi-fi systems, any system, and especially checking out various speaker designs. And yet, sort of paradoxically, it is very, very rare for me to hear a speaker that makes me want to own it. Few hi fi systems have the "it" factor that makes me want to just keep listening, that sound "right" (to my ears). And that's one reason I tend to hang on to speakers that do have that "it" factor for me (hence I currently still have 5 different speaker systems, though I'm mostly listening to the Josephs currently).
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Hey prof, what would you purchase if your budget was 2-3x your Perspectives? |
snatex
I'm glad you enjoyed the thread.
Still haven't heard the Devore Super Nines. When/If I do, I'll report back in this thread.
I've been playing around with the JA's, tweaking speaker/listening positions and have them dialed in very nicely.
Of course I can pick nits with any speaker, but overall the Perspectives have been amazing. Not much to add to my previous description, really.
The combination of clarity, smoothness and punchy quality are so compelling. They can do spacious, they can do groove and drive.
I've been listening to a bunch of rock recently - LP reissues of Van Halen and Rush (R.I.P Neil !) and having a ball. In fact I just came from listening to Rush's Hemispheres and some of Moving Pictures and it was just blowing my mind. There is a peering-into-the-studio clarity to the sound, with big spacious soundstaging, amazing separation of instruments, and the rhythm section of Geddy Lee's bass and Peart's drum work is riveting - super clear, defined, but big, dense and punchy so the music just drives.
It's nice to have a speaker that does tonal qualities so well for all the acoustic stuff, but which can be so much fun for funk, rock, etc.
Lots of fun!
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What a great thread. Thanks for the ride. I am considering a speaker upgrade as well and have been drawn to the looks and organic sound of the Devores. Did you ever hear the Super 9’s? How are things going with the JA’s? |
I'd referred to my previous post describing my Joseph speakers.
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which? the DeVore's or the Joseph's? |
Sorry, that user report I'd posted yesterday was long. Short version: I like ’em! :)
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RESULTS SO FAR:
These speakers are GLORIOUSLY GREAT!
Where to start?
First, they are the most gorgeous-looking speakers I’ve ever seen (at least anywhere near their price point).
But beyond that, they certainly do the "disappearing and soundstaging/imaging" thing like mad. But I have to admit I’d be more impressed by this if I hadn’t been so used to most of my speakers having been stellar performers in the same respect. But, it’s nice to have.
I did a quick set up, dialled in the imaging and generally balance using some tracks I always use from Everything But The Girl (Amplified Heart). Then played a track I remembered loving on the Perspectives, "There He Is" from the Amazing Spiderman 2 soundtrack (not a soundtrack I love, but one that impressed me on the Perspectives in demos). Sure enough there were those timbral and resolution qualities I loved. The track has many very subtle plucking, tinkling, textural elements lightly swirling about that lead up to a big "synth bass drop" moment, and all those elements just sparkled in the air around the speakers wonderfully. It was effortless to hear even the quietest, most subtle sounds. Then the bass synth part swelled up to become a single column of pulsating air right in the middle of the soundstage. And, again, this reminded me of what I really liked about the JPs - they have this meaty, dense, tonally "chewy" midbass-on-down quality. That bass pulsing column of air ends in a lower bass "drop" down and the JPs just sent that wave of low bass rolling along the floors to my chair, filling up the whole room, an a dramatic manner. Which again reminded me: these speakers have a way with soundtracks, with the "drama" of how the music swells with power, retreats to delicacy, suddenly punches out...just the general flexing of dynamics. They are just very engaging in this way.
Then another track from that same soundtrack (I think it might have been "My Enemy") came up. That soundtrack combines orchestral instruments - often delicately used - with often heavy synth intrusions.
This track was nuts on the JPs! It’s going along doing some fairly sedate soundtrack stuff when all of a sudden these synth bursts crack the air like lightning and on the JPs these things just burst in to the room with such power and tonal complexity and SIZE. I remember a review (maybe it was an Art Dudley review of some Spendor speakers) where the speakers were describing as having the surprising capability of suddenly sounding much larger than they’d led you to expect "like a cat suddenly puffing up it’s fur to become bigger." That’s what it was like with the JPs. The amount and quality of bass especially just takes you by surprise, and it’s like they suddenly expand in to bigger speakers at a moments notice. It wasn’t that the synth parts simply sounded of low-bass, but they sounded BIG and authoritative, as if coming from bigger floor standing speakers. And then when the music went quiet again, it was super delicate. That really was the moment where I knew I’d chosen killer speakers given my love of soundtrack music.
As I started playing a variety of music - funk, disco, soundtrack, jazz, electronica and more - the general sense of the sound was an expansive, super-refined clarity and tonal purity, where any scrim of hash was wiped away leaving the exact timbral qualities of any instrument pure and obvious - the metallic ring and bite of brass instruments sounded unequivocally made of metal, wood of wood, subtle synth parts mixed with acoustic instruments were completely discernible. There is a sense of crazy-high resolution, without any hard or grainy analytical tinge. The "clearing away of haze" means that the exact nature of the reverb in any recording is very obvious.
If the recording contains closer mic’d instruments, the sound becomes appropriated huge and life-like "drum set in the room" stuff.
Though I had really liked aspects of the JP bass in demos, I worried about the bass being possibly overwhelming in my room (though my room is generally great for getting good, even bass). But it turns out the bass (and it’s integration up to the upper bass/lower mids) is fantastic! First, it’s tight, punchy, and every bit as tonally beautiful as the rest of the frequencies. Jaco Pastorius’ bass just appears as a dense instrument between the speakers, and there is more tonal subtlety, beauty and exactness in how his bass is rendered than I’ve heard before. And that’s generally speaking true of most electric bass instruments, and kick drums, through these speakers. Far from one-noting it, they untangle the timbral qualities of drums and bass expertly. Yet with a Big Juicey punchy quality that really drives music.
I’m especially happy with kick drums. One of the reasons I’ve been attracted to the Devore O speakers is how their big, round bass quality made drum sets sound particularly impactful, where I was always aware of what the kick drum was doing. I’m surprised how close the JP speakers have come to that quality. Their bass also has a big, round, hefty quality (though focused!) that makes kick drums send this "punch of air/bass) OUT of the speakers to the listener, so I’m feeling that bass drum’s rhythm.
My Thiel 2.7s (like the bigger 3.7s) still have among the best bass I’ve heard in terms of how focused, dense, controlled and punchy it sounds. But I’d say the JP speakers add a bit more "fun" in to the mix, in the way their bass has that projection and reach-out-to-the-listener quality. My legs are often resting on an ottoman and when the JP speakers are doing bass, I can feel it through the ottoman in to my legs, which I don’t remember from the Thiels. (Still love the Thiels though!).
I can crank the JPs quite loud to listen to from a room down the hall, and they really kick ass!
As for the high frequencies, I’ve found positions in which they are very extended and airy, having that "lit up" character which is really nice.
Too bright? NO! Thank goodness! The vast majority of content has been so smooth and so clear that if anything the JPs have allowed me to play at ever higher sound levels. They just never give any impression of sounding harder or grittier or of distortion creeping in, so I can listen somethings a bit "too loud" (louder than I should at the moment). Got to watch that. They also actually sound pretty nice at lower listening volumes, with their combination of rich bass and clarity. Though upping the volume does help give a better sense of dynamics.
I was listening to some soundtracks last night on LP, the original Superman LP I’ve listened to my whole life (not very good recording quality) and a more recent re-issue of the Planet Of The Apes (Goldsmith) and I was marveling at how authentic, precise and beautiful all the instruments sounded. And how natural the dynamic swings all sounded. I certainly heard more from the Superman soundtrack than I ever remembered.
Overall the sonic impression I get from the Joseph speakers is a sense of "luxuriousness." That is, the sound is just so "high quality," smooth and complex.
As against other speakers I own: The little Spendor s3/5s still are the champs at sounding "filled out" and doing voices with a truly human quality. The JPs are very clear and timbrally convincing, but that BBC thing is still something special. The Thiels (which I haven’t actually directly compared yet) are still a bit larger in sonic size and weight and more evenly lush from top to bottom. My little Thiel 02s, which I’ve mentioned as a sort of benchmark sound I can’t let go, actually could sound on some tracks even more palpable and dynamically energized (without the lower bass).
I’d still love to have heard the Devore speakers at my place, and my jones for the Devores isn’t totally gone. But then, hey, I’m a speaker-whore.
But overall, the JP speakers have left me hugely impressed, and in some ways are the best speaker I’ve ever owned (and among the best, in some ways for what I listen for, I’ve heard anywhere).
(Also: I want to hug and kiss my good old Conrad Johnson Premier 12 140W/side tube monoblocks. There’s a reason these things have stayed in my system for 20 years, powering all manner of speakers. They’ve never failed to come through and they are driving the JPs beautifully - I’m getting that organic CJ quality in the mids/highs while also getting excellent bass control and dynamics). |
JOSEPH AUDIO PERSPECTIVES - OWNER REPORT
Well, I figured after all the pixels spilled on this thread concerning my deliberations I ought to mention how things are going with my purchase of the Joseph Audio Perspective (original) speakers.
I’ve had them up and running for a couple of weeks.
I’ve already written a lot about the things I knew I liked about the Joseph Perspectives ("JPs" for the rest of this post). So I’ll start with some of the concerns I had before buying them. These concerns arose from my own demos at the store, from having an in-home demo a couple years ago, and from reading the original stereophile review.
1. TOO BRIGHT?
The original stereophile review of the Perspective mentioned that they were tipped up enough in the high frequencies to be somewhat ruthless and bright *on some recordings.* I don’t like piercing sounding speakers (who does, really?). And especially in my case, as I’d mentioned I had an exacerbation of my hearing sensitivity (hyperacusis...which I don’t usually suffer from) that I’d been trying to get over, and that makes anything high pitched and sharp absolutely brutal and painful to my ears.I worried that this was perhaps not yet the time to buy the Perspectives.Though, in store demos and at home, I found them smooth sounding for the most part.
2. TOO DARK?
Yeah, sounds like a contradiction right? Yes, sort of. I occasionally heard the JPs to sound a bit on the darker, less airy side than I’d liked.Almost "too smooth" in the high frequencies where the "black background" almost seemed to be part of a shelving down of the airier frequencies.
3. LOOSE BASS?
This was a combo of having heard the JPs sound occasionally a bit loose in the bass in demos, combined with what seemed to be some confirmation in the original stereophile review.
4. NOT DYNAMIC ENOUGH?
In my original at home demo, I sometimes felt I wasn’t hearing the dynamics I thought the speakers were capable of.
5. TOO THIN SOUNDING?
I wondered if the JPs would be the right choice because since the time I’d thought I wanted a pair, I seem to be gravitating towards a thicker, richer sound (hence, all my auditioning of the Devore O speakers).
So, I was somewhat nervous to roll the dice. But since I’d heard the speakers often sound glorious, and since I had a good deal for the pair I wanted, and because they suited my aesthetic/ergonomic listening room requirements particularly well....I pulled the trigger.
On to my user report....
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I can feel my blood pressure soar reading that! |
fsonicsmith
Ouch! Maddening.
The hosting a party thing reminds me too: We hosted a party years ago, many parents and kids. I'd just installed our new home theater in our living room, including one of my prized home theater possessions, a very rare Hales Transcendence Center channel, below the projection screen.Hales was gone as a company and very few of those speakers were ever made.
The partying was being done in the back family room/kitchen of our house so I hoped the room wouldn't be invaded, though I kept a wary eye.
Well, wouldn't you know it, I noticed one little guy (I dunno, maybe 5 years old or something) trundling toward the home theater room on his own. I followed to see him in the room looking around, hand outstretched to touch the projection screen (VERY hard to get any finger marks off those!). As politely and firmly and quickly as I could I asked him not to touch the screen. Suggested he go back and join the others.He was also inches in front of the Hales center speaker, and I asked if he could just step away from that speaker as it could be damaged easily.
The lil' brat grinned at me and then raised back his foot in a kicking position, to kick in the speaker drivers, looking at me grinning. It was someone else's kid, I wasn't going to physically grab him away to save the speakers, so I was stuck pleading from a distance "please don't, how about just going back to the party?" The kid makes a swift kicking motion to the speakers, I gasp, he stops his foot just before the speakers touching the grill clothe, grinning, pulls his leg back and does it again, getting a kick out of my panic. I'm stuck at this point not being able to effectively call to a parent to help as I didn't even know this kid's name or who his parents were. And if I ran to the back of the house to start asking whose kid he was and for that parent to help, who knows what the kid would do while I was gone? So for what seemed like far too long, this kid held my hostage with his foot raised to kick in my speaker just because he enjoyed being a little sh*t.
Eventually he got bored and left.
Charming.
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Prof-hope the Josephs fulfill all your expectations-I am sure they will. On that topic of others not having a clue, I got conned one year into hosting a Christmas party for our law firm. I knew it would be a mistake. I asked my son-then in high school-to monitor and protect my listening room which adjoins our dining room. Since the caterers were stocking food in the dining room, the listening room was clearly in view. At one point in the evening I came into the listening room and found not one, not two, but three half-filled cold and condensation-soaked beer cans on top of my loudspeakers-at that time modded B&W 805's on stands. Since our staff were invited to bring +1's, I had to assume it was one of the +1's as I know the lawyers in my office or the staff would not have done it unless really drunk. Like you said, non-enthusiasts just don't understand. With a dedicated listening room with fancy acoustic panels everywhere and with huge pieces of electronics, you would think they would realize this is not your typical JC Penney system-in-a-box set-ups but you can't underestimate ignorance or lack of respect or even, dare I say it, flat out resentment. Luckily, I got them off in time to avoid any permanent harm. Those 805's are going to that same son who is now 26 and a budding audiophile.
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Oh my...I cringed through the later half of the above post...Rich, fire that cable guy!
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Almost there....
I now have my Joseph Audio Perspective (original) speakers in da house! All set up.
First of all, wow these speakers are gorgeous! They have the rosewood finish with a beautiful grain structure, and with the fit and finish they just "glow" with a great luster. I can’t remember seeing a more high quality-looking speaker in person. I can just stare at the things with a grin!
When I was about to order a new pair last year, through my dealer, I’d been in touch with Jeff Joseph about ordering a rosewood pair (because I like wood grain) in the browner spectrum to best fit my room decor. He sent me a couple pictures of some finishes that had come in that were more on the brown side, which looked good. (But then...disaster struck and I had to forego ordering).
Well it turns out that Joseph sent that browner pair to my local dealer that summer for their demo model, which are the demo model I just bought, so I ended up with those speakers! They are only a year old and in perfect condition. (So nice, since I’m used to purchasing speakers second hand with inevitable nicks and blemishes here and there).
The black top/face of these speakers are the most prone to picking up/showing any scratches so I have to be careful there (even used cotton gloves to move them around). And on that note: Yesterday was the first day they were set up in my room, and yesterday the cable guy showed up to change our TV boxes to a new wi-fi based streaming system. The Joseph speakers are in my living room which doubles as our home theater, so the cable guy was working in there. At one point I enter the room and the cable guy has placed crap ON TOP of my speakers! (Remotes etc). I hurriedly took the stuff off and placed it on the sofa instead, inspected for scratches..whew...none yet. Then 1/2 hour later (he’s still working) I go in the room again and he’s placed them on the speakers again!!!! Cripes! I wanted to kick him out right there! First day I have the speakers and they are already being abused by some stranger!
It just reminds me of how "normal folk" don’t see speakers the way we do - they are generally used to cheap stuff that was just as good for holding the cigarette tray on top as for anything else. I’ve had similar instances when having big groups of people over watching UFC fights or whatever. It’s always the "friend" someone brought who thinks nothing of leaving his beer on top of my nice speakers!
Anyway, I was all ready to start listening to the speakers last night when...my music server no longer showed up. Aaagh. Of course. The cable guy! He’d changed everything around, new modem, new wi-fi router...my system no longer sees my raspberry Pi/Logitech server. And I"m crap trying to figure this stuff out.
On to trouble-shooting....
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The best way to get "end game" speakers is to go out and buy some speakers you cannot really afford, and then promptly retire. That way you won't be able to afford to replace them even if you wanted to. |
Thanks displayname! I hope so too. But I am self-aware enough to realize it's unlikely I have found an "end-game" speaker in the Josephs, simply due to my own proclivity for liking different aspects of different speakers. I"d say though that of any speaker I've owned, the Thiel 3.7s seemed the most "end-game" for me. Powered by my CJ tube gear, set up in a nice-sounding room, they just seemed to check off every box for me: Smooth, fatigue-free, clean of coloration yet warm and lush while being super detailed and alive sounding, dense, palpable sonic images, a total disappearing act from top to bottom and the best soundstaging/imaging I've ever experienced at home. And totally coherent, impossible to "hear out" the drivers, while having a very wide sweet spot and even tonal balance. Every time I heard another speaker, including significantly more expensive, I'd come home and the Thiels only impressed me more. They were just too big visually/ergonomically, for my room. The smaller Thiel 2.7s I still own carry through the same voice as the bigger model (and I even prefer an element or two of the 2.7s) but listening critically, they are not quite on par with the level of refinement in the 3.7 flagship. I'm excited, and a bit trepidatious about the Joseph speakers. Ideally they work out well for me and I'd like to upgrade them to the "Graphene 2" version as soon as I can afford it.
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Very exciting! I'm sure you'll love them for years to come. |
I won't be picking them up until sometime next week.
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So did you get the Joseph Perspectives in the house yet?
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rocray
I sold my Thiel 3.7s a while back, but I'm hanging on to the Thiel 2.7s I've referenced here for, as you say, a different flavor. It would be very hard to let go of those given I love how they look and their performance is just crazy good for the price I paid (used).
I don't expect the Joseph speakers to be the "be all and end all" of speakers for me, so it will be interesting to see which speakers end up staying put in my system longest.
I had to sell my MBL 121 speakers to pay for the Joseph speakers, but after 10 years of owning the MBLs I was ok with finally releasing my death-grip on them to say bye-bye :-)
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I may have missed it,did you sell the Thiels,or will you keep them on hand for a different flavor? |
Daveyf, Thanks for the suggestion. The SF speakers I've heard never really "spoke" to me. The older versions were a bit too dark sounding for me, the newer versions seemed to have lightened up the tone, more toward neutral, but the last one I auditioned (I'm forgetting the model) didn't do it for me. (I bought the original Perspectives, on discount - dealer demo model)
I'm pretty good at assessing whether a speaker will work in my room, but more to the point I've had the Joseph Perspectives in my home for audition before. Cheers!
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A very interesting thread. Glad to see that the OP was able to finally acquire a speaker that spoke to him.
Not to muddy the water, i wonder why nobody suggested a listen to some of the Sonus Faber speakers. The new SF Electa Amator 111 really is a special speaker...and I suspect if mated with a decent sub would have been a serious contender.
The Joseph Perspective Graphene are more expensive than the SF EA111's...but probably do reach deeper into the bass without a sub required. However, i think the purity of the new SF has to be heard.
BTW, one thought, buying speakers is usually about the synergy with one's room and upstream gear...sometimes not that easy to determine if you don't get to hear the speakers in question in one's own room. |
rocray Thank you. No way I'm giving up my Spendors! I'll still throw them in the system now and again. I haven't heard the other iterations of the 3/5s (except the Harbeths, I think, at one point though I don't remember them well).
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donquichotte My listen to the A7 was very brief. It didn't have the same tweeter sound as the D7 I heard, which had a hard quality that made me want to turn the volume down. Rather, the A7 higher frequencies just sort of sounded a bit, as I said, "wiry" or steely. Not very natural.
But there's no way I'd put much on such a brief assessment.
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Congratulations prof! It has been quite a ride! I have really enjoyed this thread. You have given us some great insight into the speakers that you have auditioned. You also have a great gift of being able to put your thoughts and impressions in print. I do have a question, are you going to keep the Spendor s3/5's? I just sold a pair,and stepped up to a pair of Graham Chartwell LS3/5's. The Spendors are really special speakers. All the Best, Ray |