@jlj
No, it's not you, it's them. p3ga uis right. The fundamental truth is that the majority of loudspeaker manufacturers today have shifted to a sonic signature with, basically, a brighter top end or some version of that. These demo well for a short period in stores (like turning the TV sharpness control to max in Best Buy), but many find them fatiguing over the long term. Evidently Q is one of these. Fortunately, there are still a number of brands that don't pursue this goal. It's not necessarily that you need more expensive, just different. Vienna Acoustics and pretty much all of the *classic* BBC designs come to mind (this excludes the Spendor D series), and there are others.
No, it's not you, it's them. p3ga uis right. The fundamental truth is that the majority of loudspeaker manufacturers today have shifted to a sonic signature with, basically, a brighter top end or some version of that. These demo well for a short period in stores (like turning the TV sharpness control to max in Best Buy), but many find them fatiguing over the long term. Evidently Q is one of these. Fortunately, there are still a number of brands that don't pursue this goal. It's not necessarily that you need more expensive, just different. Vienna Acoustics and pretty much all of the *classic* BBC designs come to mind (this excludes the Spendor D series), and there are others.