Speakers for audio and home theater


Hi All, I am looking for speaker recommendations. Looking for speakers that will be good for both music and home theater. I would use them more often for watching TV but would like the set to serve well for music listening. I was thinking for about 2K for a set. Open to paying a bit more for a good set. Thanks in advance
poweskasebastian
Are you just looking for two front speakers?  What amp are you using?  How big is your room?  What is important to you in terms of sound and speaker performance? 
Polk is closing out their LSiM line and they are currently selling for 50% off direct from Polk.  Adorama has the 705's a little cheaper at $650 each.  These were Polks flagship line but they are being phased out.  And for 2K you could also get a center.
https://www.polkaudio.com/collections/home-audio/lsim-series 
https://www.adorama.com/pklsim705b.html
The best speakers for stereo are the best for home theater. Duh. 

Buy the best 2 Tekton you can afford. If you want absolute killer state of the art bass plan on spending a little more to add four budget subs somewhere down the line. Whatever you do though stay as far away as possible from multi-channel. Fastest, easiest, surest way to wind up with something no good for music nor movies is to buy anything associated with HT.
It matters what movies you like and what music you like. Movies with beautiful scores deserve full range speakers. Will you be using subwoofers with standmounts or floorstanders?  My recommendation is to buy the best front two speakers and matching center channel speaker you can afford and like their sound. It’s impossible to recommend a manufacturer or model because we don’t know your taste. The surrounds are less important but match the center to the fronts for seamless integration. Subs are essential for most movies so budget in one or preferably two subs. Hsu and SVS give you more value then you can go with standmounts and matching Center. Lots of choices. Good luck. 
GoldenEar Triton is a good suggestion IMHO
I had the same delima eight years ago as I moved into a smaller home. So I replace my Dunlavy SC lll's mains, center, rear speakers and a sub woofer with the Definitive technology Mythos ST's with the built in powered sub woofers. Worked well for a small elegant full range speaker and for two channel setup, plus they were excellent for 5.1
Get speakers geared towards music first. It must be important to you, as you are on these forums.

I started, correction, re-started my journey back into ‘hifi’ by setting up a HT set-up with speakers more geared for that purpose. Problem, I soon realized they pretty much sucked for music, especially 2-channel music listening. And, as I began to seriously listen to music again, this became a problem. Additionally, listening fatigue was a huge problem with what I had.

In a rather brief but interesting journey, I now have Vandersteen 2CE Sigs as my mains, Vandersteen 1C’s as my rears, (originally purchased as my ‘new’ mains and replaced two months later with the 2CE Sigs), an ELAC Debut 2 C5.2 center, (which actually work well with the Vandys), and my original HT purchased budget BIC F12 sub (waiting you be replaced by one or two REL’s, but as the 2CE Sigs go pretty low on their own, not in a huge rush). All that for way under $2K. More like $1,300. All purchased used (the ELAC and BIC were open box finds). I’m not recommending anything above, that’s your subjective decision, but just an example of primary speakers made for music that work well in a HT set-up.

Bottom line, good musical speakers sound better than fine to great for HT.

As I have a subscription to the Berlin Philharmonic, and listen to live performances in 5.1, the musicality of all the speakers is important to me in that regard, and it does sound wonderful when using them for that purpose. Normal TV watching, I really don’t care, but it sounds great. As do the 2CE Sigs for 2-channel music listening. Which is the most important to me now.
Interesting question and some good suggestions. I am one who believes that there are speakers geared towards home theater that are not necessarily very musical. That is sell the sizzle and not accuracy. The Klipsch floor standers come to mind, very efficient and provide crash and bang associated with movies but will not wow you listening to Mahler. I would suggest speakers with built in subs for starters, Goldenear is one and they are quite musical. That's if you are going 2 channel. I own Tekton Lores now and they do justice to both music and movies though I value music above movies. 
Thank you everyone for very good suggestions. It definitely opened my eyes into what to look for. I am starting to like Tekton speakers and they are running great specials this week
TV/home theater/surround sound (my old stuff, but, example for tv/music solution):

Watching TV, you want a 'wide center', many music speakers are for a precise center, off center loses one channel, and loses center, loses imaging.

I got these DBX speakers for my home theater fronts, they are specifically designed for a wide center, I love and highly recommend them.

http://www.hifi-classic.net/review/dbx-soundfield-100-135.html

Left speaker aimed a bit more to the right. Right speaker aimed a bit to the left. When you sit off center, you are now closer to the left speaker, however, the right speaker is aimed at you, maintaining balanced left/right/center image.

3 tweeters each, maintains high frequencies hither and thither, front facing primary tweeters for imaging.

Surround Sound

Because Dolby separates the center/dialog information, your front left/right speakers don't get that information, thus cannot create a center image, soooo, even though your main fronts are magnificent, you need a dedicated center speaker. The center channel speaker location wants to be as close to the bottom of the TV as possible, to keep the sound origin best. This Bose Center Channel is small but terrific, and blends very nicely with the DBX.

https://www.ebay.com/i/323988054675?chn=ps&norover=1&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-117182-37290-0&mkcid=2&itemid=323988054675&targetid=475515050541&device=c&mktype=pla&googleloc=9003512&poi=&campaignid=6469981122&mkgroupid=79220336802&rlsatarget=pla-475515050541&abcId=1141176&merchantid=115052798&gclid=CjwKCAiA9JbwBRAAEiwAnWa4Q0WuGZpjh1Knb79c8IRIyPLOkHgFvBx3a0b04uo0DSJxiOyFpT_XMxoCydwQAvD_BwE

Use your receivers volume settings to balance the volume, the frequency dispersion of this Bose melds well with the DBX. Remember, Bass will not be sent to the center, so small good centers can do a great job.

Rear, you know how to solve that, just a comment, many people set their rear speakers too loud. Best is if you are generally unaware of them until you turn them off and the image collapses to the front. Specifics, heliocopters from the rear, you will definitely be aware of.

1 Subwoofer or 2 Subwoofers: Definitely different needs TV/Music

One sub can be very successful in home theater, however, two subs can be better for music.
Dolby 5.1 will take the low bass away from the main fronts, so, fronts don't need to be as full frequency as for music only. However, when using 2 channel stereo mode, the bass of your fronts should be good on their own.

Music subs. I recommend a stereo pair of subs, directional, bass is not mono as many like to believe.

Music

IF a 2 channel source, or, a phony surround created from a 2 channel source:

You want to Turn all surround effects off, set your AV receiver to 2 channel only. Now you have a Stereo Pair, still with a wide center. All sound will be coming from front l and r only, sooo the amount of bass will be determined by those mains. The DBX have enough bass for music without a sub, I added the sub for Jurassic Park dinosaur stomp, that sort of thing, but is gets no signal 2 Channel mode.

Direct. Watching music programs, like the Voice, the receiver will sometimes automatically select some surround, you can change the receiver to Direct. Now, if surround is being broadcast it will keep that, if the original is 2 channel it will use that.

It is quite obvious, and the music can be much better using 2 channel mode.
So, not that old equipment, but modern stuff that has the flexibility of wide center.
Oh yeah, using subs from a home theater works for surround, but, for music, a stereo pair of subs need to be self-powered, and, for 2 channel, how do they get their signal? That's tricky, that's why a full frequency front is important.