@snapsc
The interesting thing from the March Audio review/test is that although the distortion is very low, the remaining distortion is mostly 2nd and 3rd. The question becomes "although it has great bass and an extended top end, is it musical"...or is possible that the distortion possibly too low for optimal musicality?
They sounded pretty darn good and musical when I heard the older 120W/ch version.
But I am more in the camp of “give me a wire with gain”, and not in the “spice to taste” camp.
Did hear some Devore O/98s with a Jadis that sounded nice in LA (SoCal). I did not bust out the iPhone for an SPL reading, but they sounded loud.
They were musical, but not overly quiet in the “low distortion” way.
Horses for courses I suppose??
And as Ralph says here:
Most of them tend to have unmasked higher ordered harmonics at a low level, and because the ear uses the higher harmonics to sense sound pressure, its keenly sensitive to their presence! Also because the ear assigns a tonality to all forms of distortion, this causes most of said amps to sound harsh and bright even though they might have less higher ordered harmonics than a tube amp! This is how important the masking that the 2nd and 3rd provide can actually be.
The speaker (and amp) had a quietness about them.
(And the speakers having low distortion is likely a very big part of that.)
Historically I have usually found it rare to find quiet speakers. It is always a sign that something magical is happening.
I usually find this when I cannot hold a conversation and bust out an SPL measuring app and find it is playing 90-100 dB(A).
But it does not sound as loud as a system playing at 80 dB(A) in a somewhat perplexing way.
I only have found that happening when the speakers and amp have a low distortion, so I have no reason to suspect anything else than what @atmasphere is saying about “the ear” using the harmonics to determine loudness as being likely true.
Personally I do not likely opt for musicality via high distortion over having low distortion electronics and drivers in a speaker that is also not plagued by resonances. While both can sound good with most music… it just seems easier to get good piano and vocals out of a system that is lower distortion and more free of resonances.
But, then again… I have only heard a limited number of systems, and never heard Atmasphere gear in person. I am intrigued by his electronics… so it is (IMO) a low risk decision.
Similarly with the MA gear, it measures very well… and… I have heard it and it also sounds very nice.