UPDATE:
Listened to the Devore O/93 and O/96 speakers again.
I’m STILL saving up for a speaker purchase (as mentioned earlier in the thread I was ready to purchase the Joseph Perspectives when my finances took an unexpected hit, which I’m still digging out from).
Not actively auditioning speakers but if the opportunity arises I will take it.
To that end I’ve been loving my little Spendor S3/5s which has put the bigger classic Spendor models on my radar - especially the 1/2.Very hard to audition though.
It turned out on a recent trip that a local dealer had the Spendor 1/2s for sale, second hand, so I wanted to check them out. As it happened, they also had the Devore speakers. I ended up listening to the Devores, not the Spendors, as they were essentially "set up ready to listen."
It was a big listening space, well suited to the Devore speakers (which like space around them). First off I zipped through a bunch of stuff I know and love on Tidal, through the 0/93s (both speakers driven by a Leben tube amp). I’m not going to re-describe their sound as I have elsewhere, except to modify to this extent: They did all that great Devore stuff with fullness and rich bottom end, and nice clarity. Made tons of the zany old funky Library music tracks I like (e.g. stuff by Alan Hawkshaw, Brian Bennett) really groove! But after a while, to pick some nits, two things started to dawn on me: 1. The tone, while very, very nice and to my ears preferable to much of the competition, was a bit shelved off in terms of high frequency extension. They didn’t sound "dead" at all, actually quite open and often very clear! But things like drum cymbals, horn sections etc just seemed to lack that last bit of airy "shine," and I began to feel a bit of a limit in the tonal character of the speaker.
Secondly, the imaging/soundstaging, while a really fun wall-of-sound, was a bit too obviously foreshortened. All my speakers at home have always imaged and soundstaged well, but I think I’m particularly smitten at the moment by the "disappearing" and soundstaging of the Spendors.They somehow do it in a way that feels musically meaningful, and I did think listening to the o/93s that I’d start to miss that aspect of the listening experience a bit too much.
Then the 0/93s were replaced with the bigger O/96s, same amp, same space. Oh mamma! Ok, NOW we are talking! This is the first time I was able to compare them back to back in the same conditions and it was really telling. The O/96s just sounded to me like the better overall speaker. It sounded more neutral, more extended in the high end, even bigger, and interestingly it images/soundstaged significantly better than the O/93s. Suddenly the same tracks became richly 3-D, with more depth and space around the sonic images, and the speakers disappeared more. in the bass, I felt the O/96s were, on most tracks just as controlled or maybe better than the O/93s. But those occasionally moments of bass overload were MORE obvious on the O/96s because of their bass extension.
Tonally, moving from the O/93s to O/96s was - using the images they conjured in my mind’s eye - moving from the 93’s slightly darker grayish/brownish tone, a bit more homogenized - to the 96’s more open, extended lighter "amber-wood" tone almost exactly like that of my little, magical Spendor speakers! Drum cymbals took on a brassier more open, sparkling tone, as did horn sections. Bongos, drums etc all sounded a bit more present, airy and real. And of course the sound was smooth and rich. Like the Spendors on steroids, and with greater resolution and impact.
As usual, I was constantly aware of how a drummer was playing in each track. There were dynamic ebb-and-flows that often made tracks I knew sound fresh again.
Also...a real surprise (as it was the first time I heard them) was the sense of fine resolution! There seems to be a division - some people hear the Devore O series as being somewhat smoothed over "not for you resolution freaks, more music lover speaker" as the cliche goes. Others find they hear new things on the Devores. Put me in the second camp!I’ve heard these tracks on everything from my own speakers, to the latest Magico, Focal, Raidho, Joseph Audio, Paradigm Persona...you name it. The Devores still blew me away with what I kept hearing - little things, bells or cymbal add-ins etc, I truly have never noticed over all these years. And even Herbie Hancock’s piano in "Lullaby" seemed to sound so substantial...it had a sounding board...yet the top end trail of the keys seemed to just float and go on and on, with such subtle resolution.
Once I noted the issues with the O/93 and then heard the O/96, I finally removed the O/93s from my list. They remain among my very favourite speakers, but I think the Joseph Perspectives edge them out with a big punchy sound of their own, but with a finer sense of timbral beauty and variety, and state-of-the-art imagining/soundstaging.
So are the Devore O/96s for me?
Yes and no.
Yes:
They do almost everything I seem to enjoy: They give back the heft and richness in voices and instruments that go missing in most speakers. They give a life-sized sense of imaging. They "disappear" and image quite well. They have that magic "woody organic" tone that flatters so many acoustic instruments, and that upper "golden tone" and airiness that I love that makes bells, cymbal etc shimmer beautifully.They have a sense of palpable texture which allows bows on strings, hands on percussion, etc to cut through the air like the real thing rather than having that slightly glazed, canned quality of most sound reproduction. And they groove like heck in showing how musicians do their work. All this, and with an ear-friendly tone that doesn’t bite.
No:
Sonically, they are generally wonderful. But to pick nits, they certainly do have a specific bass quality engineered in to them - that big, round, warm bass (though still able to be rythmically quick). The O/96s did remind me more often than certain other speakers, and my home speakers, that I was "listening to a speaker." (Though held against this is their ability to sound more "live" and less speaker-like with lots of material). And I did feel that the rich foundation of the speaker may be a tad over-bearing over the long haul. I don’t really know - maybe I’d dial them in so it wasn’t the case. But they do seem to present a challenge to controlling the bottom end.
The two most important things that make me have to put the O/96s "on the shelf" at this point is: The Devores REALLY DO need at least 8 feet listening distance in order to sound the way I’ve described them - the way I like them to sound. I once again measured with a tape measure my head distance from the speakers, testing between 8 1/2 feet down to about 7 feet, and as soon as my head got closer than 8 feet, the sound started to lose top end air, sparkle, snap, image focus etc, and become more rolled off and sonically "glazed over" sounding. Pull my head back and all the qualities I’ve described snapped back in to focus. This has been the same every single time I’ve done this experiment, in every Devore set up I heard.
Problem for me is I’m limited by the ergonomics of my room at the moment. Speakers have to be able to be placed closer - 7 1/2 feet at the furthers, but more like 7 feet from my listening position. I can’t figure out how I’d get the Devores to work at this point.
So...that keeps the Joseph Perspectives in first place.
EXCEPT...the new update to the "Perspective 2 Graphene" version has raised the price in Canada to beyond my reach (now $20,000!). The horror! That means my only hope will be buying a used pair of the originals and at some point paying for the upgrade to the "2" version if I want (which I’m sure I do). It’s killing me because right now people are selling their Perspectives, including my own JA dealer selling his older floor models of the Perspectives, due to the newer models coming out.Normally I could just grab them but...don’t have the funds yet! Dang!
So...that’s it for now. Still have my sights set on the JA Perspectives and if I can ever audition the Spendor 1/2s (or even 2/3s) I’ll be doing that along the way. Maybe I’ll even check out the Spendor D7/D9s.
Oh, forgot to mention: The other speakers now on my radar are the Devore Super Nines! About the same size as the Josephs, similar frequency response, and I’m wondering if they maintain some of that Devore tone. No one has them to audition, though.
Listened to the Devore O/93 and O/96 speakers again.
I’m STILL saving up for a speaker purchase (as mentioned earlier in the thread I was ready to purchase the Joseph Perspectives when my finances took an unexpected hit, which I’m still digging out from).
Not actively auditioning speakers but if the opportunity arises I will take it.
To that end I’ve been loving my little Spendor S3/5s which has put the bigger classic Spendor models on my radar - especially the 1/2.Very hard to audition though.
It turned out on a recent trip that a local dealer had the Spendor 1/2s for sale, second hand, so I wanted to check them out. As it happened, they also had the Devore speakers. I ended up listening to the Devores, not the Spendors, as they were essentially "set up ready to listen."
It was a big listening space, well suited to the Devore speakers (which like space around them). First off I zipped through a bunch of stuff I know and love on Tidal, through the 0/93s (both speakers driven by a Leben tube amp). I’m not going to re-describe their sound as I have elsewhere, except to modify to this extent: They did all that great Devore stuff with fullness and rich bottom end, and nice clarity. Made tons of the zany old funky Library music tracks I like (e.g. stuff by Alan Hawkshaw, Brian Bennett) really groove! But after a while, to pick some nits, two things started to dawn on me: 1. The tone, while very, very nice and to my ears preferable to much of the competition, was a bit shelved off in terms of high frequency extension. They didn’t sound "dead" at all, actually quite open and often very clear! But things like drum cymbals, horn sections etc just seemed to lack that last bit of airy "shine," and I began to feel a bit of a limit in the tonal character of the speaker.
Secondly, the imaging/soundstaging, while a really fun wall-of-sound, was a bit too obviously foreshortened. All my speakers at home have always imaged and soundstaged well, but I think I’m particularly smitten at the moment by the "disappearing" and soundstaging of the Spendors.They somehow do it in a way that feels musically meaningful, and I did think listening to the o/93s that I’d start to miss that aspect of the listening experience a bit too much.
Then the 0/93s were replaced with the bigger O/96s, same amp, same space. Oh mamma! Ok, NOW we are talking! This is the first time I was able to compare them back to back in the same conditions and it was really telling. The O/96s just sounded to me like the better overall speaker. It sounded more neutral, more extended in the high end, even bigger, and interestingly it images/soundstaged significantly better than the O/93s. Suddenly the same tracks became richly 3-D, with more depth and space around the sonic images, and the speakers disappeared more. in the bass, I felt the O/96s were, on most tracks just as controlled or maybe better than the O/93s. But those occasionally moments of bass overload were MORE obvious on the O/96s because of their bass extension.
Tonally, moving from the O/93s to O/96s was - using the images they conjured in my mind’s eye - moving from the 93’s slightly darker grayish/brownish tone, a bit more homogenized - to the 96’s more open, extended lighter "amber-wood" tone almost exactly like that of my little, magical Spendor speakers! Drum cymbals took on a brassier more open, sparkling tone, as did horn sections. Bongos, drums etc all sounded a bit more present, airy and real. And of course the sound was smooth and rich. Like the Spendors on steroids, and with greater resolution and impact.
As usual, I was constantly aware of how a drummer was playing in each track. There were dynamic ebb-and-flows that often made tracks I knew sound fresh again.
Also...a real surprise (as it was the first time I heard them) was the sense of fine resolution! There seems to be a division - some people hear the Devore O series as being somewhat smoothed over "not for you resolution freaks, more music lover speaker" as the cliche goes. Others find they hear new things on the Devores. Put me in the second camp!I’ve heard these tracks on everything from my own speakers, to the latest Magico, Focal, Raidho, Joseph Audio, Paradigm Persona...you name it. The Devores still blew me away with what I kept hearing - little things, bells or cymbal add-ins etc, I truly have never noticed over all these years. And even Herbie Hancock’s piano in "Lullaby" seemed to sound so substantial...it had a sounding board...yet the top end trail of the keys seemed to just float and go on and on, with such subtle resolution.
Once I noted the issues with the O/93 and then heard the O/96, I finally removed the O/93s from my list. They remain among my very favourite speakers, but I think the Joseph Perspectives edge them out with a big punchy sound of their own, but with a finer sense of timbral beauty and variety, and state-of-the-art imagining/soundstaging.
So are the Devore O/96s for me?
Yes and no.
Yes:
They do almost everything I seem to enjoy: They give back the heft and richness in voices and instruments that go missing in most speakers. They give a life-sized sense of imaging. They "disappear" and image quite well. They have that magic "woody organic" tone that flatters so many acoustic instruments, and that upper "golden tone" and airiness that I love that makes bells, cymbal etc shimmer beautifully.They have a sense of palpable texture which allows bows on strings, hands on percussion, etc to cut through the air like the real thing rather than having that slightly glazed, canned quality of most sound reproduction. And they groove like heck in showing how musicians do their work. All this, and with an ear-friendly tone that doesn’t bite.
No:
Sonically, they are generally wonderful. But to pick nits, they certainly do have a specific bass quality engineered in to them - that big, round, warm bass (though still able to be rythmically quick). The O/96s did remind me more often than certain other speakers, and my home speakers, that I was "listening to a speaker." (Though held against this is their ability to sound more "live" and less speaker-like with lots of material). And I did feel that the rich foundation of the speaker may be a tad over-bearing over the long haul. I don’t really know - maybe I’d dial them in so it wasn’t the case. But they do seem to present a challenge to controlling the bottom end.
The two most important things that make me have to put the O/96s "on the shelf" at this point is: The Devores REALLY DO need at least 8 feet listening distance in order to sound the way I’ve described them - the way I like them to sound. I once again measured with a tape measure my head distance from the speakers, testing between 8 1/2 feet down to about 7 feet, and as soon as my head got closer than 8 feet, the sound started to lose top end air, sparkle, snap, image focus etc, and become more rolled off and sonically "glazed over" sounding. Pull my head back and all the qualities I’ve described snapped back in to focus. This has been the same every single time I’ve done this experiment, in every Devore set up I heard.
Problem for me is I’m limited by the ergonomics of my room at the moment. Speakers have to be able to be placed closer - 7 1/2 feet at the furthers, but more like 7 feet from my listening position. I can’t figure out how I’d get the Devores to work at this point.
So...that keeps the Joseph Perspectives in first place.
EXCEPT...the new update to the "Perspective 2 Graphene" version has raised the price in Canada to beyond my reach (now $20,000!). The horror! That means my only hope will be buying a used pair of the originals and at some point paying for the upgrade to the "2" version if I want (which I’m sure I do). It’s killing me because right now people are selling their Perspectives, including my own JA dealer selling his older floor models of the Perspectives, due to the newer models coming out.Normally I could just grab them but...don’t have the funds yet! Dang!
So...that’s it for now. Still have my sights set on the JA Perspectives and if I can ever audition the Spendor 1/2s (or even 2/3s) I’ll be doing that along the way. Maybe I’ll even check out the Spendor D7/D9s.
Oh, forgot to mention: The other speakers now on my radar are the Devore Super Nines! About the same size as the Josephs, similar frequency response, and I’m wondering if they maintain some of that Devore tone. No one has them to audition, though.