Ears hurt when listening after changing speakers


For years I had multiple models of Maggies and Martin Logan speakers. I could play them very loud with no problems with my ears. A few months ago I purchased the Rockport Aviors and now when I listen at moderate to high levels my ears start to hurt.  Anyone one else experience this when changing speakers and would like thoughts on how to resolve other than turning the volume down.  I do love the Rockport.
128x128lourdes
It is all in the crossover, @soundsrealaudio


Any competent speaker designer could make any 2-way speaker sound bright.

I'm with Gadios and a couple others on this one.

To me... Maggies and Martins have a mellow/laid back sound.  Very inviting and relaxing.

I've never heard Rockports... but if they are as forward as B&W's... I can see why your ears might be hurting.  My ears can't handle B&W's for very long... before I get a headache.
Yes, Martin Logans were considered BORING by my wife 20+ years ago (Monolith IIIs and reQuests).  She complained about the lack of dynamics and bass.  She said pop music sounded emasculated.  I replaced them with Focus Signatures.  They play every type of music quite well with great ancillary equipment.  I've read negative comments about them (particularly from people with too small rooms).  They need some room to play well.  Otherwise get my other pair (with punchier bass-Signature IIIs).
Sorta seems intuitive, but if it hurts when you listen that loud, don't listen that loud.
I have been selling audio for 45 years and customers have commented through the years about pain, ringing or discomfort in their ears while listening to certain speakers, I experience these same symptoms from  certain types of high frequency drivers or with speakers that would normally be quite listenable but are connected to incompatible equipment or cables. One of my customers is an Otologist so I asked him about your problem, his first question was"Why would someone keep listening to speakers that keep hurting their ears?" I could not answer that question. His advice was to stop listening to the speakers and have your ears checked for some kind of problem or disease, if there is no problem diagnosed then get rid of the speakers before they cause permanent hearing damage. He went on to explain that everyones ears are slightly different and there are even people who have a different physical configuration in each one of their ears. Those physical difference are what allow some people to hear certain frequencies differently than others. 
Through the years we have noticed that some speakers will cause certain materials (glass, metal etc.) to vibrate and/or make noise while other speakers have no affect on those materials at all. The Otologist suggested that a correlation can be drawn between those materials that vibrate at certain frequencies and how different people hear those frequencies differently than other people.
If you are one of those people whose ears react negatively to certain speakers, be forwarded that according to a specialist in hearing, even sort term listening can cause permanent hearing damage.

Oops! I meant that I replaced the ML Monolith IIIs with Legacy Focus speakers which do not sound good in too small a room.

lourdes, any resolution on this situation? Did you make any changes which helped?