Hi. Coaster! Let me share my LS50 experience with you.
I put together a new system last Thanksgiving timeframe. I had been without for a couple of years so its really nice to get back into the hobby!
I’ll just get to the point quickly here. The LS50’s are great speakers; don’t buy them, lol. They are incredibly hard to drive and as a result, be prepared to spend anywhere between $1500-$2500 on the front end. I had a McCormack Micro Line Drive, B&K reference 4420 amp, audioquest red dragonfly, jitterbug, analysis plus speaker cables (oval 8?), Rel T9i subwoofer.
I burned the speakers in for 50+ hours.
They do vocals and imaging and acoustic guitars amazingly well but they have little to no bass and on quite a bit material, they sound very very thin. The Rel T9i did not make up the difference like I had thought.
I’m thinking that someone will chime in and say that they sound amazing hooked up to their pass labs or conrad johnson equipment but I digress.
My advice would be to decide whats important to you soundwise and then put together a system that will be fulfilling to you.
The Passive LS50’s did not play rock music well at allfor me. 3 doors down “the road I’m on” sounded awful. The LS50’s had no dynamics, zero slam (someone will tell me it was my preamp and that I need a good tube preamp / quicksilver, audio research etc).
Bottom line, I was not trying to buy a $1000 pre, $1500 amp, $800 dac, $800 in cables, just to achieve a sound that was almost as good as the Kef LS50 Wireless ($2200) only without the bass or magical imaging that I am hearing from the Active version.
I decided to sell / return all my gear, pocket $500, and end up with an amazing sound on all types of music while visually getting rid of a laptop, pre amp, amp, speaker cables, interconnects, over size power cords etc. Oh, and now I have remote control over music selection and as bad as the remote is (its bad, lol), its still better than no remote control which is what I had been using for the past 5 years.
So, to summarize, buy the Active LS50’s and selleverything else, OR, buy some speakers that have sound characteristics that you are looking for and that sound good with your Denon. Easy to drive speakers that sound good with a variety of amplification and sound good with Classic Rock should be what you are looking for. ZU is a good recommendation in that regard.
Buut, if you can swing it, the Active LS50’s are pretty special and a downright bargain considering what you get in a small, neat package.
Good Luck withyour search and have fun! Stressing out, like I often do, will heighten the chances of a wrong choice. Let your ears be the judge and if it doesn’t sound good to you after your purchase, and after you’ve burned them in, return them and try something else. Don’t go down the “upgrade everything inorder to make the speakers that you don’t like sound decent” road.
I put together a new system last Thanksgiving timeframe. I had been without for a couple of years so its really nice to get back into the hobby!
I’ll just get to the point quickly here. The LS50’s are great speakers; don’t buy them, lol. They are incredibly hard to drive and as a result, be prepared to spend anywhere between $1500-$2500 on the front end. I had a McCormack Micro Line Drive, B&K reference 4420 amp, audioquest red dragonfly, jitterbug, analysis plus speaker cables (oval 8?), Rel T9i subwoofer.
I burned the speakers in for 50+ hours.
They do vocals and imaging and acoustic guitars amazingly well but they have little to no bass and on quite a bit material, they sound very very thin. The Rel T9i did not make up the difference like I had thought.
I’m thinking that someone will chime in and say that they sound amazing hooked up to their pass labs or conrad johnson equipment but I digress.
My advice would be to decide whats important to you soundwise and then put together a system that will be fulfilling to you.
The Passive LS50’s did not play rock music well at allfor me. 3 doors down “the road I’m on” sounded awful. The LS50’s had no dynamics, zero slam (someone will tell me it was my preamp and that I need a good tube preamp / quicksilver, audio research etc).
Bottom line, I was not trying to buy a $1000 pre, $1500 amp, $800 dac, $800 in cables, just to achieve a sound that was almost as good as the Kef LS50 Wireless ($2200) only without the bass or magical imaging that I am hearing from the Active version.
I decided to sell / return all my gear, pocket $500, and end up with an amazing sound on all types of music while visually getting rid of a laptop, pre amp, amp, speaker cables, interconnects, over size power cords etc. Oh, and now I have remote control over music selection and as bad as the remote is (its bad, lol), its still better than no remote control which is what I had been using for the past 5 years.
So, to summarize, buy the Active LS50’s and selleverything else, OR, buy some speakers that have sound characteristics that you are looking for and that sound good with your Denon. Easy to drive speakers that sound good with a variety of amplification and sound good with Classic Rock should be what you are looking for. ZU is a good recommendation in that regard.
Buut, if you can swing it, the Active LS50’s are pretty special and a downright bargain considering what you get in a small, neat package.
Good Luck withyour search and have fun! Stressing out, like I often do, will heighten the chances of a wrong choice. Let your ears be the judge and if it doesn’t sound good to you after your purchase, and after you’ve burned them in, return them and try something else. Don’t go down the “upgrade everything inorder to make the speakers that you don’t like sound decent” road.