Speaker recommendations / live concert recordings


I have decided to look for speakers in the $900-$1100 price range. I have an old Akai receiver and an equally old Magnavox cd player, both of which will be upgraded soon after i purchase speakers.
I am looking for some advice on what to look for in speakers to listen to live rock/jazz concert recordings on. Most of the recordings i listen to are done with 2 (sometimes 4) microphones, a mic preamp, a/d converter, and a DAT deck. All components used are usually of the highest quality. The location of the microphones can be anywhere from on the stage lip to 100 feet from the stage. The performances are usually played in large venues such as the Spectrum in Philadelphia, small bars, and anything in between. Please look at this page to get a better idea of the types of recordings i listen to:

http://db.etree.org/kevinkachel

i want to reproduce the sound in the venue as it's heard when you're there as accurately as possible, however, some of the recordings have a lot of low end and can be quite "boomy." I will want to have the ability to remove some of this while listening. what would be the best way to do this? would the bass response knob on the preamp be enough, or would an EQ do a better job?
thanks in advance for you opinions.
kevin
crystalhaze17e0
In your price range nothing but Maggies would give you what you are looking for. The key to Maggies is of course proper setup, you must let the speakers "breath" in its surroundings.

The best you can do is to audition them! I have heard many speakers but only Maggies came close to reproducing the "live" sound. This is of course based on the budget you have.

Good Luck!
I like the maggies too...
but, as i'm learning with (com)plannars, the room acoustics play a much larger role with these types of speakers than traditional ones.

case in piont, my room.
I've got a nice Martin Logan setup. Dream system. Plenty of breathing room. sounds like complete ASS !
Speakers are setup properly..and then some. But my room acoustics kill their performance.

You'd never know until you got them home, but IMO...worth the effort to try as the maggies will give you the most quality sound for your money...but you'd need a sub for your musical requirements.
I am a Maggie fan myself, but I am surprised that they have been recommended by so many people for Pop/Rock type music. I don't do Pop/Rock myself, but if I did I would seek out big (15") ProSound drivers in a big vented box, because that is exactly what you hear at a live concert.

My subwoofer systems, which are crossed over relatively high (90Hz) include JBL LE15A drivers which, while originally used as woofers (up to 800 Hz) in JBL home systems, resemble current ProSound drivers. For certain kinds of music, these JBL drivers furnish the "Punch" which many people find lacking in Maggies.
Maggies for this guy? C'mon. He wants an efficient, big-bottomed boxy 3-way that's affordable. Who makes these? Maybe old Vandersteens, used big Paradigms, et al. Remember what he's listening to. Midrange honesty and coherence have to take a back seat at $1k if he wants explosive dynamics, no?