Speakers free of grain, glare and steel?


$2,000 or less used/new speakers free of grain, glare and steel, but with detail, extension, imaging, and tonal accuracy and balance? Acoustic Zen Adagio, Merlin TSM MME. Gallo 3.1, Frafrotski SE? Most speakers are competent, some are outstanding, a few deliver magic. Which speakers are the most musical and easy to listen to, rising to the top of a crowded field given their price point, and the most "forgiving" of their associated components? Which have magic?
pmboyd
Unsound and Mapman are spot on in their concerns regarding high eff speakers.

I went from a Lowther DX4 (103db) Medallion and all Audio Note Kits tube system (dac, pre,and amp) to a Class A SS integrated system.

The Shelby+Kroll monitors are 87db, but drop off at 100hz, the lower end is picked up by the Woffer monitor.

Due to the nonlinear nature of the Lowther drivers, severe peaks were to be had at the 1000hz - 1200hz range. Try as I did with room treatments, wires, etc... I couldn't tame them and became rather discontented with the whole high eff, single driver, SET approach.

Going from one camp (high eff) to the other has brought about a very rewarding change, and I'm very pleased with what I'm hearing.

I answered this in response to the high eff speakers being better statement. As noted I did recommend the Shelby + Kroll speakers, but I am in no way tying to push them on anyone. I just felt that my own recent experience in such a decision warranted this response.

Rodge
Just to be clear, I have nothing against high efficiency speakers. I just would not go under the notion that this alone determines the results. That depends on a lot of things.

I have no qualms with the performance of less efficient speakers categorically either.

Both require properly matched amplification to shine.

Achieving desired volume levels along with all the rest is quite achievable these days with modern amplifier technologies. Not a problem at all in most peoples homes.

Granted, to fill very large public venues effectively, high efficiency speakers are where its at. But most of us do not live and listen in arenas or even large auditoriums, so it is not an issue.

Efficiency alone means more volume per watt. Nothing more.
I purposely kept my question general in order to let let real world considerations bump up against the hypothetical. Of course "all other things being equal" doesn't exist -- except in any one particular system -- but interesting and useful information has resutled. Thanks for all your responses. Carry on.
"My amps are ss monoblocks, 170 watts/8 ohms"

What make/model specifically?

thanks.