The Low Volume Loudness Dilemma


I love the power and detail of music played at what I call "Actual instrument volume" which is pretty loud and dominating. 

I like music in the background when I'm reading or entertaining. The problem is that the fullness and richness is thin to gone at low volume. This seems to be the case no matter how much a system costs. I listened to a Burmester rig driving a set of Wilson Alexx V speakers in a perfectly tuned listening room with cabling that costs more than my Lexus and the "missing music" at low volume problem was there too. $350,000 in gear couldn't fix it. 

I did the unthinkable - I bought a DBX 2231 equalizer off of eBay for a couple hundred bucks and messed around with the sound curve. Viola! "Loudness"!  I know this is sacrilege and may cause excommunication by the purist class but I am able to get full rich sound at low levels. The Eq also compensates for the anomalies in my listening area (large great room with other rooms connected to it.)

I don't have the square footage or budget to build a proper dedicated listening room with all the sound management treatments so I'm "making due" with what I do have. 

Does anybody have some guidance or constructive thoughts on how to get full rich music at low SPLs? 

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I haven’t actually heard it but the Decware ZRock3 reads like it’s made for what you are describing.

https://www.decwareproducts.com/zrock3

Thanks @danager. That's pretty nifty. I just sent them an email to see if they can make one with XLR instead of RCA.

+1 Accuphase loundness (compensation) switch for low volume. Great for background listening.

I'd figure out a way to have the eq in the chain when you wanted it but take it out when you're listening at normal volume.  Maybe a tape loop?  It's been a long time since I did something like that.