I guess I'm in the source camp but speakers are very close behind in importance.
I churn my system with agonizing deliberation. Only recently did I part with my 26-year-old Dahlquist DQ-10s, which I had restored a few years ago. During those twenty-six years everything else in my system had been changed a few times.
It was marvelously instructive to hear how much better the same old speakers could sound with different components upstream. The biggest changes were with source equipment: both with a SOTA turntable (1985) and a Naim CDX/XPS CD player (2000).
Another startling, magnificent change was going from a high-end Rotel preamp to a VAC Renaissance Signature, but that hardly counts, it was such a big upgrade.
Big improvement in having my New York Audio Labs Moscode 600 upgraded and tweaked by Stephen Sank a couple of years ago. Suddenly the Dahlquists had shocking bass response and fastness I never, ever expected to hear from them. Not only was this upgrade musically enriching, but it saved me money and bought me time, since I no longer felt the urgency to upgrade my speakers. It allowed me to take longer to audition speakers and save up for more expensive ones.
Recently, I retired the Dahlquists (they were falling apart, and finally just weren't up to the quality of the rest of my system, plus my wife was begging me to get rid of them for something smaller and better looking). I bought some Kharma Ceramique 2.2s after listening to lots of great speakers, and am very, very happy with them. So is my wife.
I must say that it would have been pointless to have such great speakers without having already invested in fine source equipment and amplification (and cables, though I'm nowhere near optimal cables yet), but now that I have the Kharmas I'm able to assess how much great speakers do matter.
[Next steps: vinyl (my SOTA Sapphire/MMT has been in mothballs since I moved to NYC in 1988, and I'm going to sell it and try something new), power (major reworking of the mains power coming into my 140 year old brownstone, new power wiring, outlets)]
I churn my system with agonizing deliberation. Only recently did I part with my 26-year-old Dahlquist DQ-10s, which I had restored a few years ago. During those twenty-six years everything else in my system had been changed a few times.
It was marvelously instructive to hear how much better the same old speakers could sound with different components upstream. The biggest changes were with source equipment: both with a SOTA turntable (1985) and a Naim CDX/XPS CD player (2000).
Another startling, magnificent change was going from a high-end Rotel preamp to a VAC Renaissance Signature, but that hardly counts, it was such a big upgrade.
Big improvement in having my New York Audio Labs Moscode 600 upgraded and tweaked by Stephen Sank a couple of years ago. Suddenly the Dahlquists had shocking bass response and fastness I never, ever expected to hear from them. Not only was this upgrade musically enriching, but it saved me money and bought me time, since I no longer felt the urgency to upgrade my speakers. It allowed me to take longer to audition speakers and save up for more expensive ones.
Recently, I retired the Dahlquists (they were falling apart, and finally just weren't up to the quality of the rest of my system, plus my wife was begging me to get rid of them for something smaller and better looking). I bought some Kharma Ceramique 2.2s after listening to lots of great speakers, and am very, very happy with them. So is my wife.
I must say that it would have been pointless to have such great speakers without having already invested in fine source equipment and amplification (and cables, though I'm nowhere near optimal cables yet), but now that I have the Kharmas I'm able to assess how much great speakers do matter.
[Next steps: vinyl (my SOTA Sapphire/MMT has been in mothballs since I moved to NYC in 1988, and I'm going to sell it and try something new), power (major reworking of the mains power coming into my 140 year old brownstone, new power wiring, outlets)]