The new Gallo Reference line array (5LS) is getting pretty good press, probably worth a listen:
http://www.roundsound.com/reference-5-ls-speakers.html
-RW-
http://www.roundsound.com/reference-5-ls-speakers.html
-RW-
The Most Realistic Speaker Technology?
The new Gallo Reference line array (5LS) is getting pretty good press, probably worth a listen: http://www.roundsound.com/reference-5-ls-speakers.html -RW- |
You do need to first of all decide. 1. Do you want to have to be glued to the sweet spot for the speakers to sound good? This is my number one concern. I don't want to always have to be glued to the sweet spot, so that there eliminates a bunch of possibilities 2. What placement options do you have and how big is your room? If for example you cannot pull the speakers very far into the room that will also eliminate many speakers from the running. If you have a small room that will also. 3. What kind of music do you mostly listen to? You are not going to find a speaker that does it all for 10K, all speakers are tradeoffs so if classical is your main concern for example then there are speakers that will be more suited to that kind of a sound than one that is great with rock or jazz. 4. What is the rest of your system? This is really important. If you like small low powered tube amps then about 75% of the speakers out there are now out of the running. WE NEED MORE INFORMATION! |
there is no "most realistic speaker", only most realistic systems. and imho there are two basic types of "realism"- 1. up front and in your face (exciting sounding) and 2. laid back "sense of ease" effortless sounding. one may be fatiguing after awhile while the other may be so relaxing you might doze off half-way into the cd/record. my preference after hearing a pretty fair number of stereo's is #2, although a great #2 should wake you up pretty quickly when the composition gathers force and fury. #1 will have you dissecting the music for things that are supposed to be there but they're not audible enough, or things that ARE there that you are convinced are artifacts, although 95% of what you hear is unquestionably "so close" to an actual performance you are continually amazed and impressed. NOW, if you were to take a decent tape recorder to an orchestra or band rehearsal hall, set up two (just two) very good microphones on boom stands, and make a 15ips or 30ips recording, take it home, and play it on an average or high end stereo, doesn't really matter which, you would hear a very raw sound, even unpleasantly so. but with a little patience, after awhile you might get used to the "flawed" sound and start enjoying the lack of studio (professional) treatments. you would hear the musicians in the room with fresh ears- in other words your ears would become the microphones instead of the complex series of electronics you would find visiting sony or telarc. i've heard these raw tapes, and with all of their limitations it is a remarkable experience to hear what you just played, no audio cosmetics deftly applied. so that is a third reality that one should keep in the back of their mind just so you never forget how drums, and brass, bassoons and piccolos keep you wide awake and attentive, excited about the piece they're playing- and not the way it's being played back. |
If you're shelling out $10k for new speakers, definitely make a local dealer earn their cut. Any decent shop selling at this level will let you sit and listen as long as necessary until you know what you want, then bring it home for audition. That's the whole benefit to buying new - you take the time to get it right the first time, uswing their equipment so you don't have to keep trading here. Just make sure you are willing to pay retail when you find what you like, rather than use the showrooms, then buy used here. |