help me choosing first HiFi


Hello everyone

first time poster here, not a big expert, just music lover. Please I need your help to select a good (understood pretty difficult to use the word “best”) system for my budget. My apology for the long thread.

My source: mainly cd (around 2.000 so ripping is not an option)
Music: classic, chamber, opera, piano solo, jazz + radio and some podcast.
Like detailed, spatial, clear and natural sound, but not cold.
Budget: 2.000 EURO (2.000USD/ 1500 GBP), stretchable at most to 2.500 euro (2.800 usd/ 1.800 gbp)

I have been reading for some weeks now, and few days ago I started to listen as well. Basically I am torn between two main alternatives:

“Alternative 1”- a good integrated entry system, like the Cambridge MINX XI, which is Ampli+DAC+network streamer. Has a good price, good quality. This would give me everything, and leave budget for the speakers, and be the simplest and cleanest solution. I read many reviews and the internal Dac is supposed to be very good.

“Alternative 2” - increase a bit in quality, stretch the budget, get a good ampli-dac+cd, and add a cheap web radio which will be sent to the good Dac into the amplifier. First thinking: Cambridge new CX series: ampli culd be the CX A60 and the cd player the CXC, a player with NO dac inside. I would miss the chance to send some podcast from my pc/mac to the stereo. I would gain flexibility to change some component or add a new one in the future. As far as I have read, the network streamers currently on the market produce good sound but software somehow has still to catch-up, so i might buy this in the future, and now buy just a web radio receiver. Nevertheless, I saw network streamers like Pioneer N30 do not cost too much.

I should try to listen to these two alternatives and assign a price to the difference in quality I am supposed to hear (not sure yet!) But I am still confused about few fundamental issues.
Let's start:
1- “invest more of your budget into the speakers” VS “rubbish in rubbish out, so split equally your budget among the components”. I heard both of them. What follows in the first case is to use a basic cd player/dvd player, send the digital signal to my good Dac and enjoy. In the second case instead I should also invest in a good cd player or blu ray should I use the same for movies as well.
2- pairing ampli with speakers. I am still confused on how to undestad if an ampli and speakers are potentially a good match. I know, I should listen, but in theory I hear “that ampli cannot express the best out of those speakers” or “those speakers are an overkill with that ampli” or “you need a better ampli for that speakers” or instead “with that ampli you should use a better speaker set”. In theory, I understood I should look not at WATT, but at somethink related to electrical power/ampere, but dont know much. So if I choose speakers first, I dont know how to choose the best ampli for that speakers.

As far as the speakers: so far I heard just TOTEM (canadian producer) MITE model. I was blown away, seriously. I couldn't imagine speakers so small would produce that clarity, that definition of space. Cannot think a bigger speaker to sound better. But I'd like to hear something more before. I was set to listen B&W 685 s2, as I had read good things, but perhaps the Mite are a bit superior. Other I'd like to listen: Sonus Faber Venere 2.0, Focal 906 and some Monitor Audio.
To sum all this up, my questions for you experts are the following:
1- what would you suggest for me in terms of alternative1 vs alternative2?
2- should I buy a quality cd player or a basic cheapest blu ray reader ?
3- should I look to buy bigger floorstander spearkers? or with the budget is better to stick to bookshelves? Do you have alternatives to the speakers I mentioned?

Thanks really a lot in advance
lorcar
hello Lorcar. what type of listening space do you have? small office? giant cavernous living room? 11' x 13' dedicated man-cave? that will help determine the type of speakers to recommend.
Finding a good dealer, assuming there is one within driving distance of you, is a much better way to proceed at assembling a music system, IMO.
Lorcar - apologies upfront for answering questions you did not ask, but I was in a similar situation when I got back into the hobby about four years ago, with a similar re-entry budget.

My first recommendation is that you determine what your three year budget is and do not spend more than half of that total. Your odds of nailing this the first time out are practically zero. You will end up tweaking, upgrading and experimenting.

Second, no matter what system you end up with, spend at least 500 hours listening to it and learning how to optimize it for your listening habits before you swap out any gear. I've moved my system at least four times as I've learned how I listen. Turns out I do much more solo listening than I thought I would and as a consequence I carved out dedicated space, which also influenced my ultimate gear selections.

Third, if possible go to audio shows. This is the easiest way to get exposed to all genres of gear and identify what you like and don't like, represented in the current SOA.

Fourth, speaker/amp matching and system synergy is paramount to performance so your technical questions are a good sign. An excellent primer on the technology that drives all stages of audio reproduction is "Audio & Hi-Fi Handbook", edited by Ian Sinclair. I have the 3rd edition which was published in 1998 but is very much current for all but the most modern technology and engineering.

Good luck.

BG
Take a look at Dynaudio Xeo for a somewhat different but very cost effective and good sounding solution.
I agree with BG's suggestions, particularly his Second suggestion.
The way the system sounds the day you drop it in won't necessarily be the way it sounds in weeks or months. It takes time, probably a combination of getting accustomed to the sound, positioning the speakers, and understanding how you listen (at first we often play the music louder as we are judging the sound). I don't know if 500 hours is the number, but it's as good as any number. Bottom line - It takes a while.