The HRS-120 is not overboard on pricing - starting at $19,495.00/pr for the fine grain veneer version. It's almost full-range. In a moderate room it will give you 30Hz to 21.5kHz. It's not chump-change, but then again I don't think there's anything else that could possibly touch it at anywhere near the price.
Of course, I am biased ... ;-) since I distribute GP in North America. Still - I'd never have taken the risk of bringing something like this into the stable if it weren't phenomenal.
Jeff Fritz did a little review on the HRS-120 HERE where he had lots of nice things to say about them:
Not too shabby.
Of course, I am biased ... ;-) since I distribute GP in North America. Still - I'd never have taken the risk of bringing something like this into the stable if it weren't phenomenal.
Jeff Fritz did a little review on the HRS-120 HERE where he had lots of nice things to say about them:
They produced the most expansive, most three-dimensional soundstage Ive yet heard in my room.
The sound was melt-the-walls-away wide and deep. The result was that the speakers truly "disappeared" from the music, leaving behind only some of the most beautiful sound Ive ever heard.
The HRS 120s kept a stable image even when I listened a couple of feet or more off axis.
What I instead heard was bass that was reasonably extended ... with good speed and integration.
The HRS 120s could flat-out rock when called on to do so.
Germans Physiks loudspeakers have something unique: their sound. The Dick Dipole Driver, now virtually perfected, has been put to good use in the HRS 120, where it produces a sound that is quite marvelous -- I loved listening to these speakers.
You might just fall in love with them. If you do, I can just about guarantee that youll be the first on your block to have a set, and that your audiophile friends will gawk in amazement when they first hear them.
Not too shabby.