Help me replace ancient speakers - or not


Looking forward to your collective wisdom...

Short version:
Should I replace my 40 year old Allison One speakers with something made within, oh, the last couple of decades??  And can I get something reasonably full-range, that can fit into my small NYC living room, for, say, $2500 or less?  Used is fine. 

Long version:
I've had these Allison Ones for about 10 years, and they replaced Allison Sixes that I purchased new in 1982 or so.  So I've had very similar speaker "sound" for a verrrry long time. 

I've been interested in hi-fi since the 80s but rarely purchase anything new - clearly!  I'm a musician and equipment/hobby money has usually gone to instruments and music instead.  I try to get improvements on a small budget. 

Rest of the system is a NAD C352 integrated (Craigslist find!) with Tara Labs jumpers, a Marantz CD6005 cd player, and an Auralic Aries MIni streamer, the last two running through an Audio GD r2r DAC.  This is all cheapish stuff, but it sounds good in our small apartment, or it does most of the time.  

I'm listening to a Geri Allen trio date with Dave Holland and Jack DeJohnette, and her piano sounds full and tonally correct, and the bass and drums are balanced and impactful.  There isn't a huge amount of imaging  - Allisons don't really do that - but it all seems pretty correct.  BUT - maybe I'm just used to it?  

Other factors: we like to listen to everything from jazz to opera to poorly-recorded music from all over the world, at realistic volumes.  Scale is important, imaging not so much in my book.  My ears have taken a beating from years of loud gigs so I favor a warm-ish sound, but am open to trying something totally different.  I'm always drawn to the Audio Note rooms at shows, and a pair of AN-E's would be my dream.  Thinking of Klipsch Heresy's too, for some reason.  Gosh, I guess these are pretty ancient designs too.  

Any thoughts welcome and sorry for the novel. 
sforrey
Yes, there are Audio Note kits.  Worth checking out.

Otherwise, Totem Forest might fit the bill.
I'm currently evaluating a pair of Spatial Audio M3 Holograms, and while its early for me to write a full review, I will say that I can't stop listening to them. My critcal listening is usually jazz (Jim Hall, Metheny, Gary Burton, Dave Holland, Charlie Hayden, Miles, Coltrane). 

I got got turned onto the Spatial's through this forum and after reading many reviews, felt it would be worth a shot given the 45-60 day in home trial. I wasn't even looking to replace my "forever speakers" (restored KEF 107s), but this pair has me considering it.

They're just a little over your $2500 budget. If you have the space, consider giving them a listen. 


Thanks so far, appreciate it.

Yes, the Klipsch thought is left-field.  I sometimes feel that the sound of my system isn't as engaging at lower volumes, which got me thinking of higher-efficiency and less "polite" speakers.  

I've looked at the AN Kit speakers, would love to go that route but they're still a bit spendy.  Love the idea of DIY not practical in my current space.  

Forgot to add - the ability to sound good close to the rear wall is a must. 

@yakbob 

Funny, I've liked the idea of the Spatials as well... even though an open baffle is 180 degrees from my sealed boxes.  How's the bass quality? 

Any thoughts that the NAD is a limiting factor in my system?