Best Loudspeakers for Rich Timbre?


I realise that the music industry seems to care less and less about timbre, see
https://youtu.be/oVME_l4IwII

But for me, without timbre music reproduction can be compared to food which lacks flavour or a modern movie with washed out colours. Occasionally interesting, but rarely engaging.

So my question is, what are your loudspeaker candidates if you are looking for a 'Technicolor' sound?

I know many use tube amps solely for this aim, but perhaps they are a subject deserving an entirely separate discussion.
cd318
@cd318

“@dracule1 seems to be a very elusive master of disguise popping up only very rarely in audio circles.”

Hmm...I have 5x more posts than you.  
 How good speaker be high end score 100% when they leave out 25% for timbre marks?
@dracule1 , sorry for any misunderstanding but I was referring to the ever elusive Rich Timbre.

See, he's even more difficult to pin down than we thought. 
@ashoka, you're right. If they took timbre and harmonics into consideration I'm sure that quite a few 'high end' speakers would be seen as hopelessly flawed.
That is part of my problem with Magico and Wilson.  They play sound okay but not music.  That's with about 15 or more auditions of each of those two brands.  Never heard a Harbeth I didn't like.  I own Legacy Focus and Signature IIIs (originals).  I like vonSchweikerts and Lumenwhites a lot.  They have timbre and rhythm correct with adequate dynamics to make the sound lifelike to the recording.  The Harbeth has some contraints in the frequency extremes and dynamics but is otherwise a very musical sounding speaker.  I came up from owning large electrostats for over 20 years (Acoustat X, Acoustat 2&2 and ML Monolith IIIs).  While I liked what they did right, my wife did not like what they didn't do-tight deep punchy bass and dynamics.  Also, the speakers I like tend to be easy to drive, unlike the Magico and Wilsons.