Speaker advice for listening to Blues music


Hi, new to the forum, and hoping I can get some help finding the right speakers... I'm a Blues guitar player and have a dedicated music room for my guitars/amps. I usually spend time playing my guitars and recently decided to setup a decent system for listening to my Blues music. I first started with a Marantz integrated (PM8005) and some Kef R300, source is a Marantz ND8006 and I mostly play FLAC files from a NAS, but also started streaming from Spotify and now trying Tidal. This setup was great at first, very revealing, but found the R300 were not the right speakers for the kind of music I listen to, but they were great for some Jazz and did well with good recordings, which most of my Blues recordings weren't, specially live albums. I also found them to be a little boomy in that small room (12' X 12'), so I moved them to the living room instead and added a matching center, they're perfect there.

Next came the LS50, read so much about them I had to get a pair to try. Wow! I still can't believe what these small speakers can do, the details I hear, soundstage, imaging, it's all there. But, just like the R300, since they're so revealing they're horrible with my favorite Blues recordings. It's great to listen to excellent recordings and enjoy the music these speakers are making but I want to enjoy MY music, the Blues greats I've been listening to for over 30 years. If it sounds great in the car then I should be able to find the right gear to duplicate at home, right? On some good Blues recordings it sounds excellent, but most of my favorites aren't good recordings.

Since I only play my guitars through old Fender amps I figured I should replace the Marantz integrated with a tube amp, so next came the PrimaLuna integrated. I wanted to get a "warmer" sound and hope it'll fix the issues I was having with most crappy recordings... I want to hear BB's beautiful guitar tone and crank it up, without hurting my ears. Both Kefs were too fatiguing to listen to. And on most live recordings guitars sound way too thin and bright, not what I'm used to hearing. A good example is Albert King's Wednesday Night in San Francisco, that Flying V can be painful to listen to after a couple of minutes! Not so in the car or even just using headphones and my laptop. I understand that it's because the system is more revealing, but is it possible to have both, revealing and musical so that one can enjoy the music they love? The PrimaLuna did help and it's staying, I like what I'm hearing so far, and I get to play with tubes, something I enjoy doing already :)

Right now I'm breaking in some Wharfedale Denton 80th, I wanted to try something with a soft dome tweeter, something less fatiguing than the LS50. I'm at 70+ hours so far and they're sounding much better, not as fatiguing, but something is missing... I prefer the LS50's soundstage and details, but they're both not that great for electric guitar. The Dentons are more forgiving but I don't find them musical and they don't disappear like the LS50s do.

So what are my choices? Do I stick with bookshelf, try some floor standing? What about single driver speakers (Omega, Zu...)? Are those the answer to what I'm looking for? I need something more forgiving, musical, efficient so I can crank it up when I feel like playing along some times... I want the guitar to sound full and not thin and bright. It's a small room and not a lot of space due to my guitar gear. My budget is also limited, would like to keep it under $2k, I already have a hobby and don't want this to get out of control :)

Forgot to mention, I also have a Rel sub, so not too worried about the low end. Sorry for the long post and thanks for any help!
cedarblues
Blues is a fairly diverse genre ranging from more "classic" style like John Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, etc., etc., to folks like Beth Hart, Joe Bonamassa, etc.,etc. It appears that the OP’s issues are mostly with the latter style.
It is mostly with electric blues guitar and live recordings... for example, Muddy Waters' Folk Singer (all acoustic), great recording and I have a hi-res album, sounds incredible, but then Muddy "Mississippi" Waters – Live doesn't sound that great through my system.
On a great system, crappy recordings should sound like crap. If they sound good, it’s not a great (accurate) system. To get a real handle on the nuances of your system (good and bad), use some recordings that you feel are excellent and use them to evaluate any equipment changes. 
So often I notice that when a compressed, hyped recording sounds awful, the advice is to tweak it with a few thousand dollars in new cables, or power conditioners, or new speakers, or whatever.  Which, because better stuff is probably even more revealing, will make the bad recordings sound even worse. 
Build a system where you become confident that, when a bad recording sounds bad, it’s the source...not the equipment. 
Speaker advice for listening to Blues music


Sure.

Best speakers for the Blues are unplugged.

Sorry...had to....not a fan of Blues....;-)




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Build a system where you become confident that, when a bad recording sounds bad, it’s the source...not the equipment.
I already know that some of the recordings are not the greatest, the goal here is to find a solution to still be able to enjoy these recordings, without them sounding so horrible on a revealing system. If that means building a system that's not as revealing and more musical then that's what I'll end up doing. I'm not an audiophile and not looking to hear every single detail, I just want to enjoy the music, that's all. Unfortunately for me some of these great live blues albums are not the greatest recordings.  Does that mean I'll stop listening to them? Hell no :)