I see in another thread that you are using Klipsch Cornwall III speakers, and you are presently driving them with a solid state McIntosh MC-7106 amp, which I see has a damping factor of "greater than 100."
As can be seen in the measurements John Atkinson has provided in conjunction with Stereophile reviews of various PrimaLuna amps, some (but not all) of them have extremely high output impedances, even for tube amps. More than 8 ohms in some cases, as I recall, which corresponds to damping factors of less than 1!
Although various versions of the Cornwall III have been produced over the years I would expect that the impedance curve of your speaker is generally similar to the one shown near the bottom of this page:
http://web.archive.org/web/20060604032319/http://www.belgaudio.com/kcmeasurements2.htm
It can be seen that the impedance varies from a low of about 5 ohms at about 100 Hz to a high of around 75 ohms at about 2.5 kHz. That very wide variation will cause the tonal balance of the speaker to vary considerably as a function of differences in amplifier output impedance (which is inversely proportional to damping factor), and in contrast to solid state amps (which like your MC-7106 almost always have output impedances that are a tiny fraction of an ohm) the output impedance of tube amps varies widely among different amps.
I took a quick look at the specs of a few Icon Audio models. One model had a specified damping factor of 10, which is fairly high for a tube amp and signifies a relatively low output impedance (less than 1 ohm). No spec was provided for the other models I looked at.
The bottom line, IMO, is that if an audition with your particular speakers is not possible, I would suggest that at the very least you try to find reports of which specific amplifier models others have used with your specific speakers, rather than relying on generalities about the two brands.
Good luck. Regards,
-- Al