Upgrade for Paradigm Prestige 75F?


I've had a pair of Paradigm Prestige 75Fs for about 3 years now and I really like them.  Great detail, soundstage, bass and they look fantastic too.  However, I've always been irritated by the high midrange.  It seems a little harsh and nasal to me.  I listen to A LOT of jazz and I really notice it in saxophones.  There is a lack of body and warmth to the sound of the instrument no matter who is playing it.  It gets a little fatiguing especially at higher volumes

I'm wondering if folks have a recommendation of a speaker that retains the characteristics that I enjoy in the Paradigms but improve upon that upper midrange?  I wouldn't mind recommendations in a higher price-point as I don't mind buying pre-owned

My other equipment is a Peachtree Nova 300
Rega P3 with all groove tracer upgrades and an Apheta cart
Cambridge Audio CXC transport

thanks
adam8179
Unfortunately, there’s a huge misnomer that driver material is the Biggest problem with speakers.  While the material can interject it’s own inherent characteristics into the sound, it’s the crossover that dictates what those elements will do or don’t do and when people hear something they don’t like, the driver material is generally the easiest and first thing to get blamed.    
The cabinet/environment that those drivers are put in will affect things as well, but a lot of it circles around the crossover and just because someone uses a really expensive fantastic material for a driver when designing a speaker doesn’t always mean they knew what they were doing with it.  Best example of that is Bowers using Kevlar.  When the patent ran out, you could find Kevlar on $399 Sounbars at Walmart, but the Kevlar didn’t make those Soundbars sound like speakers worth a thousand dollars.  They used a cool material that had no bearing on that product’s performance.  Bowers had been using Kevlar for twenty years before anyone else.  Then there’s budget.  What’s the target price point for the design?  That influences a lot as well.  So, in the end, driver material doesn’t play the biggest role in the sound of a speaker and that’s what I wanted to get across here.
Thanks.
Post removed 
Its your speakers.  I’ve had a bunch of paradigms and feel the same way about as you do about all of them with the exception of the Sig 2 V.3’s.

I like revels Be stuff... they sound really nice!

BUT, I think you’d be happier with that laid back british sound.  Harbeth, spendor etc.  Dynaudio came to my mind as well.  I’ve always been a fan of Dynaudio and for me, they do the tone well.  I’m also a fan of seas excel and they have that laid back but detailed sound also.

Trying to audition some speakers would be smart, otherwise research research research, speakers that have that sound you are looking for, buy used and resell if you don’t like them.  I don’t see you disliking something like harbeth though...
Similar to b_limo I've owned Studio 100s versions 1 then 2s when I was auditioning, at home, their then recently released Signature 8s when I purchased a different brand that I've used ever since. Only then did I realize I had been listening to a speaker and not the music.

Converting your analog signal through digital signal processing or subjecting your digital signal to yet another digital conversion might be a Band-Aid but not a solution.

Listen for more of a point source that's difficult to differentiate the tweeter, midrange, or the woofer. Much less of a speaker, more musically cohesive. Good luck with your search.   
steakster thanks for the suggestion.  I don't have power conditioning but I'm pretty sure it's not distortion.  I'm fairly familiar with what distortion sounds like in its different forms and what I'm hearing is not it

thanks