JBL 4367 shoutiness remedies?


Hello all, I am a first time post-er, so pardon me if I am clumsy with this venue. 
I live in a small town on an island in SE Alaska, and do not have immediate access to anywhere locally that sells hifi equipment besides Walmart. So after reading complimentary reviews, I ordered from USA Tube Audio a pair of JBL 4367 speakers, ..a two way design  with a woofer and a horn. I have about 20 hours on the speakers, driving them with a Primare I35 Integrated Amplifier and a perceived higher end Primare CD player., and for an alternate music source, I use Music Choice from my cable box. I also have a 10 band graphic EQ to tailor the  sound to my liking. The issue I bought when I paid for the speakers is a  loudly blaring shoutiness in the range of frequencies of the human voice. It can be loud and overpowering even with EQ attenuating the frequencies between 500 and 4khz. I called the dealer who I bought them from for advice..he told me the amp and cd player are junk, ($6000 junk) and the only way to fix the shoutiness was to buy tube equipment.  On some recordings, the speakers sound wonderful, but on some, it makes me question whether or not they're worth keeping. The room in the apt I have them in is about 15x18 with low ceilings. Does anyone have any practical suggestions or ideas on how to remedy or at least partially correct this issue? Thank you for reading.
deckhand
As a horn user ( Klipsch Lascala ) / tweaker/ modifier, I do not feel it is the Primare equipment, based on reading several reviews of the gear. Horns are more directional, and with each pair, the listening distance between them and the listener is very critical. Listening too close to the horn, you hear the inside of the horn. The horn of the JBL 4367 is a polycarbonate design, and does create resonance ( they all do ), and can benefit with a Dynamat treatment, mentioned above by twoleftears ( not if you are returning them ). Horns are ruthlessly revealing of details, ime, and you will hear weaknesses of the recordings ( compression, eq., etc. ). Room acoustics, always helps the speaker / listener interaction. Of course, horns, are not for everyone. Just my feedback. Enjoy ! and stay safe. Always, MrD.
Post removed 
Deckhand, when you get done reading all the other things it cannot be I sure hope you will try the corner tunes. It will ameliorate, and maybe even totally eliminate, your problem.
Wow! Deckhand you have two of the finest studio monitors made by JBL. The “shoutiness” you mention is a desirable quality in many studio monitors and translateS to being a bit “forward”.

Yes, work toward tuning your room and then Live with the speakers for a while before doing anything hasty.... you may find you love them as you adjust to their sound!

t
You might be getting bounce from the floor.....if you don't have carpets try some rugs in front of the speakers at various distances  (you should use natural fiber..thin nylon probably wont do the trick)