I would like to amend my last post. I should have been specific. I was referring to an alternate set of speakers I use from time to time that exhibit the slight ’thickening’ I mentioned. These speakers are no slouch but they are not my main speakers: Maggie 3.7s. I listen to these alternates solely for modern studio-recorded music with a lot of slam; i.e., electric bass and hard driving drums. Kinda hard to escape that need at times being from the inner city. :-)
I do not however, experience any thickening with the Maggies, which I listen to for jazz, live and acoustically-recorded music, which is my main stay. The Jolida is awesome with the Maggies. They are clear, transparent, crisp and articulate with that incredible texture, without the Jolida interfering with these qualities. I hear fingers on frets, keyboards, the tips of drum sticks on cymbals, the breath of saxophones and trumpets and the nuances of a singer’s vocal cords. The Jolida transports me to the performance venue, breathes space into live performances and makes studio music less studio-sounding which was an unexpected dividend. I would have tossed it rather than compromise the Maggie’s exquisite qualities.
In summary, the system is incredibly engaging with the Jolida in line. A different tube may help with the other speakers but I actually don’t care as it is a slight thickening and I don’t critically listen to them anyway, I just like their slam factor. Nothing does it like a cone but I don’t prefer them for anything else.
I thought it worth mentioning if others experienced this thickening issue, but I did want to make this distinction clear.
Sorry for any confusion and hope this helps...
I do not however, experience any thickening with the Maggies, which I listen to for jazz, live and acoustically-recorded music, which is my main stay. The Jolida is awesome with the Maggies. They are clear, transparent, crisp and articulate with that incredible texture, without the Jolida interfering with these qualities. I hear fingers on frets, keyboards, the tips of drum sticks on cymbals, the breath of saxophones and trumpets and the nuances of a singer’s vocal cords. The Jolida transports me to the performance venue, breathes space into live performances and makes studio music less studio-sounding which was an unexpected dividend. I would have tossed it rather than compromise the Maggie’s exquisite qualities.
In summary, the system is incredibly engaging with the Jolida in line. A different tube may help with the other speakers but I actually don’t care as it is a slight thickening and I don’t critically listen to them anyway, I just like their slam factor. Nothing does it like a cone but I don’t prefer them for anything else.
I thought it worth mentioning if others experienced this thickening issue, but I did want to make this distinction clear.
Sorry for any confusion and hope this helps...