Speakers for Classical Music


Hello everyone,

Recently, I have listened to several speakers from low-end to high-end in order to find the best speakers of classical music. My criteria were sound clarity, sound stage, accuracy and depth. However, I was not able to locate approriate speakers to meet the above criteria. Therefore, I am seeking your advice.

What are the best speakers for classical music?

Thanks in advance.
ddhpark
I listen (more or less only) to classical music and came to the following: if you want to be really satisfied you must spend much money! I have a Genesis II, Wadia 270/27ix and McIntosh MC 1000, no pre. This is quiet expensive but you get back each single dollar in sound stage.
Some details:
1. I never thought of spending this amount of money but once I got into it I get to know that this is the best/only way.
2. By far the best to try out sound stage is to listen to piano. Not loud piano not extremely quiet, just quiet. Get a disc and ever try out with this cd. Take a DDD disk not a ADD. With piano music you hear the limitations of quality much more easy than with other music.
3. It is not true, that you can not hear classical music from cd. But it is true, that the quality of the cd-player is very important. Records have other big problems.
4. With B+W Nautilus I had very bad experience! I listend to the 801 much and in the end I would say they are far below the average in their price-range!
5. Electrostatic are generally a good idea. Some are not good in the bass, as other postings allready mentionend. If this would be a problem it is easy to solve with a sub.
6. Genesis is out of the market in the moment but I still would recommend these speakers.
I really like searchant's recommendation, the Audio Artistry Dvorak. That's an excellent speaker. I sell a roughly comparable system, the Gradient Revolution.

I have a customer who plays violin with a symphony. He owned highly modified original Quads, and before listening to my stuff told me that these particular Quads were the only speakers he's heard get violin right.

After we'd listened to his selections, he told me that not only did the speakers I peddle get the violins right, but they also got the cello and double bass right, which he said he'd never heard any speaker do before. We were listening to Sound Lab Millennium-1's. Needless to say, he ordered a pair.

Among speakers that I don't sell, you might check out the Heil Kitara's, Shahinians (especially the Diapasons), and the Buggtussel line.

Best wishes on your quest!
Hello everyone,

Recently, I have listened to several speakers from low-end to high-end in order to find the best speakers of classical music. My criteria were sound clarity, sound stage, accuracy and depth. However, I was not able to locate approriate speakers to meet the above criteria. Therefore, I am seeking your advice.

What are the best speakers for classical music?

Thanks in advance.
ddhpark

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Yes this Q has aslo been on my mind past year or 2. 
My researches and experimentations have led me far and wide. 
I do think perhaps the research has paid off. Not sure til the speaker is ordered, maybe Septemberish
And no, there really has not beena  speaker in 2001 that will meet your criteria. 
You had to wait another 10 yrs or so.
Unless you decided on horns, which are 
1 expensive
2) heavy
3) not wife friendly/too large , tend to be ugly.
4) and good for classical, but  you were looking for something real special. 
I may have found the end of the rainbow.
In regard to models and electronics, I have listened to at so many different places with so many different equipments, and it's impossible to list them all here. However, they include: Acoustic Research, Bose, Cewin Vega?, B&W, JBL, Martin Logan, McIntosh, Tannoy, Wilson, Yamaha, Von Schweikert, Genesis, Diva, Avalon, Quintessence, German Physics, PSB, and others WITH McIntosh, Krell, Bryston, Sony ES, Pioneer, Yamaha, Accuphase, PassLab, Onkyo, Jadis, Adcom, NAD, Audio Research, Mark Levinson, and others. I think that's why I was so confused.

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**looking for love in all the wrong places
looking  for love in too many  faces**
Sung by Mickey Gilley

I could easily double your list, as not up to par for classical music. 

, evolutions of the BBC "school".


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Ahh so that explains that, There are quite a few fans  here of the **British sound**
I'll pass. 
I  prefer Norway and Denmark,  for bass speakers and Germany for all other fq's. 
Britain I'll pass.