What Is So Special About Harbeth?


SLike probably all of you, I just received notice from Audiogon of a 20% discount on Harbeth XD. I clicked on the tab and found that the sale price is about $2700. I have read so many glowing comments here about Harbeth — as if just saying the name is the password for entering aural nirvana. I admit, I haven’t listened to Harbeth speakers. But looking at these, they just look like smallish bookshelf speakers. I’m not questioning how good others say these speakers are, but HOW do they do it out of an ordinary-looking box?

Is it the wood? Is it the bracing? Is it the crossover components? Is it the cone material? What is the reason why these Harbeth’s are such gems compared to other bookshelf speakers? What is it about the construction or technology that makes these speakers a deal at $2700 on sale versus the $800, 900 or $1,000 that others normally cost? What is the secret that makes audiophiles thrill to get such a costly bargain?

bob540
Post removed 

 to the OP,

Finding the right speaker that does your music best will save money. Buy used until you find the sound you want. you can take all the time you need and resell at little to no loss. I own a pair of speakers that can't play metallica aat ear ringing levels, buty what they do with Annie Lennox, Patricia Barber,Beck, etc make up for it. If you like the Harbeth for most of your listening get 'em and buy a used pair of Legacy's for friday night.

A quick search around the web reveals a few reports of busted Radial drivers. Of course, it could be that those owners were simply careless, but I'm not surprised by the pics of cracked cones and disbonded suspensions based on my auditions. All I know for certain is that I would be very cautious of the SPLs if I owned a pair. 

The question is what percentage of Harbeth speakers are reported to have such problems. We should be careful in drawing conclusions based on anecdotal evidence coming from a 'few' reports. Are we talking 2% or 40%? I have no affiliation with Harbeth in any shape or form, but when someone makes such sweeping generalizations, it makes sense to ask for more supporting evidence.

On the "what is special about Harbeth?" question, here's part of my answer.

Having auditioned an insane amount of speakers - the Harbeth have just stuck out in terms of being able to produce the "gestalt" of the human voice, as well as acoustic instruments.   But human voice in particular.

I've long been obsessed with live vs reproduced.   Not that I expect a sound system to be able to reproduce sound truly indistinguishable from the real thing.  Just the opposite!  In paying attention to live vs reproduced it's only highlighted the differences between live vs reproduced.   I've done recordings of my family's voices (as well as instruments we own being played) and done direct live vs reproduced comparisons with various speakers I've had (and also used those tracks sometimes when auditioning speakers).    The ways some speakers do better in these comparisons than others was always fascinating to me.

Just as when I audition speakers, when I go to audio shows I'm constantly comparing live vs reproduced.  How?  By comparing the sound of the live human voices talking all around, vs the sound of voices being played through the various sound systems.  Inevitably many systems are playing a well recorded vocal that is supposed to impress us as sounding "realistic."   Very often these are certainly producing a VERY vivid and clear "something" in between those speakers.  But it's not really a human voice.  It's usually still electronic sounding, like a voice "reconstructed through hard materials" and often insubstantial, like you can wave your hand through it.   Human voices sound "organic," made of "damped flesh" and they have an acoustic density, where eyes closed you sense it has density, it's occupying space in the room.  It's this amazing combination of clarity and the organic warmth and density that to me distinguishes the real thing.

So at shows if they are playing a vocal I will close my eyes and listen to the (invetable) sound of someone talking in the room and compare it to the reproduced vocal.  "What is it that the sound system isn't getting about the real thing?"  It always shows up the artificiality of reproduced voices.

 

EXCEPT....to some degree...the Harbeth speakers for which I've done this "test."

I remember a full day at the last show doing this eyes-closed "live vs reproduced voice" comparison and in a Harbeth room I was simply astonished to finally hear a speaker that came that close to the real thing.  I'd listen to the real voices in the room, the voice coming through the Harbeth, and the "gestalt" in how it was reproducing the human voice was amazingly close.  No other system had quite done that, to my ears.

I owned some Harbeth speakers for a while and to this day the thing they did better than any other speaker I've owned, was to find the "human quality" in voices.

Which is a pretty damned impressive thing, and something the designer should rightly be proud of.  I certainly get why the brand is coveted by many.

[please excuse my poor English]

Just a few thoughts:

- buying a $2700 speaker blindly is like having your cat ordered on Amazon, and have it delivered by drone: completely, totally, dramatically nonsensical. But I am European (nobody’s perfect)...

- Harbeth speakers sound better

  • on acoustic instruments (classical music, vocals, folk). They are not for rock, IMHO.
  • listened near- or mid-field. Do not try to put them in a big room, sitting 5m away, pumping up the volume, in hope they will deliver the thrills of a live rock concert. They won’t. Instead, they will play like a "big radio gear".
  • Sitting not too far, you have to look into the sonic landscape they produce, instead of expecting that the scene "jumps to you" //hope this is understandable...
  • at low to moderate volume. The can play louder, but it is not what they prefer.

In these conditions, they are terrific speakers if you favor timbres, emotion et delicacy (ex: unamplified acoustic music), at the expense of sheer energy and attack (ex: amplified rock concerts).

I upgraded from M30.1 to M30.2 Anniversary. I compared them at home. The M30.2 Ann gives me more detail, is more transparent, lifelike. Its low-mid is less exaggerated. And the M30.2 Ann remains a highly musical monitor.