Totally overwhelmed (speakers under $5k)


I am newer to the audiophile community and don't have much in the way of higher end gear to be honest.  I have been upgrading things as I go with my home theater (now Anthem receiver, Martin Logan speakers, and SVS sub) and am now wanting to upgrade my music system that is in my home office.  It is currently equipment that was originally in my home theater that has been replaced.  So I have a BasX preamp, 7 channel solid state BasX amp running 2 channel, T2+ speakers, and cabling all from Emotive.  The wires are basic copper speaker wire with banana plugs on the ends.  And I have an RSL Speedwoofer 10"  subwoofer. My source is Amazon Music HD on a Macbook Pro fed to the preamp by an optical cable. All in all it sounds pretty good but I want to take it up a notch.  

The other day I spoke with James at Raven Audio about cables and he said suggested that I would actually get a lot more bang by upgrading my equipment than worrying about my cables (which is fair).  Of course he is a fan of his own brand's amps and speakers but he also said very good things about Dynaudio and Focal (which I do have some experience with for car audio and headphones).  In doing research on the Raven Audio speakers, I have seen people lauding the Tekton Moab, Aperion Verus III, as well as others.  When I do searches for "best speakers under $5000" I get lots of mainstream review sites that talk about brands like Definitive Technologies, Polk, KEF, Klipsch, SVS, and more.  But they generally don't talk about Ravel, Tekton, or any of those. I assume it is because they are too small. 

Honestly though, at this point I am overwhelmed. Too many brands with too many speakers and where I live there are not a lot of shops to go listen to these higher end speakers. I have seen lots of debates on here along with folks that really have their definite opinions.  Here are my requirements and hopefully I can gain some knowledge, insight, and direction from folks on this site that have much greater experience than myself. 

1) I want speakers that are clear and clean with lots of detail.  But I also want to be able to just listen to the music, being immersed without having my ears ringing from the sharpness after a bit.

2) I want to be able to plug them into my current preamp and solid state amp and be able to enjoy them as is.  Later on, if/when I decide to change the amp to a tube amp, I want them to be able to work well with those characteristics too. 

3) I want the new price to be limited to $5k and under.  I am open to used in the right circumstances but hoping to get a smoking deal on some used $15k speakers (like some Legacy's) is just wishful thinking at this point.  With new, you know what you are getting and will have a warranty.  

4) I listen to all sorts of music so it needs to be able to switch between rock, heavy metal, classical, jazz, hip hop, bag pipes, and everything in between.  

5) Subwoofer is optional.  I have the Speedwoofer currently which is know is not perfect for music (ported).  I am fine upgrading to a sealed SVS at some point or getting towers that don't even need a sub. I actually have an older pair of Infinity SM 125's that I got close to 30 years ago that don't really need one.  

6) Aesthetics are a plus but not a requirement.  I am a function over form guy.  Some of these B&W's, Focals, and others look beautiful compared to the Moabs which are more utilitarian but I am not stress about it. 

7) Size can be whatever.  Again, the Moabs appear to be massive and that is fine but so is something that is much smaller.  The room is roughly 14' by 24' with 9' ceilings.  While it isn't an auditorium, it isn't just a small room either.  

Ok, I think that covers it except to say straight up, I don't tend to care for negativity.  If you have heard something and you don't care for it for X, Y, and Z reasons, great, please say so.  But please don't put something down because you don't like their marketing or you believe that it has to be a $100k system to be worthwhile.  Thank you in advance for your responses. 

ddonicht

 

@holmz They believe that everything comes down to Sinad, THD and measurements.

You like a warm sounding tube amp? Welp you must be a fool because the THD and Sinad are horrible.

I have not claimed that I am not a fool.

They trying desperately to make audio completely objective when it fact it isn’t. They completely discount subjective preference. Meanwhile youll see at the end of his reviews Amir is hypocritical by then injecting subjective terms like ’wow wow wow’ for his DCA stealth review.

I suppose that you can spin it to be completely, and 100%, objective versus completely and 100% subjective as two separate group…

However the work of Toole, Olive, etc has been toward science and quantifying what objectively is correlated with subjective goodness.

So knowing what is resulting in “wow, wow, wow” would be good to know. And then one might fine a $1000 headphone that gets “2-1/2 wows” would be good enough… and a $2000 headphone with “1.5 wows”, is not a great value.

However it is also possible that Amir saw the numbers and that created some of the “wow, wow, wow” bias.
 

Audio is not just about SINAD and THD. This is something Amir and the cult of ASR will never learn.

If I was looking at speakers <= $5000 then I would think that starting with a list on ASR and filter that into two sets, is not a bad approach.

The ones that are in the “listen to it list”, could then be listened to.

I am not going to pretend that understanding compression, distortion, frequency, and directivity are not something that is not able to be heard.,, and that the my ears are better tools for those things than measurements.

It is basically the same as looking in “Car and Driver” to understand braking, acceleration and cornering. Then I go to the dealer to see if the things feel OK.
I do not go to every dealer and look only their red cars.

ASR listen with measurements only. Not earshot seems very clinical to me and there are things we cannot measure I’m convinced. 

ASR listen with measurements only.

Using “Science” sort of forces something that the quantified and provable.

 

Not earshot seems very clinical to me and there are things we cannot measure I’m convinced. 

There are also things that we do not measure. And measurements that the manufacturer does not often provide.

  • Compression
  • Distortion
  • Harmonic distortion
  • Radiation pattern
  • Impulse response
  • Step function response 

The ensemble of those things are correlated with what people like and find to sound good. A lot of those people are running similar gear to what people here run.

It is not by shear coincidence that good sounding gear often measures good.
(But sometimes bad measuring gear also sounds good… just it is more rare.)

 

if someone cannot find a good sounding set of speakers for <- $5k, then they are not looking hard enough. And some people also factor in looks over sound.
(But there are better speakers (or more of them) in the 10, 20 and 30+ k$ range, and many that look stunning as well.)

Per   @ghdprentice:     "This is one of the major challenges… and I think can be a real distraction… highly detailed. I was drawn to detail… but kept finding it got in the way of the music. You can have both… this is typically where lots of money is required, otherwise you get lots of detail and fatigue / high frequency hash… or warm and missing detail."

 

 --  What you've written above makes sense to me. I'm more in the musical camp if pushed but recall not preferring Monitor and enjoying Sonus Faber much more (at lower cost levels, under 5k). It's hard to get high resolution and musicality/tonality at a certain price point. It's just how it seems to be, then there's the good stuff...

As nice as the Dynaudio Saphhires (ca: 16k, but bought used) were for five years, they were still missing the detail and wonderful richness of tone that the Raidho D2 loudspeakers showed me were possible (but no head-banging volumes).

But speakers like those were never in a "New Retail" range for me so your point on 'where lots of money is required' is well taken; I just got lucky, and appreciate it. I also like TAD, Tidal, etc. and those aren't free... 

I'm not sure our O.P. will find the 'match' to all the requirements listed, some merely due to equipment interactions. I didn't see heavy metal volumes listed as a requirement, but that might just be missing. Without the need to play very loudly there may be some other small sophisticated speakers that perhaps might apply.