Rock and roll speakers?


Is/are there a brand/model of speaker that is better suited/build to play classic rock/hard rock and symphonic music fairly loud?
Speakers will be powered by two Sony 333 ES AMPS.
Budget is around 1500 dollars, preferably used, and I can rebuild or upgrade as needed.
Thanks.
rockanroller
I agree with most that dynamic range and ultimate volume levels might be the biggest concern. Though as has been already pointed out, often times (though not always) proper amplification can go a long way in negating that concern. Another issue is frequency response, and whether the room can handle it. Yet another issue is how well a given loudspeaker can present a satisfying soundstage and imaging. Now this last item might be more of an issue to those that listen to music that is recorded in such a manner as to preserve it, and less so if the music is not recorded with much concern for these matters. IME, classical music is more often likely to be in first category and pop music more likely to be in the second category.
Interesting thread. I think the element being not mentioned enough is that rock n roll is usually played loud and is not that sonically nuanced. Much is electric and the drums are simpler and less sophisticated. Taking this into account a listener is able to forego certain design possibly pricey features in a speaker and focus on the aspects of a speaker that highlight this music. Hi efficiency forward sounding drivers or horns do this well. In a perfect world where price was no issue it would be easy to pick a one size fits all speaker for 50K. If I want to listen to a debussy piano concerto I love my single driver full range speakers but ac/dc is not gonna shine like it would on some klipschhorns.
Hi efficiency forward sounding drivers or horns do this well.

Agreed. That's why I've been pushing the high end JBLs...you have the best of both worlds; power *and* finesse, imo. They rock hard, but can be delicate if need be.

Klipsch is ok too, but they're not in the same league as the high end JBLs, imo. However, Klipsch are more reasonably priced. As it should be. I wouldn't pay $10K for a Cornwall III.

At the low end, I guess Cerwin-Vegas, but those have clear colorations, perhaps ones that enhance the sound when playing rock and metal recordings, but in the long run one would get bored with them and sell them.
I think the element being not mentioned enough is that rock n roll is usually played loud and is not that sonically nuanced. Much is electric and the drums are simpler and less sophisticated.

That's quite a generalization! But the fact of the matter is that rock recordings are all over the place in terms of quality. If you are presuming that one *only* listens to the poor recordings and *never* the good ones then this might work.

I play lots of rock recordings at audio shows as demonstration. Not because they are 'not sonically nuanced' but because they sound good and show off what a good stereo can do; here are some examples:

ELP, self-titled, Pink Island edition
King Crimson, Islands, Atlantic white label promo
Steve Tibbetts, 'Yr' self released
Steve Tibbetts, Safe Journey, ECM
Black Sabbath, Paranoid, white label German Vertigo
Porcupine Tree, Voyage 34, Delerium

The better the system, the better these LPs sound!!

Whatever can play classical well should be what plays rock well as well. Speakers don't have taste- people do.
I think Dynaudio does a great job of playing both rock and roll AND classical music very well.

Typically, I prefer different speakers and setups for those two very different styles of music.