1) Your original post talked about a shift in the highs to the right. I think this is consistent with your description of your room and speaker placement. I'm a bit confused by your now referencing a drift to the left.
I believe that originally, the azimuth was off, causing a shift to the right. I then made an adjustment which now causes things to be centered for the most part, but Im still getting a feeling that the soundstage is more open on the left. Its been driving me crazy because its hard to adjust azimuth when you havent isolated all the issues with room acoustics. But thats what Im trying to address now, using CDs which I know are balanced evenly between the channels.
2) Use of a solo piano recorded and played back in stereo is not a good test for judging imaging. Usually they are multi miked and in many recordings the engineers have tried to re-create a life size piano (one that spreads over much of the stage between the speakers) and the dominant sound often is left of center, depending on where the recording mikes were placed and how they were mixed.
Thats very true, and I have noticed that myself. A piano is one of the hardest things for a system to reproduce. The problem that I was noticing was simply that the reverberations of the recording venue seem to be causing the illusion of a shift. The reverberation of fthe left wall in the recording venue sounds stronger than the reverberation on the right; this makes it sound like there has been some kind of shift when notes are played louder, because there is more reverberation in the recording coming from the left.
I have done some experimentation with speak placement. Ive tried moving them closer together, adjusting the toe in, etc. Ive been able to get the sound to be a little bit better, but still not perfectly even. My speakers are Paradigm Studio 60 v3s. They havent been as particular about placement as much as other speakers Ive heard. I will try your suggestion and experiment with toe in even more. Ill report back this evening with any progress. Thanks.
Stringreen: I may have to consider some drapes. I do, however, have sliding vertical blinds, which I usually leave half open so that the blinds are either perpendicular to the glass, or at an angle. I figured this may help to break up those sound waves, but it doesnt seem like it does a whole lot.