Paul seems like a nice guy, and I'm sure he's knowledgable, and I haven't seen the mentioned video so am going off only the rough paraphrase of the OP's post (let me see, can I think of any other caveats?), but a speaker's ability to reveal changes in cables seems an odd metric for determining their ability to reveal detail in music. I get it - if the speaker is sensitive enough to reveal differences in cabling, then it should, in theory, be capable of revealing detail in a recording, but, it seems to me, it ain't necessarily so. A different cable may alter the sound enough to be noticeable through your speakers, but that doesn't mean more detail, nuance, subtlety in a given recording is going to be heard. Volume, coloration, boosted treble or bass, are not only not necessarily indicative of the greater detail but may in fact occlude detail. So, again, while it may be possible that a speaker's ability to register differences in cables or what have you, it's hard for me to see how that in any way necessarily translates into an assurance that your speaker is capable of revealing important details in a recording. I suppose the only way to know for sure if your speakers are revealing is to compare them to other speakers in your system. If you hook up a different pair of speakers in your system and suddenly hear elements in the recording you weren't hearing with yours, then your speakers are not as revealing as they could be. Or, if you have a recording you know inside and out, so you know what should be there, and your speakers are giving you everything you know to be there, then your speakers are revealing, at least to the extent of your memory of the recording. I don't think this is just a difference without a distinction. That your speakers sound different with different cabling is just not the same as your speakers' ability to reveal music. I'm not trying to be a curmudgeon here. As I said, it just struck me as an odd metric. And, for the record, I find my X5s to be, especially given the limitations of my room, as revealing as is necessary to communicate the music. They're not what I would call hyper-detailed or clinical, but, if it's recorded well, I can follow the various parts in a vocal or jazz ensemble, pick out and follow the oboe, clarinet, violin, viola, cello, or bass in a symphony, pick out and follow the parts in the Act II closing septet of Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, and clearly hear the myriad electronic constellatory sounds of Florence and the Machine's Cosmic Love. I guess, in short, yes, I consider the X5s to be revealing.