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Not everyone has 95dB speakers. Speakers @ under 90dB need those 100+s-watt amps.
Since 3db of volume gain requires roughly double the power if you use a 92db efficient speaker and listen to music the same level as Steve you'd still use only 1/2 watt most of the time with 2-4 watt transients. 89db speakers would be 1 watt with 4-8 watt transients. 86 db = 2/8-16 watts etc. Unless you listen to REALLY LOUD MUSIC you should be just fine if you double the transient peak; i.e. 32 watt amp into 86db cone speakers would work just fine for most listeners. My 40 watt tube amp into 90 db cone speakers will shake the foundation of my house.Panel speakers are a different beast altogether. I certainly would recommend megawatt SS amps for planars and electrostats.
I've had a different experience. I have 87db efficient speakers with a relatively easy impedance curve. They are a nominal 8 ohm and drop, at their lowest, to 3.9 ohms. I was told that a 60 wpc tube amp would drive them well but I always felt - after several tube amps of 50-70 wpc - they were lacking drive and dynamic impact. I don't listen particularly loudly but it's not about that. All of these amps would play loud enough but just didn't have the dynamics and drive to be fully enjoyable. It took 90-100 tube wpc to make the speakers come alive.
As an aside, I continue to be amazed by the fact that most audiophiles are not aware that they are using underpowered amplifiers that are clipping and distorting most of the time. It is easy to show that most speakers need around 400-500 W/channel to play dynamic music at the loud levels audiophiles enjoy. If you doubt this, just connect an oscilloscope to your speakers and watch it. You will see the trace run into an invisible "brick wall" when the amplifier runs out of power and clips. In most systems, you will see the amplifier clipping constantly on musical peaks.
Is the Threshold Stasis a high current amp?