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I'm trying to generate a list of speakers that fall into these two categories, i.e. ones more suited to a particular genre of music. This list will hopefully help me in determining what speakers I'll buy next. Let's keep it in the $2500 and under range new or used.
Definately agree on the Gallo Reference 3also:Von Schweikert VR-2Devore Fidelity Gibbon 8I have yet to hear anything else at around $2500 that can touch these three speakers. In my experience, they work in small (i.e. 11x11) to...
Nathan,Indeed your list is very good. I've had quite a few experiences with the VR-2's, and provided you give them the right equipment, they are decent.However, none of the above are capable of excelling in every regard. Personal taste aside, a pair of vintage $250 dollar Polk Audio SDA's will trounce the living daylights outta all three of those speakers when it comes to producing a "live" sound. All three will also fail horribly to capture the brute force and power of the 2000's.I am not p ...
The Gallo's in an 11x11? Really? I have an ~ 11x13 size room. I've always liked the way these looked but didn't think they'd make it in a small room...
I happed to heard the Gallo Ref 3's in a 10x12' room on a denon integrated with denon 2900 source. Sounded awful. I didn't expect a lot from this dealer's showroom. Not sure what was to blame but I admit that is utterly killed my interest in these speakers.
probably both room and front end...JoshK, what type of sound do you gravitate towards? warmer speakers? detailed and analytical? or neutral? depending on where your preferences lie in the spectrum would determine if you liked the Gallos.
Most definitely both I would assume. The room I had given credit for the one note bass, I just wasn't captured at all by the mids up. I will have to retry them someday in a more serious setting. They sounded hazy, veiled and slow. Just not what I expected to hear is all.FWIW, I probably gravitate to the open, fast and detailed side of "neutral". Nothing else to me sounds natural.
I did however claim that in short, they are not the end-all, be-all in every aspect to reproduced sound. I sincerely fail to see how anyone could make such a bold claim, but it is all opinion just the same.
"I certainly maintain that the best speakers I have heard excell at ALL types of music.""a speaker that makes a bad recording sound good in one genre, and a good recording sound bad in another, is just not something I am willing to live with, especially now when there are so many INCREDIBLE speakers that sound fantastic with all genres for so little money."and most importantly:"At this point in the industry, if you are spending over $2000 on speakers, they should sound incredible with ALL types of music, have a full range response (I mean that, using a frequency limited monitor in this price range is simply losing out. Bass problems can be fixed with proper acoustic treatment, no matter how bad the room is, and music happens down to 20Hz, whether there is a drum or just a soprano. Any speaker at this price should be comfortable at around 30Hz) and offer superior dynamics, imaging, and aesthetics. I just don't think you have accept anything less these days."
All dealers and manufacturers,the rules state that you may not recommend brands you manufacture or sell outside of your own circle or market square. i would appreciate it if you would abide by the rules and refrain from doing so in the future. i know it's tough because often you choose to carry a line because you like how it performs. thanks for your cooperation.