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Knowing your musical taste to be expressed in the bedroom, size of the room, and what flexibility you have for setup would all help.
Powered/active speakers have been mentioned and can be an excellent alternative when used with a DAC/computer or DAC/pre-amp. Note that compared to normal (passive) loudspeakers, powered speakers simply have a manufacturer matched amp built into the speaker cabinet while active speakers have a low powered crossover that feeds one channel of amplification per driver for superior sound. But keep in mind that most active speakers (especially the cheaper ones) are designed for work in studios, so they are dry/extremely revealing and so fatiguing versus being emotional satisfying (whatever that means to the variety of consumer taste that drive the market. Good "pro-consumer" choices around this price range include Adam A3X ($650/pair and another speaker that translates well from desktop to room wide use) and Focal CMS 50 ($1200/pair). Just hook up to a quality analog source and you'd be good to go.
I tried a Marantz receiver/DAC/CD player combo unit with 50W/ch last week, but it sounded thin and had weak bass. It lasted fewer than 24 hours, before I boxed it up.
Funny you should mention the D7s. I just heard them for a few minutes this afternoon at a dealer in Portland, OR. I only listened for a few minutes, but they sounded quite nice. They have that warm British sound that is often heard in the Harbeths, Proacs, Spendors, PMC, etc. the D7s are able to reach for a bit lower bass thanks to the passive radiator below the mid woofer.Michael
Stubies,Yes, you can connect powered/active speakers directly to Airport Express (but it's only Stereophile class D rated, so I'd vote to use the optical output to a different DAC). Note that some powered/active speakers also include a built-in DAC, often called digital speakers (such as the tiny $250/pair Audioengine A2+ or the well reviewed $800/pair KEF X300A), so you could bypass the Airport Express DAC. In fact I auditioned the British $2400/pair Avi 9RS speakers (recently replaced with DM10) that exact way a couple of years ago. Note that the KEF does not have subwoofer outputs, so no easy way to connect one.