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As the problem seems to be isolated to your speakers and it occurs across different songs, I'm suspect that something is wrong with the speakers or something in your room (possibly on your desk or inside a desk drawer) is vibrating at certain frequencies.
I notice bloated mid bass in that song which I find very annoying. It wasn't on an Omega based system I tried it on, but my little Altec ATP3 2.1. In your latest picture your system looks better set up than in the previous image. I would keep the lamps from heating up the speakers - from here it looks like they could. Speakers don't like that kind of heat.I personally like JLMs suggestion of one big monitor vs multiples, and with that big monitor set back against the wall. I keep my 23" Dell close to the back wall so the speakers aren't compromised by it.One thing you will notice with the Super 3i and Super 3 Desktop is the linearity of the frequency response, hence no mid bass hump like your B&Ws likely have (and my Altec likely has). When I tried the earlier Yes Band song on the Omegas, the irritation you spoke of was less (taking the poor recording quality into account).I realize you're hearing this from an Omega rep, but nothing I've heard touches Omega on the desktop. With solid state or tube.One more thing. If you can, try a different amp and/or DAC. It can make a difference too.Bottom line, I think your problem is a combination of 3 things. The setup in general, possible bass bloat from the B&Ws, and the recording quality of the songs in question. If your amp has a lower damping factor than is usual for solid state, that could be a factor too, but I highly doubt it. Musical Fidelity has been designing and building amps for a long time and should know what they are doing.I suggest you try a set of Omegas on a 30 day return. Little to lose in that.