I used to cringe at the prospect of combined components. Now, I'm finding myself okay with it, sometimes. I would prefer a combined BDP/BDA unit. I'd also strongly consider the new BR-20 if I was in the market for a pre-amp. I've determined *I* am in a niche market among audiophiles: I value home theater almost as much as I value 2-ch audio. But, I'm reconsidering lots of things. I'll spend less money on cables and power conditioning with integrated equipment. I'll get a higher WAF (wife approval factor) too. And it's easier to control.
I think separates will likely always be able to achieve a higher performance than combined systems, but at what price increase? Is an extra 3% or so worth separate components, cables, etc?
I personally LOVE Bryston's sound. If they feel confident in a combined piece of equipment, I'll probably love it too. Mixed feelings aside, I think combining components (only because Bryston and others can achieve amazing results) will be the wave of the future.
Side note - Bryston is definitely a 2-ch audio company at heart. They applied their AMAZING skills to multi-channel audio (for movies, in my case) and came up with a winner. I wish there was some way they could continue that. I do not WANT to have a separate 2-ch audio and multi-channel audio system feeding into the same amps/speakers to achieve the results I want. I would greatly welcome a Bryston processor that could do what the BR-20 does AND handle modern Dolby Atomos/DTS-X decoding. Given the apparent stagnation of the SP-4, it's simply not meant to be.
I don't post this to be angry or anything else negative toward Bryston. They've been everything I could hope for in a high end audio company. As someone who would now prefer more component integration without sacrificing much (if any) of the audio quality of separates, I think, to answer your question, combining components is the way of the forseeable future.
I don't WANT to consider a separate AV processor, but I am. I'm looking at a separte AV processor and a BR-20, but I'd STRONGLY prefer as much of a unified system as possible. In MY revised invisionment, I'd at least prefer a combined DAC/BDP. A pre-amp/DAC/BDP solves ALL of my 2-ch audio issues. So, thats ONE component I need for 2ch audio, 1 component I need for HT audio, and just amps. That's MUCH easier than a separate DAC/Player/Pre-amp AND a separate Pre/Pro for HT.
- Garrett