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I've heard Salk speakers at several RMAFs I have attended and I think you would be happy with anything Jim produces. I would also recommend taking a look at other manufacturers as well. I have speakers from Vapor Audio - the Auroras, and Odyssey Audio - Kismet speakers. They do well with any genre of music I listen to. I also listen to Industrial, Gabber, hard Techno, Stoner Rock, heavy metal, and even some classical occasionally. There are a lot of good manufacturers to choose from. I've purchased speakers from a variety of manufacturers as a result of my attendance at RMAF so if you have the opportunity to audition speakers, that would make your selection easier.
I have to agree, although my thoughts on Spatial's are somewhat dated. My experience goes back to M2 Turbo's. That said, I recall it being the first speaker I'd had in some time that was truly comfortable playing all genres. All I can say is there's something to be said for larger drivers and their ability to be both satisfying and comfortable playing a wide variety of music...especially rock. (this large driver theory goes for box speakers as well) Never felt I missed anything when Bill Evans or Patricia Barber came into play either.
My music taste is very eclectic. I can be listening to Rage Against the Machine one minute and Diana Krall the next. Some of the music I listen to is very demanding and I like to crank it up at times and really get that palpable feel of kick drums and so on. First of all, are there Salk speakers that can do this?
Since everyone is recommending their speakers, I'll recommend mine - The Salk Veracity HT2-TL, they can take a beating and keep on ticking.My music taste ranges from Daft Punk, Yello, The Future Sound of London to Sara Bareilles, Nora Jones, and the new Jorma Kaukonen & John Hurlbut album "The River Flows" (it is excellent by the way) and everything inbetween. The HT2-TL handles it all beautifully.
Since everyone is recommending their speakers, I'll recommend mine - The Salk Veracity HT2-TL, they can take a beating and keep on ticking.My music taste ranges from Daft Punk, Yello, The Future Sound of London to Sara Bareilles, Nora Jones, and the new Jorma Kaukonen & John Hurlbut album "The River Flows" (it is excellent by the way) and everything inbetween. The HT2-TL handles it all beautifully.The HT2-TL doesn't get much press since the Song3 lineup arrived, unfortunately I haven't heard the Song3 yet so I don't know how loud it can rock. In almost 10 years I have never reached the HT2-TL's limit, I bail first. Bass response is deep and punchy, a couple of years ago I added a REL sub crossed over at 30 Hz and it takes the sound to the next level. The RAAL tweeter is clear, clean, bullet proof and it won't peel paint off the walls at super high volumes.I would think the two Seas Excel W18's - 7" midrange drivers in the HT2-TL would go louder than the single 4" midrange in the Song3 but the W18's are also handling the bass too so there may be a trade off.Mick heard my speakers do Pink Floyd just a week ago, I think I saw him jump when the bells came in on "Time" off of "Dark Side of the Moon".
I second this. I am also running Salk Veracity HT2-TL with a Rythmik G25HP. The combo is incredible. Alan Walker, ATB, BT, Deadmau5, Daft Punk, Orbital to list a few all sound fantastic. The RAAL tweeters are amazing on vocals and guitars. If you want the really really deep base from EDM etc you need a sub to go with them and not just any sub. I had dual Salk custom built Rythmik 12s and they weren't adequate. The G25HP is unlike anything I have ever heard before in my life.