So I'm trying to figure out what to do here.
Before I discovered good imaging and soundstaging, I was perfeclty happy to hear music from speakers without it. I describe it as the sound being "stacked up" and localized on a speaker. There's nothing wrong with it. You got your sense of stereo and it was "2D", but enjoyable. Lotsa sound hitting you. Crank it up!
Switching over to speakers with great imaging, I went thru this transition period where I thought it all sounded thin/anemic. I got used it it. I added some upgrades to the system over time - digibuss,minibuss,better power cables, tube based streamer, and now I'm demoing a tube pre-amp. Each of these helped in their own way with the soundstage. The final two in the list especially helped adding weight/presence to the sound at each location in the soundstage. I liken it to the airbrush tool in photoshop. It cranked up the "meat on the bone" to a much higher percentage in the airbrush tool. It filled back in and the anemia was gone on any decent recording.
So.. what I have now sounds great.. and I'm happy with it... BUT for decently-recorded albums.
Here's the real problem.. With crap recordings, they sounded better on a speaker without imaging/soundstage. What I'm calling a simple stero setup where the music is "stacked up" right on top of the speaker.
I'm not sure what to do about this. I don't want to avoid listening to these good tracks, but they are no longer enjoyable because they sound so anemic. My first idea was to have a big red button I could push that would disable imaging. lol I don't think that's gonna happen.

So, what are my best bets here??? Do I need more square inches of speaker driver to put the umpf back into it? I'm stumped.

Speakers: X-SLS