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Quote from: jose on 3 Jan 2008, 05:07 amDon't forget that another thing that classical music requires is lots of amplifier watts. Please do yourself a favor and take a look at the Musical Fidelity "sliding rule"; it computes the number of watts needed for accurate reproduction of transients. (A 110 dB peak - say, in Mahler's 2nd or 3rd - may easily take more than 800 watts. Not so fast with the sliding rule.Speakers have measured decibel output over the frequency spectrum. Sure it's simple multiplication to take the 1 watt reading over a band of frequencies in an orchestral peak and calculate some peak power needed. But so what. You are never going to listen at a level of discomfort, even for a peak, and 110 db. is way too loud for comfort, even in an orchestral peak.I've listened to Mahler's 3rd symphony many times at home with my 60 watt amplifier as loud as I wished with no effort and no distortion from the amplifier. And in concert, I don't think it ever got anywhere near 110db at the climaxes. But, I don't have an spl meter, so maybe I'm incorrect a bit, hard to know.
Don't forget that another thing that classical music requires is lots of amplifier watts. Please do yourself a favor and take a look at the Musical Fidelity "sliding rule"; it computes the number of watts needed for accurate reproduction of transients. (A 110 dB peak - say, in Mahler's 2nd or 3rd - may easily take more than 800 watts.
116db at the listening seat, can you imagine what it's like as a conductor, or a player? I've never been able to get close to the experience I get from sitting in the orchestra. Ever sit 4 feet in front of 6 or 8 double basses? Better to have more clean power on hand than the other way around. The sptech/nuforce I've heard do a great job. I haven't heard many of the other fine speakers mentioned in this thread, though.
I would say that large and small-scale orchestral music accounts for at least 80% of my listening. I have a large room (L-shaped, 38 x 17 feet on the long dimension and 23 x 16 on the short dimension) and I like to listen at levels from low (for reading and conversation) to "pretty close to real" concert hall levels. For the last year I have been listening to Linkwitz Orions ( http://www.linkwitzlab.com/index.html ) and I can recommend them whole-heartedly for all music, but they seem to be made for large scale classical works. The Orions are capable of playing softly, they can play loud with no apparent distortion (that's what I hear!), and on good recordings image extremely well. IMO, they make music and they come very close to the sound of the live unamplified event. Good music + a good recording + the Orions will stir your soul and--IMO--bring you very, very close to the performance and the artist's intent.I live in Minneapolis and one night I listened to Osmo Vanska lead the Minnesota Orchestra in Beethoven's 1st Symphony at Orchestra Hall. A couple of hours later I had the BIS SACD recording of Beethoven's 3rd (Vanska, Minnesota Orchestra, recorded in Orchestra Hall) playing at home. The comparison left me very happy with the state of my audio system.I have not heard any of the speakers on your excellent list, so I can't compare. If you are really serious about your quest, you should try to find a way to spend some quality listening time with each of your top choices. Good luck, and all the best,Peter
I remember the first time I saw the Chicago Symphony live and noticed the plexiglass wall between the back-row brass (trumpets, trombones) and the players immediately in front of them...Given that I've left more than one concert there with my ears ringing, and have been on stage with them myself, I can attest to what it's like "near field" (i.e. real friggin loud).
Audioexcels just put a pair of Ronin RMD's up for sale with the plate amp option (on the trading post). I had a chance to spend a week with them last year and would think they'd be a great option for any orchestral music you could throw at them. Easily fit into that list you've developed and worth a listen.
I find that conductors often exaggerate the loud passages from the soft too much, much like movies do nowadays. It grates on me. To me, it's often like melodrama.
Of course, enjoyment of music is a very subjective experience, and a listening room is not a concert hall. But the 110 dB upper bound for orchestral peaks (measured from a regular listening seat) is pretty well established. It is not an opinion or a guess. Furthermore, this estimate is for small to medium size orchestras, not for large ones. According to the MF web site, for large orchestras, Tony Faulkner regularly measures peaks of 113-116 dB. Please note that that we are talking about dynamic attacks, not continuous levels. Listening to music anywhere near that level would induce hearing loss. (As a point of reference: 110 dB is the sound pressure produced by a chain saw.)Things are well explained in the MF web site:http://www.musicalfidelity.com/products/supercharger/technical.htmlhttp://www.musicalfidelity.com/products/supercharger/dynamicrange.html
I wowed a crowd here last year by playing just 2 channel music through them in my HT and everyone thought the sub was on.
the ribbon tweeter detail of the V3 or the Hiquphon OW2 dome unit
The V series does not get a lot of love (yet), but I absolutely love them and think they are the steal of the century. There really isn't anything they don't do. We watched Elizabeth on HD DVD Saturday night and the sound just enveloped us. Very crystal clear and never grating.