A few months ago i decided to make a downgrade in my system by selling off a pair of Wilson Audio Sophia 2 speakers. These expensive speakers performed well (they should at $16k retail!) and excelled in many areas, especially in over-the-top build quality at throwing an image outside the speakers. However, they are very heady (>200 lbs) and portability might be essential in the next few years....and i ain't getting any younger.
After considering the marketplace for a suitable replacement, i decided on looking at the Martin-Logan family. I haven't heard them in years, and was always amazed on how such a niche product was sold at Best Buy..... but things have changed in audio! I owned MLs way back... in fact, I previously owned the original CLS and also the CLS 2 (circa 1990), and later, in a different house, a pair of Arius made its way in for a while (apx 1994). So it's been 30 years since I've owned a pair! (lot of life got in the way).
Anyhow, the Sophias were sold, and i acquired a used pair of ESLs. Again, this was a "downgrade" in comparison to my prior speakers. Anyhow, I've connected them to my existing components (Unison Research S6, a Class A single-ended tube integrated amplifier; and a North Star "Blue Diamond" CD/DAC, both from Italy).
In short, I've been blown away.
I'm continuously pulling out music that I've listened to for decades, and each session is like hearing it for the first time. The ESLs are not just pulling out detail (which it does), or providing great imaging (again, accomplished), but the music is no longer HiFi. This is heard to explain: instead of hearing a sound in space from behind the right speaker, I'm hearing an instrument; no longer just sound effects, but as if a real instrument is right in the room. It's quite startling!
Even voices sound so robust and full, with hearing such body to them, you swear the singer is there in the room. Not just a sound coming from an image between the speakers, but as if you're hearing the vocals right from the singer's mouth, with such true dimensionality you'd swear that you can tell the depth of each breath taken.
I've been "messin' with hi-end audio" for over 40 years and owned some great setups, but this is a new expereince. Very unexpected and somewhat at a loss for words, to be frank.
After considering the marketplace for a suitable replacement, i decided on looking at the Martin-Logan family. I haven't heard them in years, and was always amazed on how such a niche product was sold at Best Buy..... but things have changed in audio! I owned MLs way back... in fact, I previously owned the original CLS and also the CLS 2 (circa 1990), and later, in a different house, a pair of Arius made its way in for a while (apx 1994). So it's been 30 years since I've owned a pair! (lot of life got in the way).
Anyhow, the Sophias were sold, and i acquired a used pair of ESLs. Again, this was a "downgrade" in comparison to my prior speakers. Anyhow, I've connected them to my existing components (Unison Research S6, a Class A single-ended tube integrated amplifier; and a North Star "Blue Diamond" CD/DAC, both from Italy).
In short, I've been blown away.
I'm continuously pulling out music that I've listened to for decades, and each session is like hearing it for the first time. The ESLs are not just pulling out detail (which it does), or providing great imaging (again, accomplished), but the music is no longer HiFi. This is heard to explain: instead of hearing a sound in space from behind the right speaker, I'm hearing an instrument; no longer just sound effects, but as if a real instrument is right in the room. It's quite startling!
Even voices sound so robust and full, with hearing such body to them, you swear the singer is there in the room. Not just a sound coming from an image between the speakers, but as if you're hearing the vocals right from the singer's mouth, with such true dimensionality you'd swear that you can tell the depth of each breath taken.
I've been "messin' with hi-end audio" for over 40 years and owned some great setups, but this is a new expereince. Very unexpected and somewhat at a loss for words, to be frank.