Malcasine,
What M15 and Tosh said, and............... my 2 cents. OK 3 cents based on 7 years experience with Prodigy "in a room too small for them to sound good ".
First my disclaimer; I listened in the extreme nearfield. Growing up I was in multiple vocal groups, choirs, pop rock bands, concert bands, marching bands, and dance bands. I'm used to having the voices and instruments right up to my ears. The high-frequency rolloff that occurs at mid audience and further back is not my desired perspective.
This is my old setup. I've moved to new location and the room I am building will actually be a bit smaller.
The room in the picture was approximately 10'3" wide(3.12 m). The speakers were approximately 5 feet from the wall behind them (1.52 m), and as you can see very close to the sidewalls, at least the edge of the woofer cabinets.
This arrangement sounded good from day one.
But as I went from stereo to mono amps got better. From hybrid tube MOSFET to tubes even better. Eventually digital external crossover with tubes on the top and solid-state on the bottom. The two depths subwoofers really were superfluous.
If you're only going to use one amp then it needs balls. The woofers really soak up power.
The system gives pinpoint imaging, with tremendous stage depth and width and realistic instrument and human size.
One of the great benefits of near field listening is that the primary wave from the speaker gets to your ears long before the reflected waves. Although you will notice a fair amount of do-it-yourself room treatments in these pictures. Room treatment never hurts.
Rather than bore the others further with this, if you would like to continue discussion you can PM me.
Your ML friend Bruce