Gary, I agree. I think that one of the most common failings in the entire field, is that tweeters are simply too bright on many speakers. But here's what irks me. You are paying 150K+ for a speaker. Everyone in audio knows the sound of a speaker is room dependent. Most folks don't have perfect rooms. Yet the arrogance of a company like Magico is that they think the listener must be too stupid to set a tweeter control level themselves because they simply don't offer one. Now they will tell you (I know, I've asked) that the reason they don't do this is because it will compromise the sound, but we know this too is BS. The signal must go through a resistor in series with the tweeter internally. Would it be that onerous to give the user a choice via a simple switch of two or three resistor values? Oh, they will then say the switch itself would be the source of unacceptable degradation. And that's when you realize they must be smoking something, shrug your shoulders in disbelief, and look elsewhere at other manufacturers. Magneplanras, Focals, Wilsons- they ALL have the ability to be fine-tuned to the listener's room. It not only makes sense, but for 6 figure speakers, it should be mandatory. You gotta wonder how Magico's "our way or the highway" view could possibly result in a successful company. Oh well. It is what it is.