Every system I heard that aimed to do neutrality sounded sterile and lifeless. Except Mike's. It is not possible to guess what that sound can be by relating previous experiences and extrapolating. When I visited Mike's I was ready to text a couple of friends that this is another high spending wanker who has a lifeless SS cone based sound. Instead I texted this is the best system I have heard. Next day I texted I was wrong, this is far better than I thought yesterday.
He lets the recording flow through perfectly. When you change from transistor based mastered 33 rpm to tube mastered 45 rpm (analog productions vs classic records scheherazade..) The jump is huuuge.
Every note of every recording leaves you mesmerized. Led zep sounds raw, primal, like the way they want you to hear them. Audiophile crap sounds like at a hifi show. Beethoven 9th tuttis are unraveled 100 times better than you will ever hear them in a system.
Yes, I will never try or suggest that approach, because I am sure most will end up with a sterile system. I will go the SET horn route. Much easier, and gets me a lot of way there.
But then I will never have a koetsu like cart as my primary cart. Maybe for fun. I think the SPU despite its limitations is more real than koetsu, though again it will never be my primary cart. And I will never use sweet sounding tubes like the standard 300b.
The reason I say this is Ron seems to latch on to statements where neutral = sterile, highs = bright, and seems to favor words like sweet, lesser highs, or the verbal description associated with koetsu. While I understand that from a Lyra perspective, having sat together with Ron for some listening sessions I think he will regret if he buys components that go as per the koetsu description and ignores some that might, on the forum, sound a bit like the Lyra description. He might find that Mike has the most sweet sounding sound, created through a neutral system. Because real violin, real flute, real clarinet, is damn sweet sounding, more so than a koetsu color. And based on the speakers he has chosen, the Mike model suits him best.