Overview
Overall, in my experience, the Larsen 9 speakers provide four main areas of excellence, which even if not totally unique are at least highly unusual and enjoyable:
1. The Larsen speakers seem to erase the second venue effects of the listening room. They ignore my small room acoustics to a unique, unprecedented extent, so much so that even in my small room I think many listeners might be satisfied with and even prefer the sonics without any purposeful room treatment at all. Their presentation is maximally open and large without any such room treatment. I am using acoustic foam room treatment only to eliminate relatively mild slap echo on radio announcer voices and to add further stability and precision to their imaging, particularly at center stage.
2. Their boundary placement design also conveys highly unusual benefits in lower range response. Their placement at the junction of wall and floor amplifies their low bass response so that their relatively small cabinets can provide considerable bass power right down to the very bottom of audible frequencies. The near-floor mounting of the woofer operating only below 300 Hz also eliminates “the usual floor dip” which can rob speakers of output and authority in the crucial orchestral “power range” of 100 to 300 Hz. The Larsens also provide for me unprecedented detail about the texture of bass-through-lower-midrange notes, allowing one to hear bass tunes more easily, better hear life-like moment-to-moment dynamic and tonal changes in the lower ranges, and hear bass instruments as solid 3-D images rather than mere bass rumbles or thumps.
3. Once tweaked by my Lyngdorf TDAI-3400’s Room Perfect equalization, the overall frequency balance from lowest bass to highest treble closely matches that of my AR-303a, thus sharing with that speaker and that speaker alone in my experience, the ability to sound naturally convincing on an extremely wide range of commercial recordings without the need for additional recording-to-recording equalization. Bass is powerful, extended, and a bit elevated, the midrange is very smooth, and the high frequencies are extended enough to yield adequate air while rolling off gently in the top two octaves, preventing any high frequency nastiness from spoiling the suspension of disbelief with most recordings.
4. Last but certainly not least, there is their “non-speaker” sound, hard to describe but easily audible with only a brief initial audition. The sound is untethered from the speaker locations to a degree unique in my small room experience. The sound just exists before you. The Larsen presentation is as through a window on the music, concert hall or otherwise. That window expands and contracts in terms of depth, width, and envelopment from recording to recording, but is always there, regardless of its apparent size or shape. Also always present are a clarity and immediacy without projecting the sound into your listening room or ever sounding overly bright or aggressive. Seems contradictory, I know, but it's always "you are there" rather than "they are here."
Why?
Before acquiring the Larsen 9 loudspeakers I still thought the AR-303a speakers I’ve been using in both my systems are as fine an overall reproducer of a wide variety of recordings as I’ve ever heard in my small audio listening room. But I had long wondered about the Larsen line, especially the model 9.
As I recently stated in a post to my sticky thread on “The 12 Most Significant Loudspeakers of All Time,” one important category of speaker has largely been left out of this entire discussion. That is the category of boundary placement speakers: speakers intended to be placed against at least one room boundary--say the wall behind them--or at the junction of two boundaries, e.g., that wall and floor, or the junction of three boundaries--in a room corner.
Yes, I suppose corner horn speakers like the Klipschorn are an example of this group. But unlike most of the others, the K-Horn and other corner-horn speakers really do not deal well with the very strong early-in-time room reflections which accompany such positioning. This failure is one major cause of the high-frequency stridency K-Horn detractors note.
The list of successful boundary placement speakers is short. To get an idea of which speakers are on this list, read Robert E. Greene's (REG) reviews of the Larsen Model 8 and Larsen Model 9 loudspeakers in The Absolute Sound. He mentions Sonab, Allison, Steinway/Lyngdorf, Tact, and Larsen.
Perhaps the list of successful boundary placement speakers should not be so short. As REG notes, this type of speaker represents a sort of "road not taken" in high-end audio loudspeaker design. He notes:
I’ve never really heard any of the speakers on REG’s short list of successful boundary placement speakers. Neither did I hear the Larsen 9 before purchasing them. But I usually agree with REG’s sonic assessment of speakers. And I should note that from what I can tell from online comments by others, those who have heard or owned Allisons and Sonabs generally love them, keep them a long time, and seem to consider them legendary. There is still a lot of active online discussion of Allisons and Sonabs even though these speakers have been out of production for several decades.
REG’s review indicated that the Larsen 9 has fine tonal balance and a unique transparency to the original recorded event. His review also stressed that even without purposeful acoustic room treatment, the Larsen 9, set up as recommended, could basically match or better the degree to which conventional speakers toed in and listened to from the near-ish field in a well-padded room ignore the second-venue effects of your listening room. I figured that combining the Larsen 9 with some acoustic foam room treatment could produce yet more insight into the recorded acoustics than I’ve ever been able to achieve from conventional speakers in my small room.
REG’s review indicated that the Larsen 9 ticks all my primary listening bias boxes. My primary goals in music reproduction can be summed up as: to hear the recorded music and acoustics of the original real or artificial venue, with a natural yet forgiving tonal balance compatible with as many commercial recordings as possible without the use of recording-to-recording equalization, while minimizing the second venue acoustical contributions of my small listening room.
Thus, when the opportunity arose to acquire a used pair of Larsen 9 speakers in fine condition at a good price, I took the plunge.
Overall, in my experience, the Larsen 9 speakers provide four main areas of excellence, which even if not totally unique are at least highly unusual and enjoyable:
1. The Larsen speakers seem to erase the second venue effects of the listening room. They ignore my small room acoustics to a unique, unprecedented extent, so much so that even in my small room I think many listeners might be satisfied with and even prefer the sonics without any purposeful room treatment at all. Their presentation is maximally open and large without any such room treatment. I am using acoustic foam room treatment only to eliminate relatively mild slap echo on radio announcer voices and to add further stability and precision to their imaging, particularly at center stage.
2. Their boundary placement design also conveys highly unusual benefits in lower range response. Their placement at the junction of wall and floor amplifies their low bass response so that their relatively small cabinets can provide considerable bass power right down to the very bottom of audible frequencies. The near-floor mounting of the woofer operating only below 300 Hz also eliminates “the usual floor dip” which can rob speakers of output and authority in the crucial orchestral “power range” of 100 to 300 Hz. The Larsens also provide for me unprecedented detail about the texture of bass-through-lower-midrange notes, allowing one to hear bass tunes more easily, better hear life-like moment-to-moment dynamic and tonal changes in the lower ranges, and hear bass instruments as solid 3-D images rather than mere bass rumbles or thumps.
3. Once tweaked by my Lyngdorf TDAI-3400’s Room Perfect equalization, the overall frequency balance from lowest bass to highest treble closely matches that of my AR-303a, thus sharing with that speaker and that speaker alone in my experience, the ability to sound naturally convincing on an extremely wide range of commercial recordings without the need for additional recording-to-recording equalization. Bass is powerful, extended, and a bit elevated, the midrange is very smooth, and the high frequencies are extended enough to yield adequate air while rolling off gently in the top two octaves, preventing any high frequency nastiness from spoiling the suspension of disbelief with most recordings.
4. Last but certainly not least, there is their “non-speaker” sound, hard to describe but easily audible with only a brief initial audition. The sound is untethered from the speaker locations to a degree unique in my small room experience. The sound just exists before you. The Larsen presentation is as through a window on the music, concert hall or otherwise. That window expands and contracts in terms of depth, width, and envelopment from recording to recording, but is always there, regardless of its apparent size or shape. Also always present are a clarity and immediacy without projecting the sound into your listening room or ever sounding overly bright or aggressive. Seems contradictory, I know, but it's always "you are there" rather than "they are here."
Why?
Before acquiring the Larsen 9 loudspeakers I still thought the AR-303a speakers I’ve been using in both my systems are as fine an overall reproducer of a wide variety of recordings as I’ve ever heard in my small audio listening room. But I had long wondered about the Larsen line, especially the model 9.
As I recently stated in a post to my sticky thread on “The 12 Most Significant Loudspeakers of All Time,” one important category of speaker has largely been left out of this entire discussion. That is the category of boundary placement speakers: speakers intended to be placed against at least one room boundary--say the wall behind them--or at the junction of two boundaries, e.g., that wall and floor, or the junction of three boundaries--in a room corner.
Yes, I suppose corner horn speakers like the Klipschorn are an example of this group. But unlike most of the others, the K-Horn and other corner-horn speakers really do not deal well with the very strong early-in-time room reflections which accompany such positioning. This failure is one major cause of the high-frequency stridency K-Horn detractors note.
The list of successful boundary placement speakers is short. To get an idea of which speakers are on this list, read Robert E. Greene's (REG) reviews of the Larsen Model 8 and Larsen Model 9 loudspeakers in The Absolute Sound. He mentions Sonab, Allison, Steinway/Lyngdorf, Tact, and Larsen.
Perhaps the list of successful boundary placement speakers should not be so short. As REG notes, this type of speaker represents a sort of "road not taken" in high-end audio loudspeaker design. He notes:
This creates a challenging situation for a design that works in a way different from the, by now, ensconced forward-radiating box with directivity increasing with increasing frequency that has somehow become a “standard,” whether it should have or not. And such a design as the Larsen Model 9—this is something different. It is also something good. Very good, indeed.
I’ve never really heard any of the speakers on REG’s short list of successful boundary placement speakers. Neither did I hear the Larsen 9 before purchasing them. But I usually agree with REG’s sonic assessment of speakers. And I should note that from what I can tell from online comments by others, those who have heard or owned Allisons and Sonabs generally love them, keep them a long time, and seem to consider them legendary. There is still a lot of active online discussion of Allisons and Sonabs even though these speakers have been out of production for several decades.
REG’s review indicated that the Larsen 9 has fine tonal balance and a unique transparency to the original recorded event. His review also stressed that even without purposeful acoustic room treatment, the Larsen 9, set up as recommended, could basically match or better the degree to which conventional speakers toed in and listened to from the near-ish field in a well-padded room ignore the second-venue effects of your listening room. I figured that combining the Larsen 9 with some acoustic foam room treatment could produce yet more insight into the recorded acoustics than I’ve ever been able to achieve from conventional speakers in my small room.
REG’s review indicated that the Larsen 9 ticks all my primary listening bias boxes. My primary goals in music reproduction can be summed up as: to hear the recorded music and acoustics of the original real or artificial venue, with a natural yet forgiving tonal balance compatible with as many commercial recordings as possible without the use of recording-to-recording equalization, while minimizing the second venue acoustical contributions of my small listening room.
Thus, when the opportunity arose to acquire a used pair of Larsen 9 speakers in fine condition at a good price, I took the plunge.
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