cd318,
That describes exactly what the Joseph speakers are great at. Pretty much every review of the JA speakers (look up the Pulsar reviews) makes a point about how easily separate and distinct the timbral qualities of instruments remain, even as a mix gets more complex.
You’ll see Michael Fremer describing that quality here:
https://www.stereophile.com/content/joseph-audio-pulsar-loudspeaker
Or from the absolute sound review:
http://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/joseph-audio-pulsar-tas-203/
I found this particularly intriguing when I played various mono recordings on the Joseph speakers - Chet Baker, etc. When you have various voices and instruments "lining up" behind one another in the center, rather than spread out discernibly in the soundstage in stereo, a less pure-sounding speaker can make it harder to untangle one instrument from another. But on the Joseph speakers it seemed every instrument was effortlessly separate timbrally, making it more realistic and "easier" to listen to one particular instrument over another even in a really tight mono mix.
I find that Classical music and Jazz really become captivating when it’s easy to distinguish the sound of the instruments rather than just the notes they are playing.
That describes exactly what the Joseph speakers are great at. Pretty much every review of the JA speakers (look up the Pulsar reviews) makes a point about how easily separate and distinct the timbral qualities of instruments remain, even as a mix gets more complex.
You’ll see Michael Fremer describing that quality here:
https://www.stereophile.com/content/joseph-audio-pulsar-loudspeaker
Or from the absolute sound review:
http://www.theabsolutesound.com/articles/joseph-audio-pulsar-tas-203/
"The first thing I noticed about the Pulsars was their midrange purity and lack of grain."
..................
"Of all the Pulsar’s sonic attributes, the one that impressed me the most was the high level of discernability. What I mean by discernability is, how easy is it to listen into the mix and pick out exactly what parts you want to concentrate on? The higher the level of discernability, the easier it is to do this. The Pulsars made it easy to recognize the essential banjoness of a banjo on Paul Curreri’s “Once Up Upon a Rooftop” [California Tin Angel Records]. Even when a harmonica is added to the mix, it’s easy to tell where the banjo stops and the harmonica starts."
I found this particularly intriguing when I played various mono recordings on the Joseph speakers - Chet Baker, etc. When you have various voices and instruments "lining up" behind one another in the center, rather than spread out discernibly in the soundstage in stereo, a less pure-sounding speaker can make it harder to untangle one instrument from another. But on the Joseph speakers it seemed every instrument was effortlessly separate timbrally, making it more realistic and "easier" to listen to one particular instrument over another even in a really tight mono mix.