

Martin in the Fields, Recorder Concertos, in particular try Vivaldi's Concerto in C - Allegro. Finally, want to hear a sopranino or soprano Baroque recorder (high pitch indeed!) played by a virtuoso? Try Michala Petry, and the Academy of St. If you want to hear crisp wonderful mid-range vocals try most vocal jazz. For a Classical strings tune with deep resonance try Yo-Yo Ma's Bach's Prelude, Cello Suite, No. Also for a dynamic test try Peter Gabriel's Solsbury Hill. It has much more swing to it, and his voice is way different. For a different take that will test the speakers differently, try Aaron Neville's version in his Christmas CD.

There are several ways to adjust your playback system to make the DAC-11 NOT to operate at the non-linear gain section, then the left and right channel will be balanced properly at your listening level. If you care to test out these Klipsch speakers, or any other ones, try these tunes to check low, mid, and high frequencies:Īve Maria (almost anybody singing it, but the Josh Groban version is deep and wonderful. Digital volume control will be 100 linear all the way but the sound quality is no where near the high end mechnical one.

The right channel no longer works, plugging both speakers into my left channel rules them out as suspects as they both work. The midrange is crystal clear, the high also, and the subwoofer is darn impressive. These are on the boards inside my Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 subwoofer. I've put all my music on the iMac (I try to encode at 192kbps or better, and you can tell the difference) and use it as a jukebox. If you are looking for a pair of good 2.1 speakers that super-enhance the sound of your Mac, these are it. Friends, I got my speakers, attached them (easy), set the subwoofer to where Klipsch indicates (little white mark on the dial), and Voila! Or better said, WOW! Awesome! These speakers are just wonderful.
