Over the past 12 months, I have had the opportunity to listen to a lot of Hi-Fi components at home, trade shows, dealer showrooms, factories, and private listening events.
Readers love to kvetch when we don’t include their “favorite” pair of loudspeakers or network player in our annual “Best of 2022” Buying Guides but the reality is that we can only listen to so many products in one calendar year.
If a product makes the list, it is because we actually spent time with it. In some cases, the reviewer bought it after the review was already published or after trying it on multiple occasions. Listening to something at a trade show for 20 minutes doesn’t count. Not even remotely.
After listening to the Kuzma Stabi R Turntable at T.H.E. Show in June, I really wanted to request a review sample, but it really didn’t make sense in the context of our coverage which is more focused on affordable high-end equipment.
The Slovenian turntable is one of the best I’ve ever listened to and for $27,000 (with cartridge) — it really should be. One can easily spend a lot more on a turntable in 2022, but that’s not really our audience. It’s hard to understand how that moves the needle for the industry if we devote a lot of time to such products when there are 20 other magazines willing to drool over it with the same readership.
There are 6 weeks left in 2022 and I will have a lot to say about a dozen products between this week and December 31st.
I feel comfortable making this list after listening to over 160 new products in 2022 and a few trends are starting to really bother me and also excite me about the future of this hobby and industry.
You may not agree with any of my picks. That’s the best part of being Editor in-Chief — I have the opportunity to listen to a lot of average, good, excellent, and often very overpriced and hyped products that most consumers don’t have access to.
In Part One, we’re going to focus on wireless loudspeakers and turntables. Part Two will feature bookshelf loudspeakers, phono cartridges, and phono pre-amplifiers. Part Three will focus on integrated amplifiers, network players, and CD players.
The Future of Hi-Fi
There are going to be a significant number of wireless loudspeakers on my list in 2022 because the category is really starting to move in the right direction; both in terms of performance and connectivity options.
Passive loudspeakers are not vanishing from dealer shelves over the next 3-5 years, but I expect to see almost every high-end loudspeaker manufacturer looking to stay in business offer more than just one wireless loudspeaker between now and then.
If high-end loudspeaker companies want to grow, they will not be able to rely on the 50+ crowd (that would include myself and many of you) because many of us are consolidating what we own out of financial necessity and housing changes.
Priorities change.
Younger listeners will demand wireless systems that can work with their new turntable and TV setup. That’s non-negotiable.
There’s nothing wrong with a high-end wireless 2.1 system. It’s a lot better than a generation listening to music on only a pair of Apple AirPods.
My Magnepan LRS will survive the transition because they are too good for the money, but everything else in my system that can’t work with wireless speakers (minus the turntables) is expendable.
Affordability
There are a lot of excellent affordable high-end products right now. Certainly the most in the 24 years I’ve been writing about the industry for SoundStage!, Big Picture Big Sound, Digital Trends, Gear Patrol, eCoustics, and The New York Times.
In the CI market, mid-tier projects are suffering the most as consumers either go for cheaper entry-level projects for the home or very expensive systems for the entire home which includes home theater and multi-room audio.
I’ve spoken to a number of very successful custom integrators who have told me that the middle is dying for them.
Is that the direction that high-end audio is headed?
We look at entry-level from the perspective of $400 turntables, receivers, CD players and loudspeakers. If you spend that much on 3-5 components and cables, you might already be approaching $1,200 to $3,000 for a high-quality entry-level system.
That’s a lot of money for most people. Perhaps not to those willing to waste $3,000 on a single power cord, but it represents more than 95% of the population.
Sonos can barely keep its products in stock; my baby sister and her husband earn enough money to easily spend $50,000 USD on a system but it’s not something that they would ever contemplate.
When she gave me a budget during her recent home renovation, I recommended 5 rooms of Sonos for its multi-room audio capabilities and the Sonos ARC Soundbar for their living room and a 65″ LG OLED. She added a turntable and Sonos hub so that she could enjoy her record collection wirelessly in her home along with their TIDAL and Spotify accounts.
If the system couldn’t be controlled from all 4 iPhones — No Sale!
They all use it and think Uncle Ian is the best. Except my sister who thinks she overspent on the turntable. Sigh.
But enough of the family.
Favorite Wireless Speakers
Q Acoustics M20 HD Wireless Speaker System ($599)
My favorite affordable wireless/Bluetooth loudspeaker system of 2022 and one that has taken up permanent residence on my desktop flanking a 27-inch Apple iMac. If you like the Q Acoustics ‘house” sound — the M20 HD is a powered Bluetooth option that sounds very full and detailed. It’s not as polite as the 3050i loudspeakers but also lacks the bottom end.
A very well made system that keeps me going all day and night.
Where to buy: $599 at Amazon | Crutchfield
Triangle BOREA BR03 BT ($1,000)
The French manufacturer has really hit one out of the park with the Borea BR03 BT; the industrial design, build quality, connectivity options, and overall sound quality makes this a great system for most people. Just add a turntable with a MM cartridge and you’re done.
I like it so much that I might buy two different finishes in 2023 for use in the bedroom and our dining room. One of the best kept secrets of 2022.
Read more about the Borea BR03 BT here.
KEF LSX II ($1,499)
The LSX II is a very interesting product from the perspective that it offers the right mix of connectivity options for the 2.1 music/movie customer and because it takes up very little space. The images are very accurate. I do wish that the stand options were not so expensive. The temptation to buy a pair and a KEF KC62 Subwoofer is very strong right now because the system is one of the easiest to use with a smartphone and it offers both Spotify and TIDAL Connect capabilities.
It does not include its own internal phono preamp which seems wrong at $1,500.
Sonus faber Omnia ($1,995)
I spent a few months with the Omnia before it was launched and thought the team in Italy accomplished all of its goals. This is more of a lifestyle wireless speaker system; it just happens to be one of the best ones from the perspective of performance and its unique industrial design.
Sonus faber can barely make enough of them and I am seeing them with increasing frequency in retail stores, offices, and people’s homes. It doesn’t offer the slick interface of the Sonos S2 app, but it’s a lot more fun to use and designed by people who really care about build quality and sonic performance.
Dynaudio Focus 50 ($11,000)
$11,000 for a wireless loudspeaker? Please show the same degree of indignation and incredulity when someone mentions $5,000 interconnects and $80,000 turntables and we can have lunch together.
The Focus 50 offers everything but a turntable and it’s not hard to understand why some audiophiles would ditch everything except for their digital and analog sources and enjoy the rest of the audio journey with this magnificent loudspeaker from Dynaudio.
You can connect the Roon Ready Focus 50 loudspeakers to your network via WiFi or Ethernet and the system also supports Bluetooth, Apple AirPlay, Google Chromecast, Tidal Connect, Spotify Connect, and Internet Radio — which is pretty much every possible streaming platform you will ever need. Qobuz is supported via Roon (or via Bluetooth) if you roll that way.
The primary speaker has two sets of analog inputs, and 3 digital inputs (1 Toslink, 2 Coaxial), along with a single subwoofer output.
The 72 pound cabinets offer that understated Danish flair that I inherently love and while the Focus 50 are rather large loudspeakers, they also come with Dirac Live built into the package and control app.
Why does that matter? Dirac Live does an impressive job of room correction in listening spaces that may not want to cooperate fully. This would be one of the first high-end wireless speakers to offer this package and it means that the Focus 50 can be tailored to work in any room (for the most part) even if you move into a different home and your listening space changes rather dramatically.
Related Reading
Best Wireless Speakers: 2022 Buying Guide
Richard
November 25, 2022 at 4:02 pm
Can’t disagree with your assessment of the market. You can look at new product introductions and see where the action is. Even Stereophile had a recent editorial where they acknowledged as much and admitted they were behind the curve. It will be interesting to see which products become the next step up, or aspirational products for these buyers. Just glad a new generation is finding some interest in better music production. BTW…your webzine layout is really excellent. Great visual presentation, fonts and spacing. Kudos.
Ian White
November 25, 2022 at 4:14 pm
Richard,
Appreciate your very kind words.
It’s hard to ignore what is happening. There will always be a market for the products at the extreme top because people want to show off or own the “best” but that’s not the future of high-end audio.
The smart manufacturers knew what was coming and adapted years ago. To think that those of us over 50 with 3 kids (college tuitions) and aging parents are going to continue spending $$$$$ on systems is just stupid. We already spent far too much already and it’s time to consolidate.
My kids have been around high-end audio for over 20 years and it doesn’t matter to them — unless we’re talking about wireless speakers, and videos games.
Best,
Ian White
Catherine Lugg
November 25, 2022 at 5:50 pm
Thanks for the hat-top to the Q Acoustics M20. I purchased a pair for a relative’s 60th birthday. They live in a SMALL place, and I’m somewhat budget restricted. So, these made a fine addition to their home. I made this decision based on my own experience with Q Acoustics 3030i, which are fabulous in my humble book. So far, the M20’s are a huge hit. If I pick up some small gigs, I might purchase a matching sub for next year’s festivities.
Ian White
November 25, 2022 at 6:55 pm
Catherine,
Very happy to hear that. I use my pair every single day on my desktop.
Best,
Ian White
Step Brady
November 27, 2022 at 2:29 am
Audio is dead, I can’t even give good Mac, Marantz, or Accuphase equipment away to my kids; they are happy with the crap sound and speakers that I think were taken out of my mono AM radio I used at the ballpark. Sure they are wireless, but you plug them in with wire. Samsung owns half the industry (all of the Harmon companies since 2017 (most companies went bankrupt), and even B&W is private equity out of Southern California. Glad I got my prime 50 from the seventies to now, I still enjoy it, and glad I never fell for snake oil wire, Roger Russel from McIntosh taught that lesson back in the eighties.