Hey RJ, my new retirement gig as a remote showroom for Rhapsody.Audio means I have the great pleasure to have three amazing speakers in-house—the Alsyvox
Botticelli X, the Bayz
CounterPoint 2.0, and Diesis
Roma.
At this time, I am driving all with Pilium
Alexander pre-amp, and
Achilles power amp.
And I do mean its a great pleasure. My prior kit included Audio Research REF10 pre-amp and REF 160M power amps, along with Wilson Alexia v1. The Pilium is another level for sure, though I do wish I still had the ARC kit on-hand to compare and contrast on each speaker. Most likely I'll bring in some VAC pieces to satisfy those folks who'd like to hear any of the speakers with tubes. That said, I am like Bob.east (Bob @ Rhapsody) in listening with Pilium I do not find myself longing for some "tooby-ness."
The Botticelli X is a stunning speaker. Beautiful to look at, astonishing in its sonic delivery. The wife acceptance factor is very high, meaning for a lot of folks it can fit into the home without having to have a special room. Of course, a nice room helps, and the benefit of the X-ternal crossovers is you can tweak the speakers a little if your space is super lively or heavily damped.
The sonics of the Botticelli X — seem to be amazingly balanced across the frequency spectrum, with resolution and ability scale that puts my older Alexia to shame. I loved that ARC / Wilson rig, it brought me many nights of pleasure. But the Pilium and any of these other speakers simply elevates the experience to be so much more realistic. The Alsyvox and the Bayz have the ability to play deeper than the Diesis, but honestly unless someone is coming for an audition I never feel the desire to swap out whatever was last setup.
I will say the Alsyvox will likely appeal to a more traditional idea of "presentation" than the Bayz. I had the Alsyvox setup for about 6 weeks up until last weekend, loving every listening session. Then I swapped in the Bayz and immediately I thought "whoa, these are F'n amazing too." There is, IMHO, no give with respect to resolution or balance across the spectrum, but the presentation of an omni is quite special too when you hear how well it is done by Bayz. (I like it more than MBL, but that is my opinion, I speak for no-one else.)
But, this is the Alsyvox thread so I'll return to that—and how much fun I have queuing up Copeland's
Fanfare for the Common Man and then watching my guests jaws drop when the tympani comes crashing in. First they pick their jaw up off the floor, then smile, then they have that look of "really, a panel just did that?" Besides stunning dynamics, they also play with delicacy and nuance if you're listening to Miles Davis being one with that horn.
So yep, the Botticelli are the real deal. I can't imagine anyone not being supremely satisfied owning pair. Sure, lots of competition out there, and people have different tastes, but for a speaker that ticks all the audiophile boxes, is easy to make sound good in almost any room, is easy to drive, and has a very high WAF while not looking like a Transformer, the Alsyvox should be heard by anyone shopping in this upper echelon of audiophile toys.
I try not to get too gushy over any of this kit I am now representing for Rhapsody, but now and then I feel its OK to let my enthusiasm show through, these are remarkable tools.
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