The Article
SPENDOR A1 SPEAKERS: YOU MUST TAKE THE A-LINE
7th October 2017
Looking to balance price with design and feature quality, Paul Rigby reviews Spendor’s new stand-mounts , the A1 speakers
Stand-mounted speakers are arguably the most popular variant of speaker design on the market. Partly because of cost, partly because size is important to those with little space to spare and partly because the speakers tend to provide excellent value for money.
This is all well and good but not particularly exciting. Stand-mounted speakers are ten a penny. Everyone does them.
Even so, when certain brands announce a new stand-mounted design, you really can’t help but sit up and take notice. Spendor is certainly one of those.
Founded in the late 60s by BBC engineer, Spencer and Dorothy Hughes – the ‘Spen’ and ‘Dor’ – in the name. The company started it’s life with its iconic BC1 which became the monitor of choice for broadcasters and recording studios worldwide. Since then, the company has never looked back and has gained an enviable reputation along the way for quality sound and design.
Spendor corrals its speakers into a varying ranges including the Classic series, the D-Line and, in reference to the speaker under review, the A-Line.
Focused on value for money and lower budget designs, the A-Line tends to be slimmer and compact than other Spendor loudspeakers, using the new EP77 polymer cones and three veneer finishes: black ash, dark walnut and natural oak.
The 2-way stand-mounted A1, under examination here, spans 305 x 165 x 178mm and weighs 5kg. It includes a 22mm tweeter with an intriguing diaphragm profile.The tweeter has a protective mesh grille. The front also sees the 150mm mid/bass unit.
The A1 cabinet has thin low-mass side panels. Each panel is bonded to a visco-elastic damping pad which dissipates any energy into inaudible heat.
SOUND TESTS
I began by spinning a beautifully mastered and pressed vinyl version of The Fall’s Frightened from a first pressing of Live At The Witch Trials.
In this sound test, the A1 speakers hit the ground running. So many positives hurled themselves at me, it was tough to write them all down. First of all, there is a delicious contrast between the vocal and the dominant drums. The latter provides an efficient power, a slightly dry, punchy, hard firm suite of lower frequencies that provide a transient speed that emphasises the mobile nature of this still massy – for the price and size – lower frequency.
The above is then combined with the organic nature of the vocal. Mark E. Smith – he of the languorous bitterness and the cutting edge comments – is present there with plenty of intricate texture. Smith’s voice is full of nuance. His vocal inflections are plentiful and a less than excellent speaker will miss most of them. Not the Spendors. The A1 speakers followed the vocal line with some ease, hanging off his vocal chords with aplomb.
The wide ranging, open and airy soundstage confirmed the low noise nature of this design. In fact, I had to raise the gain on my pre-amp by three clicks to reach the same volume, which added to the detail and penetration into the core of the mix. Treble was sensitive yet confident, especially during cymbal taps, while the shy organ riffs were informative and quietly confident instead of missing in action, as with many other speakers of this price point. The bass guitar too, another shy entrant into the soundstage, could be followed by the ear with ease.
I then changed the music to jazz and Gogi Grant’s version of the standard, By Myself.
I was happy to hear how the Spendors handled the vibrato-rich delivery of Grant. Some speakers at this price point can sound a little confused with the slightly nasal frontal area of the delivery with that vibrato reverb. Not the A1 speaker which held firm, added control but enough freedom for Grant to vocally express herself fully, adding emotion and sensitivity to her performance.
The instrumental separation within the orchestral background was wide enough to allow each instrument or bank of instruments room to manoeuvre, giving the ear a rounded appreciation of each. Brass instruments combined their wholly metallic effect with an organic resonance that added soul to the music while the percussion provided a delicate treble and an efficient beat which remained complex yet never blurred or smeared.
Also impressive was the upright bass which not only could be followed throughout the track. The Spendors were able to translate the resistance of the strings. The definite ‘twang’ from the plucked strings were a feature.
For Japan’s 12” version of I Second That Emotion, featuring David Sylvian’s textured and expressive vocal style, that delivery was presented effectively here. His elaborate vocal movements, twists and turns were illuminated by the Spendors, which helped to add a richness to the delivery.
The bass guitar was also relatively shy on this too but the A1 speakers spotlighted it without resorting to clinical behaviour to allow the ear to pick it up without undue effort while the open and airy soundstage added a sense of dynamic reach for the saxophones, percussion and synth runs.
CONCLUSION
OK, look, I’ll cut to the chase with this one. These are stand mounted speakers, a little over £1,000. Even at this price point, you often hear compromises in emphasis, some do great bass and iffy mids, others are vice versa, some offer the looks but no sound quality, some sound great but look like a 5 year old’s school project and so on. You know the sort of thing, I’m sure.
The A1s somehow look, feel and sound ‘right’. This review really took 30 seconds. I couldn’t help it. After that time, I had to nod and say “Yes” to myself. The A1 speakers will have you mentally nodding and giving the thumbs up. They exude plenty of confidence and security. You know that these speakers will give you quality sound and no nasty surprises. I’ve yet to hear any speaker in this size/price point which is superior. The A1 has it all.
SPENDOR A1 SPEAKERS
Price: £1,095
Website: spendoraudio.com
Tel: 01323 843474
GOOD: airy soundstage, low noise, informative mids, revealing bass, build
BAD: nothing
RATING: 8
REFERENCE
Rega Planar 3
Ortofon 2M Red MM cartridge
Trichord Dino phono amplifier
Rega Brio-R integrated amplifier
Spendor S3/5R2 speakers
Acoustic Energy Radiance 1 speakers
Harmonic Resolution Systems Noise Reduction Components
All vinyl was cleaned using an Audio Desk’s Ultrasonic Pro Vinyl Cleaner
Hi Paul,
My budget is £2500 roughly,
I like marantz as there good looking & sound nice but would welcome a few other suggestions please.
I like the rega elicit r but no phono stage, basin I’m told are great but not slit to look at.
Thanks
Regards
Neil
I wonder if this one might just be for you in terms of sound quality and facilities. It’s an alternative, at the very least 🙂 : https://theaudiophileman.com/halo/
Hi Paul,
I demoed the Splendor A1, superb, detailed, with great vocals & lovely tones.
I have some early Foundation speaker stands but only 17″tall, if I modify them professionally to 24″ will that be ok or maybe getting epos K5 stand or B&W series 7?
I’ve used blue tax on the top plate previously but wondered if the 9mm gel isolation pads are better?
Can I also ask I’m using chord Rumours 2 speaker cable terminated, but wondered when funds availible would the signature be much of an improvement, or wait & replace amp in a few years instead?
Many thanks,
Kind regards
Neil
Hi Neil – never used Foundation stands. As long as there’s no flex (they look at a bit slim in the photos I’ve seen), they’re rock solid stable and don’t wobble, then sure. The pads sound intriguing – which ones are you looking at? Yep, the Signatures would be a good choice.
Hi Paul
Looking for some new standmounters for my Rega Brio 2017. Had Dynaudio Emit m10’s and liked their size and sound but wondered if I could improve on the combo. Would the Spendor A1’s fit the bill?
Hi Michael – sure, the A1s are excellent speakers and would work well with the Brio.
Hi Paul,
A bit late to the party, but happy to join from Toronto, Canada.
I just picked up a 2017 Rega Brio and a pair of the Spendor A1s in Black ash.
Am currently running them in and figuring out positioning. Currently set them up at 2 ft from the back wall on stands. Starting to sound niiice as the bottom end opens up.
Thanks for the review. It played a part in my decision.
Any suggestions for optimization are welcome!
Joel
Based on this review, and another, purchased a pair of these. The review is spot on, these sound fantastic, and surprisingly dynamic for their size. Paired with sub, they are perfect for my small space.
Hi Paul,
Thank you for the in-depth review. What stands would you recommend for these? (any specific model or brand).
Stephane
That depends on your budget, Stephane. Do you have a figure in mind?
Hi Paul,
Actually, I will move to the Spendor A2, the ‘bigger brother’. Alhough they are small floorstandera, they seem to have a lower bass response and my room is probably too big for the A1. Your review was helpful as I did not know Spendor before.
Thank you
Glad to be of help, Stephane.
Hello Paul. I would like to know your opinion regarding the Spendor A1 using the Audiolab 6000a
Would they be a good match? Thanks in advance.
Rafael
Hi Rafael – yep, technically, there should be no issues there.
Hello Paul,
I’m looking for small bookshelf speakers to combine with a Roksan Kandy K3 amplifier. I currently have small 11L Quads that are very pleasant to listen to, but sometimes a little dry and with a slightly weak bass base. I am nevertheless very attached to it and I am therefore looking for a model with a fairly equivalent sound signature, but with more bass seating, more transparency and clarity in the midrange / treble, and a little more relief as well, everything while remaining of course soft and soothing to the listening. I would add that these speakers are positioned on a piece of furniture 40 / 50cm from the ground, and about 10-15cm from the rear wall, with a spacing of about 2m50 between the 2. I have successively tested Dynaudio Emit 20 (very boring !!), Kef R300 (much too overwhelming bass) and Q acoustics 3020i (excellent for the price, but a lack of relief I find and a perfectible mid / high clarity). So I checked among Spendor A1 or Quad S2. Do you think this is a coherent choice with regard to what I expect?
Hi Julien – the 3030i speakers are superior to the 3020i if you need a low cost option. The A1s are recommended, as you’ll find in the review plus the Martin Logan 15i and Cabasse Surf speakers for under ¬£1k.
Hi Paul thanks for this review, very informative and professional. I am looking to do a upgrade to my hi-fi to a budget of £2k. I thought about the Spendor A1s as I prefer bookshelves.
My current speakers are Dynaudio Emit 10s and a REL 5 subwoofer. My amplifier is a Rega Brio. Other equipment is a Chord Mojo, Marantz 6006 CD player that I use as a transport, a Pro-ject Stream Box S2 Ultra and Chord Clearway interconnects and speaker cables. My listening is almost wholly classical. I don’t do vinyl. Can you identify any bottlenecks here? I want to be confident that the Brio is capable of driving any new speaker. I will upgrade the amplifier in a year or two.
Thanks again for your reviews
Hi Alan – apart from the fact that I have issues with a sub in a 2-channel system (buy hey, that’s my problem, if you like it then go for it) then I would upgrade the 6006 to a dedicated transport. Right tools for the job and all that. Especially as you don’t do vinyl. That makes your transport critical. Plus a quality coax cable, I hasten to add.
Thanks Paul I appreciate the feedback. Needed some guidance on priorites, and you’ve done that – thanks
Just to refer to the addition of a sub in a 2-channel system you mentioned. My listening consists of almost wholly classical music. Most of the time I’m not really aware of the sub. Where it does come into its own is when presenting instruments such as kettle drums (Mahler’s 4th Symphony), the double bass in Schubert’s The Trout Quintet and for example Shostakovich’s 4th Symphony where there is a driving drum pace. Whilst with pop (and this is not a criticism) there is often just a persistent heavy bass with no discernable instrument.
Hi Paul, really enjoyed your review. Have you listened to the new Classic 4/5? How do they compare to the A1? Thanks
I haven’t Grant – colleagues do tell me that they’re rather civilised, though 🙂
Trying to read between the lines, by “civilised” would that mean more subdued or sedate in sound character compared to the A1’s? I’m in the U.S. so I would like some clarification. Thanks!
To me ‘civilised’ means well behaved and orderly and doing the right thing and not sonically surprising you in a bad way and respecting your music without the threat of blooming or blaring or offering nasties and being a perfectly acceptable design to introduce to your mother without any fear of embarrassment.
Well that helped clarify things. Not the way it would have been explained here in California but I get what you’re saying. Thanks!