I’ve but to meet a pair of KEF audio system I didn’t like. The model’s penchant for offering inflexible and musical bass, a heat and clean midrange, and easy treble extension retains wi-fi fashions just like the LS50 (9/10, WIRED Recommends) and LSX (9/10, WIRED Recommends), and the wired R3 Meta (9/10, WIRED Recommends) amongst my favorites available on the market. These trusty sonic hallmarks are current as soon as extra within the new Q Concerto Meta.
Together with nice sound, KEF’s Q Sequence goals to offer you extra on your cash, which within the Concerto’s case equates to a bounty of drivers. You don’t typically see three-way bookshelf audio system at this worth, however the Concerto ship the products in an environment friendly configuration. You’ll get a hefty woofer, a midrange driver above, and at its middle, KEF’s signature concentric tweeter that has trickled down from a number of the model’s greatest, together with the highfalutin R3.
The Concerto instantly evoke the R3, from their design aesthetic to assist for KEF’s “Meta” absorption tech, geared toward eliminating undesirable cupboard frequencies. The similarities finish there; the Concerto’s sound (understandably) can’t method the R3’s lofty heights, whereas their vinyl-wrapped facade feels extra funds than KEF followers would possibly count on. Nonetheless, this can be a nice bundle for the cash, providing aggressive sound with a deal with exemplary tonal steadiness and potent bass.
Loaded for Naked
I used to be positively giddy to be unboxing a glowing new pair of KEF’s newest bookshelves, however my pleasure was tempered once I obtained the Concerto free from their foam houses. The vinyl cupboards (accessible in black, white, and walnut) look clear and comparatively sharp, however most audio system I’ve examined of their class and even a step under do higher. In comparison with the luxury piano gloss of SVS’ Extremely Evolution (9/10, WIRED Recommends), or the Focal Vestia No1’s funky leather-based and woodgrain panels, the Concerto have a extra discount basement vibe. Attaching the plain-Jane magnetic grilles additional pushes them towards boxy obscurity.
{Photograph}: Ryan Waniata
In equity, I believe these are purposeful nook cuts to take a position extra on {hardware}, and the Concerto actually have it the place it counts. Their three-pack of drivers per aspect features a 6.5-inch hybrid aluminum cone woofer, a 4-inch aluminum cone midrange driver, and a .75-inch concentric waveguided tweeter bearing KEF’s Twelfth-gen Uni-Q design (placing the “Q” in Q Sequence).
The drivers cross over at 450 Hz within the bass and a couple of.9 kHz within the treble, with a claimed frequency response of 48 Hz to twenty kHz (extra on that later). Behind the drivers is KEF’s Metamaterial Absorption Expertise (MAT), which claims to get rid of “99% of undesirable frequencies.” It’s cool to see the tech that has unfold throughout the model’s high hi-fi audio system in approachable fashions. MA apart, most undesirable frequencies will probably come out of your listening room, so that you’ll nonetheless wish to think about ideas from our Audiophile Gear Information like acoustic panels, that are each efficient and comparatively inexpensive.
The Concerto are slightly massive for bookshelf audio system, standing 16.3 inches tall, 8.3 inches vast, and 12.4 inches deep, and weighing over 20 kilos every. You’ll wish to safe a stable pair of stands suited to their sizable footprint. (KEF will fortunately promote you a $700 pair designed for the R3.)