I"m curious, did the amp just happen to match well with the speaker load used for the listening tests?
How would it sound with a different set of speakers?
In the ideal world, an amp would be load invariant.
When I set up the 6200, I used my speakers, which I built around 5 years ago and I used music I could repeat. It takes about two minutes to switch from the P5 to anything else because the back of my rack is open and I have banana plugs and my system is two channel. The speakers in the system I installed are Dynaudio Excite 14 LCR and Dynaudio in-ceiling for the rears. I asked, but they didn't want to bother with the extra speakers the AVR can drive, so....big improvement over the crappy little speakers he had before and the old AVR is pre-HDMI, so this is much better for now and in the foreseeable future. I used a Velodyne sealed sub, because the room is very live, acoustically, and I didn't want anything to make it more boomy than anyone wants.
The last time I installed the same model of Dynaudio speakers, I compared them to mine and used them as a model for setting the level of my tweeters, relative to my woofers. I made no changes to my speakers when I connected the Denon and I would say it leaned toward a warmer sound than the Parasound but, again, I didn't use the P5 to drive the Denon's power amp.
In the theater where it was installed, it sounds very good, without ANY equalization of any kind. Considering the room's acoustics, I was very pleasantly surprised. They put down a large rug very close to the cabinet at the front, it extends almost to the side walls (which are 30' apart) and it extends about 18' from the cabinet, with a large, soft pit group for seating. These do a great job of taming the room and I was also very surprised by the bass response- much better than expected.
When I listen to speakers and systems, I want to hear an even response, that doesn't have zones where the sound disappears or is excruciatingly strong in a range where I'm sensitive. When I or the music produces a frequency sweep, I want to hear it as evenly as possible and my system does that nicely. I would like to take all of the credit, but I have to think I have some happy accidents that are helping. The theater doesn't have the same height my system does, nor did the Denon when I listened to it here. The main difference in speaker placement between my place and the theater is that my speakers are 34" tall with the tweeters a little below ear level and the bottom of the Dynaudios are 4" above the floor, behind cabinet doors with a black screen. I haven't heard them since the screens were installed, so I assume I'll be doing a good amount of equalization.