Take this with a grain of salt and recognize that it is a subjective sample of one!
When I was first getting back into audio, I listened to many speakers. One of them was the Totem Rainmaker. Totem advertises the resonance of natural wood as part of their design.
I found them to sound wonderful on non-complex acoustic music played at room filling, but casual levels; however, they faired less-well on complex music, especially if played louder.
Here are my original comments on this speaker (read into the Studio20 section).
http://forums.audioholics.com/forums/threads/notes-from-auditioning-speakers.57469/page-4#post-614015
My SWAG ("scientific" wild a$$ed guess) on this ties to the fact that resonance is non-linear. A common example of this is the feedback that can happen on a PA system where everything works fine until a volume threshold is reached where the sound from the speaker excites a resonance in the microphone driver. Backing off the volume just a little bit makes a huge difference.
A solid wood cabinet would not be near so sensitive as a microphone-amplified speaker system, but the same principal applies: Increase the volume from 40 to 60dB may not increase resonance by much, while going from 60 to 90dB (both 50% increases in SPL) is going to result in a proportionally greater increase in resonance.
But, again, I may be full of $hit, it is not like the cabinet material was the only difference between the Rainmakers and the Paradigms I was comparing at the time!