That is the camp I am in!
Imaging like nothing else!
Great detail!
Obviously a high quality speaker.
However, there was something about the dispersion (that is my theory of the measurement that would show this difference) that did not work for me. When I closed my eyes, it seemed like the music was being played in the next room and I was listening through a large opening (say french doors to the next room). A trumpet projects well to my ears, but a piano or violin lacks the in-room ambiance.
For me, the BMR's are the exact opposite.
Certainly not the perfect imaging of the LS50's concentric drivers, but I am definitely in the same room as the music.
Based on conversations I have had with fans of LS50's I know this is mostly me - something I am somehow more sensitive to (or have a different opinion on) than most. I suspect there are plenty who will prefer the nature of the LS50 over the BMR, and I am certainly not posting to say they are wrong and I am right.
I would, however, say that anyone who gets the chance should listen to both the LS50
and BMR, as I think they are both very well executed speakers in so many ways, with this one difference (that I attribute to dispersion, but that is total SWAG) in how they present the sound into the room!
Unfortunately, I did not have both speakers at the same time, or maybe I could better describe the difference and get specific on where in a particular song it is most obvious.
@shady , I know you know the BMR, but am not sure if you have heard the LS50's. If so, perhaps you might comment on what might be the reason for this difference and what your subjective impression of the same phenomenon was. Like I say for me it mattered, but I could easily see someone else thinking it was a wash or preferring the LS50!