It is neither my interest, or desire to argue merit, here. I think that what you are asking is a non-starter because most of us are not interested in that product. I have owned some of their gear in the past, and I will never go back to it again. Why?... Sure, they sound good. They do not make great sound.
You have a very capable AVR. That D&M does not give info on what power all-channels driven works out to is frutrating. It is speculation that my Marantz is probably ~60-70w RMS with all 9 channels going. Yours could be about 80. That is pure speculation, and only delving into the world of running a Sin wave at stress-test levels, which is what
@one more time mentioned in his post above.
Now consider that real-world power applications are significantly different than how the stress tests are run. Your amp may very well be capable of playing Music or Movies at reference levels with proper speakers. Assuming you have a 90dB sensitive speaker... and it takes only 1w to achieve that 90dB @ 1 meter distance, you are already listening at near reference level SPL at your LP (you lose 6dB SPL for every doubling of distance). 64w, @ 1m distance clears reference level dynamic peaks, and if you were to listen at a distance of ~6' from your speakers, you would need ~128w to clear the reference level dynamic peak at you LP.
Most of us don't listen that loud.
Moreover, modern Amps should not color sound output in any way. All they do is amplify an electric signal. Most here will agree with that statement, I think. What creates changes in sound quality is the speaker (techically, transducers, which convert electrical signal to soundwave), the room, and the interactions between them.
Which brings me dangerously close to the very topic I don't want to discuss right now: how a series of transducers in a box creates "amazing" sound, what is the definition of that, and whether a certain product [read: any product] qualifies as meeting that criteria.
Listening is subjective. If you are happy. Accept it. And enjoy
If you want to learn about your gear, and how to get the most out of it, you are in the right place!