We have had quite a few of similar posts of late and over time.
If I had to put my finger on a single event that has downgraded the fidelity of music reproduction in the last 20 years, it is the misuse of subs and a severe persuasive misunderstanding of how subs should be used.
Subs generally cover the last two octaves. That is 20 to 80 Hz. That is one of the least significant frequency bands in the whole musical spectrum. Yet it has become fashionable to devote the a very large proportion of the budget to it, to the almost total neglect of far more significant parts of the spectrum to which resources should be devoted.
Lets debunk this myth right now that speakers with single 4 to 4.5 inch drivers plus a bunch of subs can lead to anything like realistic reproduction. That is absolute bunk.
Can it lead to very satisfying reproduction properly implemented, yes. However using said speakers with one or more powerful subs turned up too high in an attempt to shake the floor is not realistic or satisfying reproduction. In short it is awful reproduction and very low Fi.
I have returned again and again, and especially of late, to the power band response of music, and where resources need to be primarily devoted.
I have shown this chart often. It shows the fundamentals and overtones of musical instruments. Now bear in mind reproduction of the fundamentals requires far more power than the overtones.
Here it is once more.
Now here is a real world screen shot from my audio workstation. The lower right graph shows the power response of musical program, but is pretty typical of how things sit most of the time.
Now lets bust another myth, that midrange starts at around 100 Hz.
The transition from bass to midrange is somewhere between 400 and 500 Hz. Anything from 20 to 400 Hz is most definitely bass!
Now if you look at the pictures I posted the area that requires the greatest attention in power band response is 120 to 350 Hz. It is most definitely NOT 20 to 80 Hz.
So the key to powerful and realistic bass is a good power band response from 20 to 400 Hz at least. In fact there is considerable power required right out to at least 2.5 KHz. The demands of baffle step compensation for most modern speakers though really requires the largest slice of the power from around 80 to 500 Hz.
Lack of power band response in this critical range can not be compensated for with unbalanced power below 80 Hz. This is what I find has become prevalent. But it is bad and unfaithful reproduction.
I have been hammering of late as to why specs and published measurements can lead you astray. This crucial data is hardly ever available for most speakers.
Yes, the +/- 3db response is important and so is dispersion and things like impulse response. However what is lacking is power acoustic output versus frequency.
So you can get nice graphs and not state output. Now all moving coil drivers that I know will have some degree of decline in maximal output with frequency. And this is something I always keep to the forefront. So if a driver will produce 110 db 1 watt 1 meter at 600 Hz but only 60 db at 120 Hz, it is not the driver you think it is.
Unfortunately the ability to maintain higher outputs with declining frequency has a strong tendency to be proportional to the cost of the driver. That is an unfortunate fact of life in my experience.
The bottom line is that if you want powerful realistic bass you need to devote far more monetary resources to what happens above 100 Hz than below it.
So get those speakers sorted before even thinking about a sub.