Fully agree with the latest posts here in October 2021. To be somewhat more objective, the Sopras, to me, have a very nice build quality and look good in my room. They're sturdy and heavy and look like they could really produce some music. The problem is having to pick and choose which music you can tolerate. These speakers perform well indeed on some classical works, jazz trios and other genres with bass-light, uncongested musical messages.
Once you dip into your youth-time favourites from the 80s and 90s and even earlier, you risk bleeding ears. Worse yet, since much of today's modern music is "better recorded" but mixed for portable devices, radio and internet streaming...once you have a revealing speaker you risk massive disappointment. This just isn't acceptable.
What is the point of having a speaker, or an entire system, that is calling the shots on what you can listen to or not? I'm guilty of enjoying Tool, Rush, Led Zeppelin, The War on Drugs, etc. on frequent occasions. The Sopras clearly say "sorry but you can't listen to that, how about Barry Manilow?"
As much as I like the Sopras visually, they have not performed well using Naim, Accuphase and now McIntosh. What's left? A Chinese Class D for 50 bucks?
They will have to go and now I must find a suitable speaker for the McIntosh MA352. First area of investigation is the latest Sonus faber Olympica Nova II which is a floorstander. We'll see...