Ken
I upgraded from Klipsch bookshelves + a sub to the Salk Songtowers in curly cherry. Same as
@Swerd 's original pair. ( I get the finish between curly maple and curly cherry confused all the time). After having them installed for a couple of months, I decided to throw in the 10" Monolith subwoofer (the THX certified one) not because it needed it, but because I can. Before the speakers showed up, and because the Songtowers tend to provide a load that is closer to 4 ohms than 8 ohms, I decided that was a good enough excuse to upgrade my older Denon 910 to a new Denon x4200W. The support for the 4 to 6 ohm load was as good an excuse as I needed. The extra power, and there is lots of power for a 2.1 system, is just a cherry on the top.
While I was waiting for the speakers to show up (and the wait was a tough one) I re-ripped all my music and re-organized my library from top to bottom. Lossless and uncompressed. I also added in a UTurn turntable just because I can for my scant record collection. My record collection has grown since then since my family now likes to give me LP's for gifts instead of neckties. A bonus.
One of the things that can get rid of the constant nagging need to chase an upgrade is to make darn sure what you're buying is a true upgrade: an audible step up. Not a paper step up based on statistics and somebodies technical opinion on "better". But, an audible steup up you can truly hear and recognize the difference. I decided I wanted to really "step up" when I went for the Songtowers. The Salk fanboys aint lying : these things sound fantastic. If I upgrade again, I'll go with Dennis Murphys AA stuff and probably go for his
Philharmonic 3's. I would go for the
Salk Soundscape 8's, but I'll never be able to afford those. Either way, I get Jim Salks cabinets.
Jim Salks cabinet work is a whole other topic. I appreciate those every time I walk up to my system. Its hard to overstate how gorgeous a piece of work he provides. A true upgrade.