Since joining this forum, I have learned much about the a/v world and I am much appreciative of all of you contributors...and even the lurkers who keep this place going and help pay the bills, so to speak. There is a nice mix of attitudes, beliefs, approaches, hard data, opinions, bs, deep knowledge, and lots of fun and funny people. The few bad seeds usually weed themselves out, but many thanks to our moderators for helping them along. So....my congrats to you all for putting up an interesting and all too distracting (according to the missus, anyway

) place to visit. Happy 2007 to you all.
Now that I have you all sweet-talked, lol, it's time to stir the pot again, as seems to be my way. I'd like your opinions on the following matter....
SPEAKER REVIEWS in general.
Since joining here a couple of years ago and attempting to build my knowledge base, I've probably read hundreds of speaker reviews by both professional (industry involved) and hobbyists alike, here and in other publications. To my best recollection, none of them, with the one exception of Craigsub's shootout last year, involved direct A/B testing, or better yet, full-blown DBT evaluation. We seem to demand this kind of data in all our audio products,
except speakers. We tend to banty about descriptive phrases about types of speakers, but using only subjective imaginings or memories to call upon.
As I audition, and now own a variety of speakers, I've found it most interesting that I'll react one way to a speaker's presentation....and entirely differently when I evaluate it in a side-by-side with another brand/model. (Many thanks to AverageJoe for providing assistance and some of the gear that gets used in these speaker evaluations...not the least of which is his contribution of labor and beautiful, custom built speaker cables.) It has become abundantly clear, to me anyway, that speakers simply cannot be evaluated or properly reviewed without comparing their presentation with another (or several) competitors...in an A/B or DBT fashion. Gene did a thorough bookshelf speaker comparison review, and perhaps even a couple of others. But, with Craigsub's comparo aside, I don't ever recall a DBT or even A/B switching to aid with the development the adjectives we all like to provide when describing the sound of a speaker. While I'm sure this has occurred within the industry or on other boards, it just is not the common practice that it seems it should be.
When you go out to a store to audition speakers, even though it's not in your own listening environment, the store will generally do fast speaker switching for you, allowing you the kind of listening that I think makes the most sense when selecting something to buy. When this approach is taken, one can give
relative meaning to terms like 'warm', or 'detailed', or 'airy', etc. I know that many of the 'pros' have distinguished careers in field and can pick out speaker details from experience and evaluate the items with much greater accuracy than I. But still, it would mean much more to me, the reader, if I knew the review writer was DBT'ing the units with other, known speaker elements and was attempting to find some standardization of the language and comparability of speaker sonance.
What do you all think?