Avantgarde Extreme 35 Today
April 15, 2026 By: [Your Name], Editor at The Sonic Spectrum
Listening to Angel by Massive Attack, the bass didn't rumble—it inhaled . It pressed against my chest like a physical column of air. There was no overhang. No "one-note" thud. The bass guitar in Ray Brown’s Soular Energy was so distinct I could see the calluses on his fingers. At 30 Hz, the Extreme 35 is flat, fast, and terrifying. I sat down with a reference playlist. Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories . Nina Simone’s Sinnerman . Radiohead’s In Rainbows . Avantgarde Extreme 35
But when you close your eyes and hear a violin bow drag across gut strings with so much texture that your scalp tingles... the price disappears. The room disappears. The speaker disappears. April 15, 2026 By: [Your Name], Editor at
Does it have flaws? Yes. It is physically imposing. It is ruthlessly revealing of bad gear. It costs more than a Porsche 911. No "one-note" thud
The second thing is the . That 35-inch horn covers 150 Hz to 2,000 Hz. This is the golden zone—the human voice, the cello, the guitar. Thom Yorke’s voice on Nude was holographic. It wasn't coming from the left and right. It was a phantom figure standing 15 feet in front of me, breathing.
Have you heard the Extreme 35? Are you planning a pilgrimage to Munich to demo them? Drop your hot takes in the comments below. Just don’t tell me your Bluetooth speaker sounds "just as good."