John Atkinson reviewed the Joseph Audio Perspective2 in July 2019 (Vol.42 No.7):
Five years ago, in our July 2014 issue, I reviewed Joseph Audio’s Perspective loudspeaker, a reflex-loaded, floorstanding, two-way design with two SEAS Excel magnesium-alloycone woofers and a SEAS Excel Millennium tweeter using a 1″ Sonatex, impregnated-fabric dome. I summed up my thoughts by writing: “The Perspective is definitely a full-range loudspeaker, with impressive low-frequency extension and weight for a speaker with a relatively small footprint. It is also one of the more beautiful-looking speakers I have had in my listening room. . . . I can confidently recommend the Joseph Perspective. It’s a lot of high-performance loudspeaker in a beautiful, modest-sized, domestically appealing package.”
Five years to the day after Jeff Joseph had set up those Perspectives in my room, he was again visiting, this time with a pair of Perspective2s. The new speakers look identical to the old. A relatively small, beautifully finished tower, it still uses the SEAS tweeter, but the 5.5″ woofers are now from SEAS’s new Excel Graphene series. Graphene is a superstrong allotropic form of carbondiamond is another, more familiar allotropethat is related to graphite and consists of a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal, two-dimensional lattice. For the new woofers, SEAS has coated its cast magnesium-alloy cones with a graphene-based “nanomaterial” and, according to the Norwegian manufacturer’s white paper, the result is a light, stiff diaphragm that is also well-dampedexactly what is required for a woofer cone.
In 2013, when it was introduced, the Perspective cost $12,999/pair; the Perspective2 costs $14,999/pair. The new speakers’ serial numbers were P-0092L & R; my samples of the original Perspectives were P-0001L & R. I set up the new speakers exactly where the original Perspectives had sounded optimal: the left speaker’s woofers were 28″ from the LP cabinets that line the nearest sidewall, the right speaker’s woofers 38″ from the bookcases facing that wall. Both front baffles were 74″ from the wall behind them, and the speakers were not quite toed in to the positions of my ears. The Perspective2s had the foam liners fitted to their reflex ports, which gives a slightly overdamped woofer alignment that Jeff Joseph feels will give the best combination of bass control and extension.
In my original review, I had found that the Josephs worked best with Pass Labs XA60.5 monoblocks. Those amplifiers had long since been returned to the manufacturer, so throughout my auditioning I drove the new Perspectives with the Lamm M1.2 Reference monoblocks that I reviewed in April 2012. Source was either the new dCS Rossini SACD/CD transport I reviewed in the May issue or my Roon Nucleus+ server sending data to the dCS Rossini or PS Audio DirectStream D/A processors. For most of my auditioning, I used Jeff Joseph’s recommended Cardas Clear speaker cables. I also used AudioQuest K2 speaker cables, which gave the presentation a little more top-octave air.
With the Cardas-connected Lamms, the Josephs produced the same wide sweep of full-range sound and tangible stereo imaging that had so impressed me with the original Perspectives. The low frequencies were still rich, but perhaps the articulation was even better. Of course, it is impossible to make a definitive statement five years after I last heard the earlier speakers in my room, with different source and amplification components, but the reflex-loaded Perpective2 did rival sealed-box systems in this regard.
In my 2014 review, I had found the Josephs to be unforgiving of poor-quality recordings, which I ascribed to the speaker having a slight emphasis in the presence region. A recording I had found not to sound as good as I had wished with the original Perspectives was Beck’s Morning Phase (24-bit/96kHz ALAC files, Capitol/HDtracks). While I love this album, every time I played it with the original Perspectives, I wanted to turn the volume down. That was definitely not the case with the Perspective2s. I could play “Heart is a Drum” at an SPL of 97dB(C) (Studio Six Digital SPL app on my iPhone, slow ballistics) without any sense of overload either from the speakers or from my ears. Turning to those superbly dynamic kickdrum samples on Cornelius’s “Fit Song” (16/44.1k ALAC file, ripped from Sensuous: la musique du 21° siécle CD, Everloving/Warner Bros. EVE016), they punched the air in front of the speakers. When the kickdrum was doubled with synth dropped-bass notes, I was astonished by how much clean, low-frequency energy four 5.5″ woofers could pump into my room.
With the Perspective2’s combination of clean dynamics and rich, well-defined low frequencies, orchestral music was well-served. The big tune at the start of the first movement of Elgar’s Symphony No.1 (Sir Adrian Boult conducting the LPO, of course, 16/44.1k ALAC files ripped from CD, EMI Classics 64013), with its pulsing bass line, sent shivers down my spine. And at the work’s climax, when this sublime melody reappears in all its glory at the end of the fourth movement, overlaid by rushing strings and punctuated by percussion, I was again impressed by the Josephs’ ability to play loud but without the sound becoming harsh or the small details of the scoring being blotted out.
Small-scale music was also well-served. As I write these words, I am listening to Richard Egarr and the Academy of Ancient Music’s performance of Bach’s Brandenburg Concerto No.6 (24/88.2k ALAC files, Harmonia Mundi HMU 807461.62. footnote 1). The Perspective2s maximally differentiated the character of the low-pitched (A=392Hz) baroque instruments, yet without adding undue emphasis to things like the rosin on the viola soloists’ bows.
Fig.1 Joseph Audio Perspective2, electrical impedance (solid) and phase (dashed) (2 ohms/vertical div.).