B&W 603 S3 Loudspeaker Page 2
This all confirms that while the 603 S3 is B&W's entry-level, it's not a 'budget' speaker, and pairing it with Primare's Class D I15 integrated amplifier [HFN Oct '18] suited it a lot better. Playing the recent Stone album from heavy metal band Baroness [Abraxan Hymns ABXN008-1], via an Ortofon 2M Bronze-equipped ELAC Miracord 90 [HFN Jul '17] through a Primare R15 phono stage, delivered a substantial and very rewarding rendition of the track 'Choir'. Distorted guitars possessed just the right amount of crunch and drive, making for a thrilling listen, and this was the case too with the more manic 'Last Word', where the familiar Continuum midrange and new titanium dome tweeter presented a tightly controlled sound with no sign of muddiness or energy loss.
Spatial Awareness
Halfway through the latter track there's a fret-sizzling guitar solo which sounds like an homage to 1980s British metal, albeit recorded in a small studio room. The shift in presentation highlighted the 603 S3's ability to communicate those spatial cues higher up the frequency band – even with dense rock like this, let alone orchestral pieces like the Wranitzky symphony.
The Baroness album is the kind I probably wouldn't have preferred to play on any earlier generation of the 603, but now there's a slight softening to the treble which makes these Bowers & Wilkins speakers decidedly more 'metal-friendly'. There's a neat (or annoying, depending on your point of view) trick to this disc as well, for at the end of the groove the record plays a sinusoidal-like loop to attract your attention – it certainly did here.
Listening to Melanie De Biasio's new Il Viaggio release [PIASLL202CD] provided another change of pace, but the performance remained extremely impressive. The 603 S3 proved able to envelop the listening position and create a feeling of depth that was suited to this new album, which portrays the Belgian-born artist's return to her ancestral homeland in northern Italy. The first part of the album offers intensely melancholic compositions verging on soundscapes, with 'We Never Kneel To Pray' a beautiful highlight featuring a slow piano reminiscent of Ólafur Arnalds and other Icelandic composers. It was all there: the breathless singing off in the distance, the slight hesitation when piano keys are pressed, a sparse flute hardly daring to intrude on the whole. Remarkably for a speaker in this price class, the 603 S3 managed to expose incredible detail and the smallest nuances.
Immersed In Music
Indeed, I'd suggest it has a surprising sense of definition. With the same CD, heard through B&W's 805 D4 Signature [full review in HFN Jan '24], there was a profound sense of being immersed in these sonic landscapes. What about the far more affordable 603 S3? It serves up a lot of the same experience. Okay, those flagship standmounts excel in many domains – there's no beating better technology – but there's also no denying these updated entry-level speakers bring much of the best of Bowers & Wilkins to the table.
Hi-Fi News Verdict
The S3 upgrade pushes the 603 into new territory. Even though it doesn't deploy Bowers & Wilkins' most advanced technologies, this entry-level loudspeaker moves closer to the 700 and even the 800 series in terms of clarity and soundstaging. 'Trickledown' might have a bad rap when it comes to economics, but in the case of audio design it proves worthwhile. For the money this is an excellent loudspeaker.