The Independent

LOUD AND CLEAR

David Phelan has a good listen to multi-room speakers

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To have music all around your home once meant endless cables squirrelle­d away under carpets or around door frames. Now, with wireless speakers you can achieve the same end with minimal fuss.

Hi-fi that reaches everywhere uses Bluetooth, wi-fi or both. Wi-fi reaches further and means you can play the same music everywhere or different tracks in each room. Bluetooth is more portable (handy for the garden or the park) but if the phone you’re streaming from rings or receives a text, the music is interrupte­d.

Look out for Spotify Connect, a simple way for Spotify Premium subscriber­s to control music from their phone or tablet – and it overcomes the phone-call interrupt issue. It’s on all the speakers here except Sonos, which has its own solution: launch Spotify and choose Sonos from the speakers listed at the base of

the screen when you play. There’s no such capability for Apple Music, for instance, but greater integratio­n has been promised.

Many, probably most, multi-room systems work seamlessly with other speakers from the same brand but not at all with rival brands. Once you’ve got a Sonos speaker, say, it’s harder to make a Bose one fit into the system.

In each case we’ve picked a good standalone speaker, which, when grouped with others in the range, forms an excellent multi-room system – generally, bigger speakers cost more, so the SoundTouch 10, the cheapest here, still has pricier models in the range, while Sonos has cheaper speakers than the Play:5.

Sonos eschews Bluetooth, but most others have both.

1. Sonos Play:5: £499, Sonos

The Sonos system works brilliantl­y, not least because the speakers link together wirelessly in a mesh so the signal is more powerful and resilient. The latest speaker, the Playbase (£699), is a slim speaker which sits under your TV and delivers great TV sound. But it’s also good enough to be a music hi-fi system on its own. Add a sub-woofer (also £699) for even better sound, or a pair of Play:1 speakers (£199 each) at the back of the room for a surround-sound effect.

Sonos is painless to set up (plug in, launch the free app, pair speaker to app and you’re pretty much there) and works seamlessly, including with services such as Spotify and Apple Music. The recently improved Play:5 speaker (£499) is also great and works as a music system on its own. One more thing: Trueplay is a piece of software in the Sonos app which lets you tune your speakers for your specific rooms, and the improvemen­t in sound quality can be striking.

2. Bose SoundTouch 10: £169.95, Currys The SoundTouch 10 is small but has big, clear sound that is very pleasing. Connecting multiple speakers is very easy thanks to the dedicated smartphone app. The speaker has a versatile shortcut system: six buttons on the unit, the remote and the app can all be configured to an internet radio station, playlist, artist or even a favourite song. It’s compatible with other SoundTouch models including the room-filling SoundTouch 30.

3. Denon Heos 7 HS2: £378.99, Amazon

Denon’s system is very quick to set up using the Heos app, which helps you create multi-room zones. The distinctiv­e teardrop design of some of the speakers is very attractive. The biggest model in the range (Heos 7 HS2) is powerful enough to fill a big space and the smallest one (Heos 1 HS2) has humidity resistance so it works in a bathroom. Denon’s great musical heritage should mean all the speakers sound great. They do.

4. Roberts R-Line R100: £201, John Lewis

This system is properly portable and truly wireless – if you opt for the rechargeab­le battery pack. For multi-room, add the R1 speaker (£136) to the mix. Both are then controlled by the Undok app - a thirdparty app which also appears on systems like Ruark’s and is available for iPhone and Android. As you’d expect from radio maestros Roberts, DAB and FM radio tuners are built in. The speaker is smallish but delivers a big sound and works extremely well, sharing music to its slightly less smart R1 sibling. Great for people who also want to use the system as a DAB radio. The colour screen on top is controlled by direction buttons and is refreshing­ly simple to use.

5. Panasonic SC-ALL7CDEBK: £319, Currys

The Panasonic ALL series play very happily together and send music round the house via wi-fi and Bluetooth. This unit has a CD drive built in so you’re not limited to digital music from your phone or tablet. It also has a DAB radio tuner and 4GB of storage for saving up to 25 CDs digitally for instant access (that is, you don’t have to go to the player to put the disc in). An app for iPhone and Android makes set-up straightfo­rward, and playing music from multiple speakers is easily achieved: just drag one speaker icon on top of another in the app. The Panasonic series work together well, delivering clear, authentic sound with a wider feel to it than you’d expect from looking at the speaker.

6. Sony SRS-X99: £529.99, Amazon

The Sony has a premium feel that matches the price. Thankfully, so does the sound, which is emphatic. It’s quite big (430mm long) so not easily portable but its statement looks mean you won’t mind it being a noticeable addition to your living room. Sony’s speedy and efficient SongPal app (for Apple and Android) is how you connect other Sony speakers. This speaker is capable of hi-res audio tracks as offered by some streaming services (like Tidal, for instance).

7. Samsung R6: £279, John Lewis

Samsung’s speaker system looks like no other, designed to provide sound which is dispersed in every direction – handy if you’re listening to music as background while you’re doing other things. It’s easy to connect the speaker using a phone or tablet (Android and Apple), via the straightfo­rward multi-room app. The unit also includes a woofer which fires sound downwards. Build quality is strong and, if you like the look of the speaker, this is a decent choice. Add another R6 to create the multi-room effect.

8. Ruark R2 Mk3: £419.95, John Lewis

British audio brand Ruark makes beautiful, skilfully crafted machines which look stunning. The R2 is compact and sounds tremendous. It’s also very enjoyable to use, with Ruark’s trademark dial control on top which adjusts volume, controls playback and changes radio stations, for instance. For multi-room add another R2 and synchronis­e them. The R2 is a real head-turner. And what’s more, it’s an excellent radio on its own with DAB, FM and internet radio stations available.

9. Naim Mu-so: £995, John Lewis

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