Dynaudio Evoke 50 5.1 speaker package
Dynaudio’s trickle-down innovations provide the Evoke 50 5.1 speaker package with a refined, grown-up, premium sound
Dynaudio has always been led by engineering. The simplicity of its speakers doesn’t lie in fashionable Scandinavian aestheticism; instead the company, which straddles pro audio and domestic hi-fi products, is more concerned with what goes on inside the box than flashy design on the outside.
The Evoke range was first released in 2018 and comprises five different speakers with two options each for floorstanders and bookshelf speakers as well as one centre speaker for use in a home cinema configuration. In addition, Dynaudio offers a choice of two subwoofers designed to complement all of its speaker packages.
Trickle-down tech
The price of £8249 places it around halfway up Dynaudio’s range, but it’s fair to say that the Danish brand has a bit of a ‘pay it forward’ approach to the high-end tech, which isn’t reserved for its flagship products. As a result, Evoke benefits from many key developments in driver design first used in its pricier predecessors, cascaded across its entire range.
In our review sample, we have the Evoke 50 floorstanders, costing £3900 a pair, on the front left and right channels. At 116cm tall, it’s the largest speaker in the range, the only model with four separate drivers and a three-way crossover.
Starting at the top, the Evoke 50 features Dynaudio’s ‘Cerotar’ tweeter, which uses design elements found in the brand’s higher-end ranges. These drivers contain a ‘Hexis’ inner dome positioned beneath the 28mm soft-dome diaphragm to manage the sound coming off the back of the tweeter dome for a more even frequency response. This inner dome works in conjunction with a large rear chamber to control the back-pressure on the rear of the tweeter diaphragm, improving evenness and extension. When unboxing the floorstanders, the tweeters are covered with puck-shaped covers that clip on to protect those fragile soft domes. Keep these handy, as you’ll need them if you decide to re-box the speakers again.
While all the models in the range make use of the Cerotar tweeter, the Evoke 50 is the only one in this 5.1 package to have a dedicated midrange driver. Measuring 15cm in diameter, the diaphragm is constructed from a single piece of ultra thin Magnesium Silicate Polymer (MSP), a material the company has used in its drivers for decades.
The low end is taken care of by two long-throw 18cm woofers, with large 56mm copper voice-coils for efficient high power handling, as well as a substantial bass reflex port. This can be partially or fully closed using the included foam bungs to reduce low-end emphasis in small spaces, but for testing, we leave them out.
Upfront and centre
Up front is the Evoke 25C centre speaker, priced £1100. Either side of its Cerotar tweeter sits a 14cm MSP cone unit. These units are connected in a 2.5-way configuration, where one of the larger drivers generates everything from the midrange down, leaving the second unit to augment just the lows.
Taking care of the surround duties is a pair of Evoke 10 bookshelf speakers, the baby of the series, costing £1250 per pair. These use the same tweeter and woofer as the centre channel, this time with a two-way crossover (and one large driver).
Despite the towering size of the floorstanders and the centre channel’s not insignificant footprint, the package benefits from a clean, minimalist design that will sit comfortably in most rooms.
There are four finishes; black or white high gloss and Walnut or Blonde Wood veneers. Every detail, from the gently curved front corners and tapered trapezoid shape of the MDF cabinets to the contrasting matt black ‘screwless’ drivers and flawless glassy lacquer, helps the Evoke system neatly take its place.
The .1 in this 5.1 package is Dynaudio’s premium subwoofer, the sealed-box Sub 6. Unusually, this design has twin 23cm opposing drivers, an arrangement that minimises any vibration generated by the movement of the cones.
On the rear face of the sub, there are a pair of balanced and unbalanced inputs as well as mirrored outputs for daisy chaining. There’s also a small LCD screen and a single knob for navigating level adjustments and settings for speaker matching, power saving, low pass filter, phase and distance from the main left/ right channels. While useful, this control system feels rather clumsy in use.
More forgiving than specs hint at
With a nominal load of 4 ohms, the front three speakers appear to be a demanding prospect for most amplifiers; but Dynaudio engineers the impedance curves of its speakers to be more forgiving than the spec suggests. We expect most price-compatible AV amplifiers to be comfortable with this Evoke package. For testing, we use our 2020 Award-winning Denon AVCX6700H amplifier, priced at £2299, with the Pioneer UDP-LX500 UHD 4K Blu-ray player as our source.
We play the opening scenes of The Social Network, which proves a solid workout for the centre channel, and we’re impressed with the clarity and projection of Aaron Sorkin’s rapid-fire dialogue. It’s rare to be able to hear every single syllable in this scene, especially those
muttered in Zuckerberg’s nasal deadpan, but at no point are we struggling to follow the exchange.
Even as the action moves to narrated montage, with Trent Reznor’s bouncy electronic score filling out the rest of the soundfield, the Evoke 10s have an excellent range and musicality for a surround speaker. There’s a solid grip on the lower-mid synth notes too, without detracting from the main image.
Fluidity in the midrange
We move on to Baby Driver, with its uptempo score giving the floorstanders a chance to shine, and they don’t disappoint. There’s fluidity in the midrange and an ease with which it hands over to the tweeter, while the rapid rhythm of Bellbottoms is as cleanly rendered in the high-frequency cymbals as it is in the nimble low end. The integration between the Sub 6 and the Evoke 50s, with their punchy bass, is effective, particularly on the leading edge of the gutsy sounds of the car engine.
As we reach the Harlem Shuffle section, sonic differences between the floorstanders and the centre channel become more apparent. The scene consists of a single tracking shot with the ambient sounds of passers-by drifting in and out of central focus, and we feel more aware of the shift into a fuller range of sound as Baby pushes pedestrians aside. With such a difference in cabinet size, this is to be expected, and isn’t serious enough to prove overly distracting.
For a sterner test of dynamics, we play the Kurt Cobain documentary, Montage Of Heck, and find that the system remains consistent even when pushed to the extremes. During the footage of Molly’s Lips, the din of the crowd and Cobain’s distorted guitar meandering into feedback feels overwhelming, as it should do, but it never threatens to become unbearably harsh. Through sudden shifts in level, from festival stages to a talking head interview back into trippy psychedelic sound design, the system maintains its tenacious character and detail across the board.
This Evoke 5.1 package has been carefully developed to deliver consistent voicing across the channels, and on the whole it succeeds, creating a wellbalanced sound field. Rhythmically taut across the frequency spectrum with a standout agile low end, the package is both detailed and robust, attacking action, music and dialogue with dynamic urgency. If you’re looking to recreate a proper cinema feel in the home, this Dynaudio package is a great place to start.
“Rhythmically taut across the frequency spectrum with a standout agile low end, this Evoke 5.1 package is both detailed and robust, attacking action, music and dialogue with dynamic urgency”