Golden Hour, twice over
This week I spent proper time with Golden Hour by Kacey Musgraves, moving between two Lowther set-ups. Same record. Same ears. Two very different presentations, both lovely in their own way.
What I enjoy about doing this is the reset it gives you. You stop chasing “better” and start noticing character, space, and intent.
The album choice from Trust Your Ears
Golden Hour is one of those albums that rewards calm listening. It is clean, detailed, and emotionally direct. It has enough subtle production and texture to show you what a system is doing, without turning into a hi-fi test record.
If you have not listened end to end in a while, try it with your phone out of reach.
Set-up 1: Acousta 117

The Acousta 117 is the “classic” Lowther experience for many people. Front-facing folded horn, fast and direct, and it can work in a wide range of rooms without being overly dependent on corner loading.
What I heard on Golden Hour
Midband focus and timing. Vocals sit forward with that “you are there” quality, and phrasing comes through clearly.
Low-level: You notice small reverbs and edits without it feeling clinical.
Bass that is clean rather than showy. It is about shape and speed, not weight.
It reminded me why the Acousta format has stayed relevant for so long. Lowther has kept the geometry and refined materials and build methods over time.
Set-up 2: Edilia
The Edilia is a different proposition. It is a newer Lowther development with a dual-driver approach. A full-range PM7A does most of the work. The Edilia’s bass driver can be dialled in via a passive L-Pad to suit the room. That adjustability is not a gimmick. It is genuinely useful when you are moving between spaces.
What I heard on Golden Hour
More bottom end presence, naturally. The album gains a touch of foundation and scale, without needing a sub.
Still unmistakably Lowther. Clarity and speed remain, just with more flexibility in how the bass meets the room.
If the Acousta feels like an instrument aimed straight at the performance, the Edilia feels like the performance plus the space around it, tuned to your room.
Why this matters
I like doing these comparisons because it proves a simple point. There is not one “correct” Lowther experience. The cabinet is part of the instrument. Room size, placement, and the way bass interacts with boundaries all shift what you perceive.
The fun is in learning your own taste, then choosing the tool that serves it.
A good continuation from last week: “Our brain is always listening”
Our friends at PS Audio shared a piece that fits neatly after our last note on listening as a daily ritual.
Key ideas from their post:
The brain is energy-hungry, always working, even at night.
Hearing is not just ears. The brain filters, interprets, and links sound to memory and expectation, so every listen is influenced by what came before.
Tiny timing differences between ears help us locate sound and create stereo space, which is part of why good two-speaker playback can feel so real.
Ritual matters. The physical actions of playing music can build anticipation and focus, which changes how we experience what we hear.
Lower quality playback can lead to listening fatigue because the brain has to work harder to make sense of it.
If you want the full article, it is worth reading: https://www.psaudio.com/blogs/copper/our-brain-is-always-listening?srsltid=AfmBOopw3_lgfgxhxsvO5rA4UfhgsD4WtlX1mgsZeTx83MI06vECD9ow
(And if you missed ours from last week, it pairs well with this idea of ritual and attention: https://lowther-loudspeakers.beehiiv.com/p/a-daily-music-ritual-for-calmer-nerves-and-clearer-thinking)
A few hi-fi links worth your time this week
Here are a handful of current pieces and announcements you might enjoy skimming:
Listening prompt for the week

Pick one track from Golden Hour. Listen once on your normal set-up. Then make one change only:
Move your chair 20–30cm forward or back, or
Toe-in by a small amount.
Write one line about what changed.
If you want, send me your notes and I will help you turn them into a short post for Trust Your Ears.
Interested in anything Lowther we would love to hear from you. Email - [email protected] and request a personalised quote.


