Overall the sound is incredible. The major caveat is the stereo to mono conversion, which impacts some recordings more than others, and is what it is. That aside, I'm completely blown away by the big, full warmth and clarity that the little amp can push out that single box/driver, and the way the sounds bounce around inside the box. It's really got me doing more focused listening to/appreciating music rather than just having it as background to other activities. I could go on for quite awhile about how it handles different styles, as I listen to many, 3 things jump out at me.
1. One of my all time favorite albums is Miles' In a Silent Way. There is a lot of space around the instruments and I'm hearing things for the first time through the amp, especially in the low registers, such as subdued but omnipresent rumblings of the electric synths.
2. Modern R&B and Hip/hop. Not what I listen to most, but given the unrepentant digital hi-fi nature of many such recordings, I would not necessarily have expected this setup to be the best delivery system. To the contrary, the clarity and definition is top-notch (minus, of course, stereo to mono losses which can skewer the relative levels of voices and instruments) and the system adds a nice woody warmth on top of it. The vocals often sound like they are being recorded right in the box.
3. Acoustic music/Bluegrass. Absolutely breathtaking. This set-up was made for acoustic music and acoustic music for it. If this were all or most of what I listened to, my perfectly respectable Klipsch powered satellite speakers and subwoofer would be on Craigslist. Great acoustic tone is as important to me as great tube amp tone (I recently sold a Santa Cruz and bought a Huss and Dalton if that's any indication) and there are songs I could listen to over and over through this amp. One that comes to mind is a progressive, gypsy-esque Tony Rice tune called Port Tobacco, which has some of the coolest, complex interplay between guitar, mandolin, and upright bass I've heard, and they all shine through. Here, even stereo to mono losses are more than made up for by instrument tone.
Honorable mention also to Wagner overtures, preludes, etc.
One final observation is that the simple but very useful treble/bass tone stack invites tweaking for different albums.
So, thanks again for all the help! Happy to answer any questions, but at this point you've probably read way more than you cared to anyway
Joe