When my grandparents moved from their old house to a retirement village, they realized they no longer needed their rarely used computer, and it was given to me, along with a printer that quickly died and a Boston Acoustics multimedia speaker system. The most important of any of these gifts by far are the speakers. The set had two small tweeters and a subwoofer, and could really put out some sound. They are now over ten years old and still sound great.
A few years ago, when I first began experimenting with building my own electric violin, my dad bought me a SWR California Blonde II acoustic instrument amplifier. This 250-watt beast has a 12" subwoofer and a tweeter as well. It sounds amazing with my violin, and was a huge upgrade from the little Fender 15-watt amp I used before. The California Blonde also features a stereo input-meaning you can blast music from your ipod. Sweet.
The California Blonde itself will vibrate the lights out of their sockets in my room, and I have never turned it up past half-volume. It gives me all the bass I could ask for. When I bought a splitter for my ipod, I plugged into my amp and into my Boston Acoustics system. When levels are set correctly, the entire house can relish my fantastic taste in music. Unfortunately, once the TV in the other room reaches max volume and still cannot be heard I am reminded in sign language to please turn the volume down.
But now, let me explain to you how I have a stereo experience in bed. I am a fan of having the tweeters in a sound system evenly distributed about the listener, as it maximizes the faithfulness of the listening experience. At one point, I had a tweeter in each corner of my bed for a truly quadraphonic experience, but now I prefer two tweeters by the headboard, a sub overhead, and a sub preferably near the base of the bed. Unfortunately (or maybe fortunately) my amp is extremely massive, and as a result does not reside comfortably at the end of the bed. I have placed it to one side, and the results are still fabulous. In reality, the placement of the speakers that produce lower frequencies are less critical than high frequency speakers because it is more difficult for the human ear to determine the direction of these lower frequencies.
I am beginning work on an integrated speaker box to attach to the underside of my bed in order to activate complete entertainment mode.
Rock it out at www.univers-al.blogspot.com. Thanks for your interest.