marshall bluetooth speaker review : I’ve wanted to do this review for the Marshall Stockwell Bluetooth speaker for a while, and it seems, given the number of emails I entered about it, utmost of you do too. A many times back, Marshall got dipped their toe into the consumer audio request, and since also, it seems they’ve gone ballistic with the number of speakers and headphones they’ve put out.

For this review, I had the option of going bigger or lower in the Marshall speaker range, but the Stockwell, which sits right in the middle of the company’s Bluetooth speaker lineup, just sounded right. So after a couple of months, how does it mound up, and can it beat my favorite speaker in this order, the potent iLoud speaker.
Marshall bluetooth speaker review
The Stockwell is Marshall’s mid-priced and mid-sized Bluetooth speaker designed to be used around the house, but it is still small enough to travel in a pinch. It has a claimed battery life of 25 hours, can be used to charge your phone on the go, and houses 2 2.5 inch drivers and hard controls for bass, midrange, and treble.
BUILD QUALITY & STYLING
The figure quality is a bit of a mixed bag for a speaker intended to be used on the go. For the utmost part, everything is excellent, from the girding casing right down to the tactile sense of the control clods. In a big way, what bothers me is that they stuck such a poor front caff
on the thing.
Related Post: How to make a microphone sound better live on pc
It’s a kind of cloth mesh that does not really inspire confidence in its long- term continuity when taken out of the home. I get that they’re trying to keep everything in line with the Marshall design morality, but there comes the point where style must take a aft seat to functionality.
Ok, I’ll admit that I’m a huge addict of the styling. Its antique design looks veritably cool and surely in line with the company’s amps, making them an icon in the music assiduity. The dials on top give a farther nod to that design morality, and it’s actually a veritably nice addition to swindle with the eq settings without digging into your phone’s settings.
In Fact, the whole top plate with its brass style is relatively fascinating, and we liked the tactile buttons as opposed to the touch-sensitive buttons that numerous of the challengers are going with currently. When not in use, you can press the buttons back into the lattice, making the speaker much easier to pack.
For as good- looking as the speaker is at the front, it’s appreciatively hideous from the reverse with all the quality control stickers going on, but thankfully you get a flip over a leather case that helps cover that up.
FEATURES – BATTERY, RANGE, ETC
While the Stockwell is not as point-rich as the Creative iRoar Go, it has a many tricks up its sleeve. As mentioned, you get the capability to control the volume and EQ settings directly from the device, but round the reverse, you’ll also find a USB2.0 harborage which you can connect your phone to charge. My only grouch with this is its placement should have been on one of the speaker’s sides, as having a string sticking right out the reverse seems like an afterthought on such a satiny design.
Battery life is stated at 25 hours and running it at about 80 volume for us it got close to that figure which is relatively applaudable.
The button layout is ridiculous as it does not give you the option to control playback on the device. That is fine in other minimum speakers, but seriously you are going to give me the option to acclimate the treble but not skip a track? Whoever allowed
that was a good idea should be fired.
SOUND QUALITY
You would suppose that having such a literal birth and character for good sound, this little speaker would live up to their claims of great sound. Unfortunately, I really set up it to be lacking, especially when the price is considered. It’s not bad per see, but it really leaves you wanting. For utmost people, this will be fine, but two effects stood out to me.
The first was the rather anemic and weak low end. I would have anticipated a far deeper low end from such a design, but Marshall Stockwell fails to give a real sense of depth and really comes piecemeal at high volume. That performance at high volume is the alternate strike; yes, the bass is poorly affected, but so is the rest of the sound, and it starts to degrade relatively poorly as you push the unit harder.
At further moderate volume, the speaker sounded good with gemstone and pop stripes with affable smooth mids. The top end was at times a bit harsh, but other times, I relatively enjoyed the sparkle. I wish it had further of a grown to compliment EDM music.
In terms of loudness, it did get relatively loud indeed though that deformation is hard to ignore. You could fill a decent- sized room with enough sound.
Conclusion
It’s a shame that Marshall Stockwell fails to sound as good as it looks and doesn’t make our list of the best bluetooth speakers. Having a long history of using Marshal amps, I really wanted to like the speaker. Still, given its price and mediocre sound performance, I would have a tough time recommending it to anyone. It’s not really that it is a bad speaker. It’s just that there are now so many speakers on the market that sound better.