When the courier dropped off the box containing a new Denon AVR-S750H off at my house for a review, he asked if that was really a Denon AV receiver inside. When I confirmed the contents, he nodded approvingly. “Nice.” Unfortunately, I didn’t get to keep it. Once the review wrapped up, the Denon AVR-S750H 7.2ch 4K AV receiver with voice control was dutifully packed up and shipped back to Best Buy. But that means you could be the one to get the thumbs up from a courier, when they drop this awesome receiver off at your home. Best Buy is giving away the same Denon AVR-S750H receiver that I reviewed to a lucky winner in this contest.
Denon is one of the top names in home audio
There are a few brands that come up repeatedly in conversations about high performance audio gear, and Denon is one of them. The company has been at the centre of audio innovation for more than a century, starting with the sale of gramophones and including global “firsts” like the worlds first commercial CD player, the CD-ROM in 1984, the world’s first Dolby Atmos-enabled AV receiver, and 2018’s 13.2 channel AV receiver. Audio products with the Denon logo have a well-earned reputation for first-class engineering, advanced technology and class-leading performance.
The Denon AVR-S750H may feature “only” 7.2 channels, but it lives up to the Denon reputation and then some.
A serious upgrade for your home theatre setup, including 3D sound
The Denon AVR-S750H 7.2ch 4K AV receiver will be a serious upgrade for virtually any home theatre setup. And if this is your first AV receiver, you’ll be starting with the key component—the receiver—that’s best-in-class.
Let’s start with power. The AVR-S750H has discrete amplifiers that deliver power to each of its seven channels. There’s a total of 165W of amplification on tap. Naturally it fully supports 4K Ultra HD sources including HDR and Dolby Vision compatibility, provides 4K video upscaling, has six HDMI inputs (plus one HDMI output) and supports eARC and BT.2020 passthrough.
Setting up an AV receiver can be a project, especially one that supports 7.2 channel surround sound. Denon does a nice job of labelling the inputs on the back of the AVR-S750H to make this as straightforward as possible. Once you connect to your TV, Denon also includes a really handy guided setup that walks you through the steps needed to get the receiver and your home theatre audio system up and running. Also included in the box is an Audyssey microphone and stand so the receiver can perfectly calibrate itself once you have everything plugged in and ready to go.
This receiver also goes beyond surround sound to support the latest in 3D audio standards, including Dolby Atmos, DTS:X, Dolby Atmos Height Virtualization, and DTS Virtual:X. Even if you don’t currently have Dolby Atmos-certified speakers, the AVR-S750H uses Dolby Atmos Height Virtualization technology to simulate height effects in regular 2.2, 5.2 or 7.2 speaker setups.
To put it in a nutshell, if your family room TV is connected to a Denon AVR-S750H 7.2ch 4K AV receiver, you’re going to be coming home from the movie theatre wondering why its sound system can’t keep up with the one you have at home …
Voice control, Wireless streaming, and multi-room audio
The hottest category of smart home devices is easily the smart speaker. With the Denon AVR-S750H, it doesn’t matter which of the digital assistants you prefer. It supports Alexa, Google Assistant, and Siri. Denon’s HEOS app is the key. It’s easy to set up the receiver and the smart speaker of your choice to “talk” to each other using the app. The smart speaker and the AVR-S750H don’t need to be physically connected, just on the same Wi-Fi network.
Speaking of the HEOS app, you can also use it to make the AVR-S750H part of a multi-room audio setup made up of other HEOS-supporting receivers or wireless speakers.
That HEOS wireless technology is also at the heart of the AVR-S750H’s built-in audio streaming capabilities. Connect it to your Wi-Fi network and stream from sources including Spotify, Amazon Prime Music and iHeart Radio. You can also stream music wirelessly (with support for all popular lossless and lossy formats) from your smartphone or other source, using Bluetooth or Apple AirPlay.
Are you a fan of vinyl? This is the AV receiver you’ve been waiting for …
One of the reasons I was excited about the opportunity to try out the Denon AVR-S750H had nothing to do with multi-channel home theatre, wireless connectivity, or voice control support. In fact it was all about an old-school, analog music format that’s made a huge comeback: vinyl records.
Many of the AV receivers on the market lack support for a turntable or record player. They’re designed for an all-digital lifestyle. If you want to connect one to play records using standard PHONO output, you’ll need to invest in a pre-amplifier. That means another box, and more wires. But Denon included a PHONO input with a ground post on the AVR-S750H. As part of my review (you can read it here if you’d like to learn more), I hooked up a turntable to the Denon receiver, along with a pair of speakers for that classic stereo setup and it proved to be a great option for listening to vinyl.
With the Denon AVR-S750H you can fully integrate your turntable with your AV sound system to take full advantage of that retro sound, and you won’t need any additional equipment.
How to enter
As always, it’s both easy and free to enter this Best Buy contest, but you can only enter once. Simply leave a comment below to tell us how you will control the Denon receiver and why. Will you use the remote, Google Assistant, Siri, Amazon Alexa … a combination? Don’t forget to explain why!
What you can win
At the end of this contest we will select one winner from all eligible entries to receive the same Denon AVR-S750H 7.2ch 4K AV receiver that I reviewed on the Best Buy Blog.
This contest runs from Sept 13th until Sept 30th.
Remember you can only enter once but you must know someone else who would love to upgrade their home theatre, so share this post with them so they too have a chance to win.
Win a Denon 4K Receiver Contest Rules and Regulations
Good Luck
I will use the remote because I’m old school that way! 😉
I would be satisfied to use the remote control.
I would use the remote!
I would likely be satisfied to use the remote control.
I’m gonna control this baby using a combination of Google Voice (thanks to the Nest’s I bought at Best Buy) along with a Logitech universal remote (also bought at Best Buy! ^_^)
Can’t wait to win!! 😀
Would love to win this for my husband! thanks for the chance!
I would likely use the remote but also play with the Google option. See which one is better!
I would use the google assistant as that is what we use now in our home so no need to change it up. awesome giveaway
I will use google home most likely.
I would use this to control my entire media setup. I’ll just use the remote. Thanks for the chance to win!
I would use the remote because I’m not a digital assistant person. At least not yet.
I’d use the remote to control the Denon receiver because Google Assistant, Siri, Alexa are always listening. Yikes, that creeps me out 🙂
With the remote.
I would use our Harmony remote, still trying to get use to the Google Assistant
I would use the remote as I’m not a fan of disembodied voices doing my work.
most def the remote!
I would use the remote.
Probably a combo, because the damn remote is always lost.
I’d use the remote
I’d use the remote for control. Remotes are familiar, and voice control doesn’t feel comfortable.
At this point I would use the remote b/c my son would have to teach me how to use the other options. 🙂
I would use the remote to start with. I’m not too technology smart. Afterwards I’d research and discover more.
I’d use the remote that was included because I don’t like adding extra devices.
I’d use Amazon Alexa because I have that set up in my home
I would use Google Assistant to control the receiver.
I would set it up for all my audio needs including home theatre and control it with a remote as I don’t currently have voice activated hardware.
I’d use the remote. I don’t have any of those google minis or apple gadgets.
I would use the remote which is supplied with the Denon AVR-S750H 7.2ch 4K AV receiver. The supplied remote will provide full access to all the features of the receiver. In combination with the HEOS App from the Google Play Store to play music from online streaming music services or from my personal music library.
home theatre remote
Logitech is the way to control things!!!
I would use Siri to control the Denon receiver because I would find it most convenient!
I’ll will be using a combination as it suits our lifestyle.
I would use Siri because it’s the easiest way to operate it.
I would use siri because I love being able to just say what I want.
I’d probably use the remote to control it!
I would probably mostly use the remote to control it, as I’m a bit old-school that way, but I might experiment a bit with the Google Assistant on my phone too.
I would have to use the remote as I don’t have any techy gadgets.
I’d use the remote only, because there’s already enough tech listening in on us as is! 🙂
Would use the remote for home theatre surround sound
I would like to set it up in my home theatre room and use siri to operate it.
Connect to play records.
Will run all my devices ( TV, bose mustic system, radio & phone} through it because as I get older Siri just doesn’t hear me well enough or me her
I’ll use my new Huawei !
Can I use it to search for ET?!
Sounds like it does everything else…
At the least I’ll use it to get to siri- I swear that byotch gets harder of hearing with every IOS update
I would control the Denon receiver using Siri , because I love being able to command my music hands free in my hoome. Siri, play my music!
I would likely go old school and use the remote. I could use Alexa or Siri but sometimes they are more annoying so if I want to enjoy my music I think the remote would be the best option with no yelling involved.
I would use the remote or the knobs …never voice controls.
I will use the remote because I don’t have any of the other ways at home.
I would use the remote
I would use the remote
We would definately use the remote!
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