Inside Denon

Dolby Atmos Music,
Meet Your New (Denon) Home

Friends gathered listening to music on a Denon Home system

It’s understandable if you haven’t gotten around to checking out Dolby Atmos Music yet. The format is well established, the catalog keeps growing every day, and the mixes are truly extraordinary. But enjoying Dolby Atmos Music properly has always required a dedicated setup: a home theater system, a sound bar, or headphones capable of reproducing spatial audio—each a different kind of commitment, in gear, in space, or in the listening experience itself. A single wireless smart speaker filling a room with Atmos Music has never really been part of the conversation.


The Denon Home 200, 400, and 600 change that.


The newest members of the Denon Home family deliver Dolby Atmos Music in a fully expanded 3D soundstage with overhead sound that puts you inside the song instead of in front of it. Each model takes a different approach: The 200 virtualizes height through advanced digital processing, the 400 and 600 add physical up-firing height speakers, and the 600 adds dual built-in subwoofers for deeper low end.

Old time Japan

If you’re new to Dolby Atmos, the great news is you can be up and running in the time it takes to read this paragraph. Download the HEOS app through the App Store or Google Play, connect your Denon Home speaker to Wi-Fi, link your streaming service, and you’re in. The HEOS app, which manages your Denon whole-home streaming experience, supports Dolby Atmos Music through TIDAL and Amazon Music Unlimited. These services offer extensive Atmos content and playlists by genre, mood, and artist—so if you’re already a subscriber, your favorite music in Atmos may be closer than you think. Just use the universal search right in the HEOS app.


To give you a feel for what the new Denon Home speakers can do, we’ve put together a TIDAL playlist with some of our favorite Atmos tracks. Once you’ve connected TIDAL in the HEOS app, head over to TIDAL, search for the “Denon Home 2026 Dolby Atmos Mixes” playlist by name, and save it in your favorites. Then, browse your TIDAL favorite playlists in HEOS and hit play. (You can also play directly through TIDAL Connect.) You’ll know you’re listening in Atmos when the Atmos icon appears on the Now Playing screen.

Here are a few highlights worth starting with. (While you can preview the songs here, playing Dolby Atmos tracks requires a TIDAL subscription and playback within the TIDAL mobile app.)


Norah Jones, “Come Away With Me”


This is a great place to start, not because it’s dramatic but because it isn’t. The Atmos mix brings out details in the intimate jazz-pop production without overwhelming the listener; instruments sit comfortably without crowding the center image, the song retains its restrained character, and the sense of space around each element is subtle rather than showy. 

The Doors, “Riders on the Storm”


The rain shower that opens this track has always been atmospheric, but in Atmos it becomes something else entirely, thunder and rain positioned directly overhead, pouring down around you as if you’re actually standing in the torrent. When Jim Morrison’s vocal enters, it anchors right in front of you, grounded and present, while backing vocals wash over the sides and above you along with the rain.

Billie Eilish, “Bad Guy”


Brother FINNEAS’ production is famously precise, and this Atmos mix is no exception. Eilish’s vocal is anchored dead center with an intimacy that feels almost uncomfortably close—particularly the whispered “duh” that’s become the track’s signature moment. Bass hits harder and punchier than the stereo mix, and synth textures move through the space around you with quiet intention. 

Ray Charles & Johnny Mathis, “Over the Rainbow”


This mix was mastered by Michael Romanowski, who we feature in Denon’s Meet the Makers series, and it earned him a Grammy Award for Best Immersive Audio Album. The Atmos mix fully envelops the listener, with orchestration, backing vocals, and instruments spread across the side, height, and rear field in an arrangement that feels intimate rather than theatrical. The vocal placement is particularly striking: Ray Charles anchored slightly left of center, Mathis to the right, the two voices occupying their own space in the soundstage without ever feeling separated. It’s a recording that rewards close listening.

Tiësto & The Chainsmokers, “Split (Only U)”


Save this one for last and crank it up. This is a heavy, bass-driven banger to begin with—but the Atmos mix transforms it into something genuinely immersive. The sweeping strings and vocal samples wrap around you, and the dynamic shift from cinematic to trap-infused to full electro-house is heightened by the spatial separation that Atmos makes possible. When the drop hits, it hits all around you. 

The Denon Home 200, 400, and 600 are ready to draw you into a new immersive listening experience. Our playlist is just a starting point; search your favorite artists and albums in Atmos and experience the music you love in a whole new dimension.

Meet the new Denon Home speakers

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