Solder is pretty soft, but, of course, it depends on the strength of the spring clamping down on the wire and the total surface area. That's why I don't much like those knife-edge clamps in most electrical outlets, either. Having something like that carry 15 amps seems risky.It's not the resistance of the solder. It's turning the wire end into a rigid cylindrical pin. The spring clamp is two flat edges that clamp the wire. Two flat edges only contact a cylinder on two pin points. It's that reduction of the conductor mass in that spot that acts like a resistor.
Now there are different spring clips and some of them have larger surface area contact. But the cheap ones exist and that would be the maybe not obvious at a glance concern.
Banana plugs are good for speaker connections! Recognized as the speaker plug looking connector and everything. +1 to that
If you want a super power with electronics, computers, and anything that needs wires connected? Recognize that these connections are not trivial and use the proper wires and connections. Shielding. Ground draining. Follow the design and don't alter it with substitutes.
Treat the cables and connectors like the most delicate equipment you own. Don't treat cables like rope and put any tension on them! That means no coiling like rope with little tugs and tight coils. 99/100 of the first failures or weird and intermittent malfunctions are some connection failing. Treat your cables and connectors religiously and 30 years of heavy use later... everything still just works like always.