06 tháng 04, 2013 12:22 Dũng viết:
One review (most helpful from Amazon)
I'm a grad student with no money and inexplicably picky tastes in
audio equipment. Having acquired a high-end digital stage piano, I've
spent the last few months piecing together a suitable setup for home
use; in my case, 'suitable' means near-reference grade, but at a cost
not exceeding what I can pilfer from Sallie Mae's purse.
Despite
the fact that I play and listen mostly at night, I viewed headphones in
proportion to their size: reluctantly, I splurged on a $30 pair of Sony
oil-barrels.
But after a few weeks of headaches and ringing ears,
I headed down to a boutiquey little sound emporium in Boston, having
committed myself to spending $100, once and for all, on some SR80s.
Given
the opportunity, though, I sat down in a studio and worked my way
through the entire three-figure-price spectrum of headphones.
Grado
yielded the most promising batch of candidates, but I was surprised at
the variance among them: the product specs you read online for Grado
really fails to emphasize this. The SR80s were everything I had
expected, but then, the SR125s were identifiably more adept at rendering
distinct voices within a choir.
Then, foolishly, I clamped on a
pair of 225s: bass pours into your head with effortless clarity,
background instruments that I never even heard on my old ear-traps were
not only present, but warmly textured, etc. When I got them home, $175
later, I decided to baptize them by fire with a mix of Beck and Ben
Folds Live, which I find stubbornly muggy at high bass and volume.
The
225s have revealed a completely unknown layer of instrumentation in
some of my favorite Beck tracks -- I don't just mean there's a new cello
back there: I mean there's a flute, a panpipe, a tapdancer, and a fat
booger hanging out of the cellist's nose. As for the live recordings of
Ben Folds, not only did the bottom-end piano hold up amidst the hum of
the crowd, but you can actually hear people talking to each other in the
audience in a couple of tracks that were recorded, it's now evident, in
a small theater.
And as for my own piano, I can say that playing
through headphones is no longer less desirable than through a set of
very commendable Infinity speakers -- especially when I have the phones
plugged into my amp instead of the piano itself.
I don't care how
broke you are: if you listen attentively to your music -- and you have a
quality home amp or receiver to drive these headphones to their
potential -- you will not look back.