Headphone Heights

Avoid anything that sounds too bright...

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Avoid headphones (or loudspeakers for that matter) that might accentuate the upper frequencies too much. Compared to smaller venues (jazz clubs, etc..,), the sheer size of symphonic halls tend to suppress the higher frequencies a bit. Headphones that image really well or seem to throw a huge soundstage might seem to be the proper choice at first, but unless they have the type of frequency response that allows symphonic music recordings to sound as if I am sitting in a good seat in the symphony hall. Massed strings that sound too steely, horn sections with too much bite, etc.., cymbals with too much splash will sound fatiguing and unnatural with overly bright headphones.

So, what I am listening for (in classical music headphones) is not simply a feeling of space or distance between myself and the performance but also a feeling that the recording venue is large and that the air has great(er) density - a feeling unlike that which I would have sitting in a small bar or jazz club, for instance.

Classical chamber music might be better served by a brighter sounding headphone but I still don't want to be distracted by too much high-frequency detail - unless the recording is supposed to sound that way, of course.

Many seem to prefer some of the the "darker sounding" older model headphones from Audeze or Sennheiser for classical music, and I would tend to agree with them on this point.


Edits: 03/10/14   03/10/14

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