Vibro Labs - Maya Review
November 2016



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Firstly a thanks to Ejong7 & Luke Pighetti @ Vibro labs for letting me be part of the Maya tour and be able to spend two weeks with them in comfort of my own home to do a review on them.
To start with I am one of those who had heard of Vibro Labs and kept hearing about the Aria’s in circles on head-fi but had not manage to hear a pair and see the tour come up so decided to see what the talk was about as I was looking for another pair of IEM’s also.So I am glad for the opportunity to try the Mayas in the comfort of my own home for a couple of weeks.
The gear tested with the Mayas in this review is:
All files in either Flac or WAV format.

Maya Stats:
The Build



The Mayas come in an exhibition case which is essentially a pelican case with Vibro Labs badging on lid which is idiot and tank proof and has had the clever sense to have a laser cut die foam for the IEM shells to sit in and the excess cable sit under the foam whilst the Buckeye finished Mayas are on display through the clear window of the Pelican case.
The Mayas come both Comfort and isolate comply tips in three different sizes for both (small, Medium & large) and also a round soft zipper ballistics type case in addition.
To top it off Vibro labs offer two years warranty which is handy!
The shells themselves are a good quality and the faceplate was a seem-less affair with a smokey see through shell which shoes how sparse the shell is with only packing quad drivers only. The cable supplied is the standard affair you see with other IEMS which works quite well with the Mayas.
The Comply tips was for me a mixed experience as I used them many moons ago and I tried all sizes in both types but for me after a prolonged listen they became irritable and noticed my ears sweating quite a lot inside (presumably due to such a tight seal) with Comply’s so even though they sounded alright was just a comfort issue for me which led me to wonder if I got these I would be better of jumping to custom fit for only another $100 with Vibrolabs. I would have tried silicone but I had all narrower IEM tips so made it hard to try any other tips with the Mayas in the time I had them.
Sound Impressions…

Sometimes you listen to something for the first time and the first track you listen to within that first minute you think you are listening to something special that is a bit different… well the Maya’s were just that for me but of course you then have to say to yourself was it just that one track that just happened to sound impressive and everything else after that does not live up to expectation of what you initially heard. This is where the Sherlock Holmes in me was intrigued and investigated further.
First thing that struck me was how intimate and close the music was to me yet had room to breathe with plenty of air and placement and layout of instruments was nothing I had heard for a long time on an IEM and I have heard quite a few this year.
I felt I was having an education in less drivers = more as it sounds like this driver set up of a quad BA almost doesn’t sound like listening to BA drivers the way it has been tuned and almost sounds dynamic like in its cohesive sound field yet is fast in response and keeps a good up tempo to songs as it sounds effortless and engaging like I have not heard for a while in an IEM. The nearest I can put these too in the way they image and present the music in semi over lapping layers timed perfectly is the Mr. Speakers Ethers and the way Dan tuned them but these seem faster in their pace.
The way the Mayas are tuned with its energising non offensively tuned signature makes these forgiving with poor recordings even much so that they actually sound somehow quite good to listen to which I found a mystery but some of my old songs on cd from the late 80’s to early 90’s was the first time I could sit and enjoy listening to them as previously these recordings would sound dull and enclosed even through something like my Chord Hugo DAC but yet the Mayas was like some sort of Enigma decoding device for music as it was separating the information better to those old lifeless recordings and think the very close presentation the Mayas provide with the mids, vocals and the treble section been extended with a life like guilt edge to musical notes that pass through the Mayas.

The treble is never harsh or too sharp but at same time is equally gets your ears taking note of its presence yet it just made those old recordings come to life like I have not heard on many other IEMs before with tired old recordings which was a big bonus as you just assume when you’re getting a flagship IEM that can excel with detail it is going to be not so forgiving with those older recordings but with the Mayas this was not the case.
It’s probably the Mayas been forgiven at the top end that is what appeals a lot amongst its array of appeal abilities as you know you are not going to get any nasty surprises and Vibro Labs have shown you do not need a screeching tuned high end to get a good extension with realistic sounding Hi-Hats, symbols etc. The track I find tests the theory is the Michael Jackson speed demon remix which is fast paced but with a lot of gear will make your ears bleed but the Mayas are so fluid and smooth but not warm or fuzzy at all. Have to say it is joy to hear this song without my ears been stabbed with what felt like a hot poker!
Imaging and soundstage is wide and spatial with placement of instruments guided with high accuracy. Vocals and micro details are immersive and again all adds to the layers you hear on the Mayas. Arrangement and placement of instruments and vocals is clarity preserved with a good ability to time details to layer in back and forth just at the right moments keeps your attention without your brain having to try hard to listen out for any nuances in details the Mayas reproduce.
My impression painting a picture in my head when I was listening to these was like having a centre channel speaker with the left and right channels and then the extra width in the soundstage was like having two side speakers coming in but the way imaging and soundstage is executed does not sound unnatural to listen to and is one of the more accurate IEM’s I have heard for natural and precise placement when engaged with the music playing.
I listened to some of my good old tried and tested demo tracks and for first time in a long time when I heard Yello “The Race” song the racing car at the start pans and tracks from left to right with perfect cohesion and the wide soundstage really helps give the effect of it zooming past in front of you from one side the other and then the solid mid bass performance of the Mayas kick in really well for the tempo as the song starts, it was a breath of fresh air listening to this old great demo track again and was very reminiscent of when I have heard that through floor standing speakers in the past. I would also say the Mayas soundstage has surpassed my original JH16’s which in comparison makes them sound a tad narrow channelled now.
I could not get over how most instruments on the Mayas manage to tonally sound real consistently with the guitars on anything having great leading edge detail to each string played you can easily tell what type of guitars they are playing. The detail been heard which is so easy to pick up for starters is not just what I’m hearing here it is the effect which feel real with really good reverb from strings, for instance like Hosiers album with “Get me to the church” track the bass guitar really has great slam and control of each note and is so easy to pick out yet the reverb really comes through in the big hall sound recording it portrays which again the Mayas can really let this song shine and make you believe you are there in that church with Hozier, it just has a great way of putting you right in there like you are there with them instead of been more in the crowd at the front but manages to do it without been weird and not sounding alien or messing up the soundstage with the way it comes across.
Even piano works do not sound coloured or off key and again the Mayas capture the detail of the in each piano note which I could sit there and easily listen to Tori Amos or Jacques Loussier as the piano even though the mids sound a little forward are not pushed in your face and hold a natural presence of tonality with any piano I heard on my time with these. It’s been a while since I heard Ivory’s on a pair of IEMS not sound thin or anaemic and have plenty of body to each note.

All Bass and Drums?
I have to say the bass registry is the only thing I really deliberated on in my own head whether I thought it was sitting just right at all placed in terms of imaging and delivery was suiting the rest of the elements that made the Maya signature what it was, there was nothing un-towards with the sound of the drums in terms of tonality and sounded real with hi-hats or the drum brushes are been used sends a tingle down my spine how natural it sounds but how the lower mids to upper mids was easy to separate what was going on but after listening to them for a while it made sense the way they have been tuned and laid out in the scheme of things as it becomes a natural cohesion of hearing the mid information first followed by the bass information just behind it never bleeding into the mids.
The bass never tread over mids at all, always been concise and clear all though prominent to the listener they deliver a balance of real mid bass has great texture in detail and control and lower mid bass has a good slam kick when needed or the recording delivers that info although the sub bass is not exactly far and few between on these it is only there If the recording requires it so after been used to a pair of JH16’s sort of always turned on type of sub sonic bass these are not going to be Richter scale 10 making the earth move inside my head with landslides every minute of the song but this is good as it will only reflect what the recording has to offer so it’s not as if the Mayas do not have a deep sub bass but they will choose to do it when required which gives a better sense of balance to the natural signature the Mayas try to provide with accurately portrayed instrument timbers so for me as long as you have the right size and type of tips in with a good seal you will hear a good quality deep sub bass when it is asked upon by the recording.
My JH16’s good as they rock for bass they are a forced tuned bass and good as this is for reliving all those gigs with super slamming bass it is not a natural response bass and the Mayas reflect the rest of its signature keeping this theme running. The good thing is when the sub bass is there is still takes you by surprise as you never know when it is going to just drop the beat to the basement floor and it’s like “holy Maya” after say three minutes into a song it can just come out and surprise you how low the Mayas bass just registered. They can deliver some form of bass slam when they want to, just not as often or still low for those familiar with a Jh16 level of bass or simply Beats depth of bass might want to audition these first to be sure if you can live without the thrills every five seconds of blow your socks off sub bass hit.

The Mayas lower bass to mid-range is arranged with tight grip and clarity with cutting guile to detail and never heard any muddying or tempo slow down at all and the way the bass is done with the rest of this IEM provides the right balance for it to do its magic in delivering a natural feel and sound with music. Would I still prefer the Mayas to have the levels of sub bass my JH16’s deliver?... yes and no, it would be nice if it had a bit more low bass reaction sometimes but having a JH16 reference of sub bass would ruin the essence and purity of the Maya’s strengths of providing a slightly mid prominent driven sound with a naturalness in tone and the spatial air these have to work would be ruined so I am happy with them where they are albeit another one or two db on the sub-bass would have been interesting to see if it would not ruin the current essence of Mayas signature.
Listening to music which had acoustic guitar… well I thought any of my favourite rock music like AC-DC, Muse, Slash, Joe Bonamassa was sounding fresh and new, no wait; real again then acoustic music is something else on these and listening to a less know English guy who has been around for years Adrian Legg if you can find his cd’s let alone streaming services out there really shows how string work should sound on an IEM let alone speakers yet my mouth was open at times with how nailed on the timing, imaging and minute amount of details to be heard was immense but all sounded natural and fluid with the treble end finely tuned just right to make the most of the fret detail sound sharp and real without bleeding or losing control and sounding unnaturally sharp. The extension on the treble with the Mayas really made acoustic steel guitar of Adrian Legg have a sense of height and realism as if listening to it live.
And talking of live music the Mayas are again just as comfortable with live music and really has the ability to scale the size of the concert with its sense of space ability to image accurately and noticed even the more not so well recorded live sets seem to have a little more energy to songs which is again in part to the mids just been raised a little all though you never notice with everything been so tonally natural sounding other than the closeness and up front sound which make up the Mayas traits to form the signature
As always Rodrigo & Gabriel’s slick hand work really shows up the fret details and how well the Maya deals with the speed of it all and showing the extension of the highs on their highly tuned or strung acoustic guitars. This is reminiscent to me of when I heard the Cavalli Liquid Gold amp and how it showed it could reproduce highs with great extension and trailing edges of notes and sound tonally so real without sounding thin and strained nor either too warm and really had not heard a treble like that on anything before I heard the Liquid Gold and for this to remind me of that shows how well the Mayas sound in what is just an important frequency path as the mids or bass.

Even though in general the Mayas are friendly even with poor recordings the only thing the Mayas did not forgive was anything with a poorly mastered top end and would sound quite flaky or crass at times (almost like listening to a mp3 compression with no detail in treble notes) so can only surmise the mids are tuned in a way that bring out dull recordings a bit but the tuning of the treble is a different challenge all together maybe but I’m glad the Mayas concentrated on getting the treble right with high quality recordings as this is not the Mayas fault recordings are bag crap by so many labels to start with but when there is a top notch quality mastered recording done correctly the reward is like icing on the cake with the rest of the Mayas signature.
I have not got lost in all my live albums for a long time going through Muse in Rome, Def Leppard Live in Vegas, Fleetwood Mac – The Dance, Cream Royal Albert Hall with that 19 minute drumming song Toad which is a good showcase for the Mayas maintains tight mid to low mid bass high amounts of energy but the one that was put on the demo peddle stall that complimented the Mayas was Ryan Adams - Ten Songs from Carnegie Hall which is recorded to a high standard as are most of R. Adams albums to be fair but he is one of those artist that seems to almost personally put sound quality at the forefront of everything he does and the Mayas openness with soundstage and ability to hang out fine details so clearly and precisely with even the usual spurts of coughing and people rustling in their chairs was a joy to hear with this recording.
Those who are a bit sensitive to high frequency’s and like their treble with plenty of detail and extension yet stay smooth enough without sounding warm will like the Mayas treble for sure.

Vocals
This is another main factor that hooked me straight away was the Mayas take on vocalists, near field positioning yet with plenty of breathing space so vocals always stay concise and easy to track especially backing vocals having a way of steering themselves even busy passages of music to sit in just the right placement depth just between the lead vocals and the rest of the music.
The timbre and grains of detail make a singer’s palate come to life with neutral tonality which makes vocals have more realism especially when they sound close as the Mayas portray the mic of a singer. I personally love the vocals which excel with the mids and propel songs with confidence in portraying the emotion of the song to come through.
The Mayas ability with the highs extension allow vocals to soar and hold on to their notes longer like Ellie Goulding’s Delirium album or Sarah McLachlan’s Fumbling towards Ecstasy where you can hear the rasp in her voice and the saliva as she sings more notes which is another old recording (early 90’s) reborn with the Mayas for me. This is one of my more favourite vocal set ups of recent times tuned on an IEM as it really does pull you into the music if you can hear the vocalist properly to start with and Vibro Labs certainly mastered that here as I never get fatigued listening to vocals on the Mayas with the placement, detail and clarity of whoever singing (I most probably do include Shane
When I had my trusty old Sony ZX1 on shuffle one night a couple of OST tracks came on, the first been the Armageddon soundtrack by Trevor Rabin has great clarity and depth with height give the Mayas a big scope with soundtracks none more so than the master of film scores Hans Zimmer’s Inception or Interstellar really stretches the fabrication of its cohesive sound and tests the low end and high end extension than most music will do out there and the Mayas handle it with ease but listening to film scores through the Mayas will give you the impression you may have open back cans on with its large scale and ability to add weight and body to some of these demanding tracks Hans Zimmer produces.



Which leads me on the side for a minute to TV & Films as I have been watching the Westworld series every week and one night was a bit late so watched it on my laptop in bed with the Mayas with it through the Chord Hugo and was honestly blown away how good these where with TV shows or films as the large panoramic soundstage and imaging is set for these types of shows so will be watching more films or shows with them from now on as Mayas are perfect with those vocals and clarity and precision of noises and sound effects for films to excel.
The Mayas paired well with any source I put with them and did not have any issues with hiss with my gear unless I put my Vorzuge Pure amp on med gain there was a slight hiss then with no music playing but these do not need med gain so was all okay for me. They loved been with the Hugo and with my ZX1 Walkman brought great dynamics with a perfect signature match together.
The Mayas are one of those IEMS that is just simply great with any genre but super excels a tad with more acoustic and vocals and handles anything thrown at it really as it is agile, fast, smooth and quite a forgiving IEM with poorer recordings and with high quality recordings this is a non-stop “Mayathon” of musical happiness as they are non-fatiguing to listen too.
Jazz, Blues and classical are also perfect match for the Mayas also from tracks I played from Gregory Porter to Nina Simone and BB King and the only genre that for some may not feel there is enough in terms of quantity in the Sub Bass area for those who may like a lot of Heavy Metal or Dance/ Club anthems as some might be looking for that more constant visceral thumping bass but I personally like the balance as I think it would detract away from the balance of this tuned set up the Mayas has. Again after what I’ve heard so far I’m a happy camper in the Maya park so far.
I have heard plenty of IEMs of late and most that go past the clouds in the price ladder making the Mayas look like a toy but apart from a couple I’ve heard of late which one is two times dearer and the other is six times dearer! I just feel the Mayas for the money are different and something I feel is more a speaker profound in its delivery which is a feat for pair of IEMS which makes it feel like listening to the Mayas is like listening to vinyl… Analog fluidity will embarrass some of those other BA driver IEMS out there that can sound more digital in comparison with the Mayas natural timbered fluid and open sound.


Conclusion...
Apart from two minor quirks for me with maybe a tad more bass could have been tuned just a tad more without affecting the current signature would of given that little extra bit more weight in the sub bass and the issue for me personally with the Complys would be nice to have silicone tips that fit also as an alternative but it has been hard for me to pick any real negatives as this happens to be especially for the price a high performing signature IEM that made me forget wanting to listen to my JH16’s for the first time ever in five years!
Apart from that I have found this one hard to find many negatives with as for me it is the most balanced natural friendly and open soundstage non fatiguing IEM at a good price for the sound I have heard for a long time.
The epiphany moment with these Mayas was less than a minute into my first song with them and just knew they would be something special… a bit like that famous scene out of Jerry Maguire when Rene Zellweger says to Tom Cruise “You had me at hello”, well the Mayas had me at track one.
I originally thought I was finally getting to hear the Arias putting myself forward for this tour but Luke sprung the surprise on us it would be something different and ended up been the Mayas and how glad I am he did as even after hearing so many IEMS lately even in the sky is the limit price range I have not been more happy with the way the Mayas find a finely tuned perfect harmony balance between detail, dynamics, space, musicality with a sense of tonal realism. I’m off to start my Maya fund and hopefully get these soon as I miss them already.
Maya the force be with you.
It’s not a race, it’s a Mayathon…

November 2016



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Firstly a thanks to Ejong7 & Luke Pighetti @ Vibro labs for letting me be part of the Maya tour and be able to spend two weeks with them in comfort of my own home to do a review on them.
To start with I am one of those who had heard of Vibro Labs and kept hearing about the Aria’s in circles on head-fi but had not manage to hear a pair and see the tour come up so decided to see what the talk was about as I was looking for another pair of IEM’s also.So I am glad for the opportunity to try the Mayas in the comfort of my own home for a couple of weeks.
The gear tested with the Mayas in this review is:
- Chord Hugo with DFI USB cable from HP Spectre X360
- Vorzuge Pureii+ amp
- Sony ZX1 Walkman
- HIFIMAN SuperMini & MegaMini
- Tag Mclaren DVD32R top loader CD player via Chord Indigo COAX into Hugo.
All files in either Flac or WAV format.

Maya Stats:
- California Buckeye
- Smoke SLA shells
- 20Hz – 20kHz+
- 12Ω impedance
- 114 dB/mw sensitivity
In the box
- Maya earphone
- 2-pin detachable cable
- Standard & Exhibition cases
- Comply Comfort & Isolate tips
- 2 year warranty
The Build



The Mayas come in an exhibition case which is essentially a pelican case with Vibro Labs badging on lid which is idiot and tank proof and has had the clever sense to have a laser cut die foam for the IEM shells to sit in and the excess cable sit under the foam whilst the Buckeye finished Mayas are on display through the clear window of the Pelican case.
The Mayas come both Comfort and isolate comply tips in three different sizes for both (small, Medium & large) and also a round soft zipper ballistics type case in addition.
To top it off Vibro labs offer two years warranty which is handy!
The shells themselves are a good quality and the faceplate was a seem-less affair with a smokey see through shell which shoes how sparse the shell is with only packing quad drivers only. The cable supplied is the standard affair you see with other IEMS which works quite well with the Mayas.
The Comply tips was for me a mixed experience as I used them many moons ago and I tried all sizes in both types but for me after a prolonged listen they became irritable and noticed my ears sweating quite a lot inside (presumably due to such a tight seal) with Comply’s so even though they sounded alright was just a comfort issue for me which led me to wonder if I got these I would be better of jumping to custom fit for only another $100 with Vibrolabs. I would have tried silicone but I had all narrower IEM tips so made it hard to try any other tips with the Mayas in the time I had them.
Sound Impressions…

Sometimes you listen to something for the first time and the first track you listen to within that first minute you think you are listening to something special that is a bit different… well the Maya’s were just that for me but of course you then have to say to yourself was it just that one track that just happened to sound impressive and everything else after that does not live up to expectation of what you initially heard. This is where the Sherlock Holmes in me was intrigued and investigated further.
First thing that struck me was how intimate and close the music was to me yet had room to breathe with plenty of air and placement and layout of instruments was nothing I had heard for a long time on an IEM and I have heard quite a few this year.
I felt I was having an education in less drivers = more as it sounds like this driver set up of a quad BA almost doesn’t sound like listening to BA drivers the way it has been tuned and almost sounds dynamic like in its cohesive sound field yet is fast in response and keeps a good up tempo to songs as it sounds effortless and engaging like I have not heard for a while in an IEM. The nearest I can put these too in the way they image and present the music in semi over lapping layers timed perfectly is the Mr. Speakers Ethers and the way Dan tuned them but these seem faster in their pace.
The way the Mayas are tuned with its energising non offensively tuned signature makes these forgiving with poor recordings even much so that they actually sound somehow quite good to listen to which I found a mystery but some of my old songs on cd from the late 80’s to early 90’s was the first time I could sit and enjoy listening to them as previously these recordings would sound dull and enclosed even through something like my Chord Hugo DAC but yet the Mayas was like some sort of Enigma decoding device for music as it was separating the information better to those old lifeless recordings and think the very close presentation the Mayas provide with the mids, vocals and the treble section been extended with a life like guilt edge to musical notes that pass through the Mayas.

The treble is never harsh or too sharp but at same time is equally gets your ears taking note of its presence yet it just made those old recordings come to life like I have not heard on many other IEMs before with tired old recordings which was a big bonus as you just assume when you’re getting a flagship IEM that can excel with detail it is going to be not so forgiving with those older recordings but with the Mayas this was not the case.
It’s probably the Mayas been forgiven at the top end that is what appeals a lot amongst its array of appeal abilities as you know you are not going to get any nasty surprises and Vibro Labs have shown you do not need a screeching tuned high end to get a good extension with realistic sounding Hi-Hats, symbols etc. The track I find tests the theory is the Michael Jackson speed demon remix which is fast paced but with a lot of gear will make your ears bleed but the Mayas are so fluid and smooth but not warm or fuzzy at all. Have to say it is joy to hear this song without my ears been stabbed with what felt like a hot poker!
Imaging and soundstage is wide and spatial with placement of instruments guided with high accuracy. Vocals and micro details are immersive and again all adds to the layers you hear on the Mayas. Arrangement and placement of instruments and vocals is clarity preserved with a good ability to time details to layer in back and forth just at the right moments keeps your attention without your brain having to try hard to listen out for any nuances in details the Mayas reproduce.
My impression painting a picture in my head when I was listening to these was like having a centre channel speaker with the left and right channels and then the extra width in the soundstage was like having two side speakers coming in but the way imaging and soundstage is executed does not sound unnatural to listen to and is one of the more accurate IEM’s I have heard for natural and precise placement when engaged with the music playing.
I listened to some of my good old tried and tested demo tracks and for first time in a long time when I heard Yello “The Race” song the racing car at the start pans and tracks from left to right with perfect cohesion and the wide soundstage really helps give the effect of it zooming past in front of you from one side the other and then the solid mid bass performance of the Mayas kick in really well for the tempo as the song starts, it was a breath of fresh air listening to this old great demo track again and was very reminiscent of when I have heard that through floor standing speakers in the past. I would also say the Mayas soundstage has surpassed my original JH16’s which in comparison makes them sound a tad narrow channelled now.
I could not get over how most instruments on the Mayas manage to tonally sound real consistently with the guitars on anything having great leading edge detail to each string played you can easily tell what type of guitars they are playing. The detail been heard which is so easy to pick up for starters is not just what I’m hearing here it is the effect which feel real with really good reverb from strings, for instance like Hosiers album with “Get me to the church” track the bass guitar really has great slam and control of each note and is so easy to pick out yet the reverb really comes through in the big hall sound recording it portrays which again the Mayas can really let this song shine and make you believe you are there in that church with Hozier, it just has a great way of putting you right in there like you are there with them instead of been more in the crowd at the front but manages to do it without been weird and not sounding alien or messing up the soundstage with the way it comes across.
Even piano works do not sound coloured or off key and again the Mayas capture the detail of the in each piano note which I could sit there and easily listen to Tori Amos or Jacques Loussier as the piano even though the mids sound a little forward are not pushed in your face and hold a natural presence of tonality with any piano I heard on my time with these. It’s been a while since I heard Ivory’s on a pair of IEMS not sound thin or anaemic and have plenty of body to each note.

All Bass and Drums?
I have to say the bass registry is the only thing I really deliberated on in my own head whether I thought it was sitting just right at all placed in terms of imaging and delivery was suiting the rest of the elements that made the Maya signature what it was, there was nothing un-towards with the sound of the drums in terms of tonality and sounded real with hi-hats or the drum brushes are been used sends a tingle down my spine how natural it sounds but how the lower mids to upper mids was easy to separate what was going on but after listening to them for a while it made sense the way they have been tuned and laid out in the scheme of things as it becomes a natural cohesion of hearing the mid information first followed by the bass information just behind it never bleeding into the mids.
The bass never tread over mids at all, always been concise and clear all though prominent to the listener they deliver a balance of real mid bass has great texture in detail and control and lower mid bass has a good slam kick when needed or the recording delivers that info although the sub bass is not exactly far and few between on these it is only there If the recording requires it so after been used to a pair of JH16’s sort of always turned on type of sub sonic bass these are not going to be Richter scale 10 making the earth move inside my head with landslides every minute of the song but this is good as it will only reflect what the recording has to offer so it’s not as if the Mayas do not have a deep sub bass but they will choose to do it when required which gives a better sense of balance to the natural signature the Mayas try to provide with accurately portrayed instrument timbers so for me as long as you have the right size and type of tips in with a good seal you will hear a good quality deep sub bass when it is asked upon by the recording.
My JH16’s good as they rock for bass they are a forced tuned bass and good as this is for reliving all those gigs with super slamming bass it is not a natural response bass and the Mayas reflect the rest of its signature keeping this theme running. The good thing is when the sub bass is there is still takes you by surprise as you never know when it is going to just drop the beat to the basement floor and it’s like “holy Maya” after say three minutes into a song it can just come out and surprise you how low the Mayas bass just registered. They can deliver some form of bass slam when they want to, just not as often or still low for those familiar with a Jh16 level of bass or simply Beats depth of bass might want to audition these first to be sure if you can live without the thrills every five seconds of blow your socks off sub bass hit.

The Mayas lower bass to mid-range is arranged with tight grip and clarity with cutting guile to detail and never heard any muddying or tempo slow down at all and the way the bass is done with the rest of this IEM provides the right balance for it to do its magic in delivering a natural feel and sound with music. Would I still prefer the Mayas to have the levels of sub bass my JH16’s deliver?... yes and no, it would be nice if it had a bit more low bass reaction sometimes but having a JH16 reference of sub bass would ruin the essence and purity of the Maya’s strengths of providing a slightly mid prominent driven sound with a naturalness in tone and the spatial air these have to work would be ruined so I am happy with them where they are albeit another one or two db on the sub-bass would have been interesting to see if it would not ruin the current essence of Mayas signature.
Listening to music which had acoustic guitar… well I thought any of my favourite rock music like AC-DC, Muse, Slash, Joe Bonamassa was sounding fresh and new, no wait; real again then acoustic music is something else on these and listening to a less know English guy who has been around for years Adrian Legg if you can find his cd’s let alone streaming services out there really shows how string work should sound on an IEM let alone speakers yet my mouth was open at times with how nailed on the timing, imaging and minute amount of details to be heard was immense but all sounded natural and fluid with the treble end finely tuned just right to make the most of the fret detail sound sharp and real without bleeding or losing control and sounding unnaturally sharp. The extension on the treble with the Mayas really made acoustic steel guitar of Adrian Legg have a sense of height and realism as if listening to it live.
And talking of live music the Mayas are again just as comfortable with live music and really has the ability to scale the size of the concert with its sense of space ability to image accurately and noticed even the more not so well recorded live sets seem to have a little more energy to songs which is again in part to the mids just been raised a little all though you never notice with everything been so tonally natural sounding other than the closeness and up front sound which make up the Mayas traits to form the signature
As always Rodrigo & Gabriel’s slick hand work really shows up the fret details and how well the Maya deals with the speed of it all and showing the extension of the highs on their highly tuned or strung acoustic guitars. This is reminiscent to me of when I heard the Cavalli Liquid Gold amp and how it showed it could reproduce highs with great extension and trailing edges of notes and sound tonally so real without sounding thin and strained nor either too warm and really had not heard a treble like that on anything before I heard the Liquid Gold and for this to remind me of that shows how well the Mayas sound in what is just an important frequency path as the mids or bass.

Even though in general the Mayas are friendly even with poor recordings the only thing the Mayas did not forgive was anything with a poorly mastered top end and would sound quite flaky or crass at times (almost like listening to a mp3 compression with no detail in treble notes) so can only surmise the mids are tuned in a way that bring out dull recordings a bit but the tuning of the treble is a different challenge all together maybe but I’m glad the Mayas concentrated on getting the treble right with high quality recordings as this is not the Mayas fault recordings are bag crap by so many labels to start with but when there is a top notch quality mastered recording done correctly the reward is like icing on the cake with the rest of the Mayas signature.
I have not got lost in all my live albums for a long time going through Muse in Rome, Def Leppard Live in Vegas, Fleetwood Mac – The Dance, Cream Royal Albert Hall with that 19 minute drumming song Toad which is a good showcase for the Mayas maintains tight mid to low mid bass high amounts of energy but the one that was put on the demo peddle stall that complimented the Mayas was Ryan Adams - Ten Songs from Carnegie Hall which is recorded to a high standard as are most of R. Adams albums to be fair but he is one of those artist that seems to almost personally put sound quality at the forefront of everything he does and the Mayas openness with soundstage and ability to hang out fine details so clearly and precisely with even the usual spurts of coughing and people rustling in their chairs was a joy to hear with this recording.
Those who are a bit sensitive to high frequency’s and like their treble with plenty of detail and extension yet stay smooth enough without sounding warm will like the Mayas treble for sure.

Vocals
This is another main factor that hooked me straight away was the Mayas take on vocalists, near field positioning yet with plenty of breathing space so vocals always stay concise and easy to track especially backing vocals having a way of steering themselves even busy passages of music to sit in just the right placement depth just between the lead vocals and the rest of the music.
The timbre and grains of detail make a singer’s palate come to life with neutral tonality which makes vocals have more realism especially when they sound close as the Mayas portray the mic of a singer. I personally love the vocals which excel with the mids and propel songs with confidence in portraying the emotion of the song to come through.
The Mayas ability with the highs extension allow vocals to soar and hold on to their notes longer like Ellie Goulding’s Delirium album or Sarah McLachlan’s Fumbling towards Ecstasy where you can hear the rasp in her voice and the saliva as she sings more notes which is another old recording (early 90’s) reborn with the Mayas for me. This is one of my more favourite vocal set ups of recent times tuned on an IEM as it really does pull you into the music if you can hear the vocalist properly to start with and Vibro Labs certainly mastered that here as I never get fatigued listening to vocals on the Mayas with the placement, detail and clarity of whoever singing (I most probably do include Shane
When I had my trusty old Sony ZX1 on shuffle one night a couple of OST tracks came on, the first been the Armageddon soundtrack by Trevor Rabin has great clarity and depth with height give the Mayas a big scope with soundtracks none more so than the master of film scores Hans Zimmer’s Inception or Interstellar really stretches the fabrication of its cohesive sound and tests the low end and high end extension than most music will do out there and the Mayas handle it with ease but listening to film scores through the Mayas will give you the impression you may have open back cans on with its large scale and ability to add weight and body to some of these demanding tracks Hans Zimmer produces.



Which leads me on the side for a minute to TV & Films as I have been watching the Westworld series every week and one night was a bit late so watched it on my laptop in bed with the Mayas with it through the Chord Hugo and was honestly blown away how good these where with TV shows or films as the large panoramic soundstage and imaging is set for these types of shows so will be watching more films or shows with them from now on as Mayas are perfect with those vocals and clarity and precision of noises and sound effects for films to excel.
The Mayas paired well with any source I put with them and did not have any issues with hiss with my gear unless I put my Vorzuge Pure amp on med gain there was a slight hiss then with no music playing but these do not need med gain so was all okay for me. They loved been with the Hugo and with my ZX1 Walkman brought great dynamics with a perfect signature match together.
The Mayas are one of those IEMS that is just simply great with any genre but super excels a tad with more acoustic and vocals and handles anything thrown at it really as it is agile, fast, smooth and quite a forgiving IEM with poorer recordings and with high quality recordings this is a non-stop “Mayathon” of musical happiness as they are non-fatiguing to listen too.
Jazz, Blues and classical are also perfect match for the Mayas also from tracks I played from Gregory Porter to Nina Simone and BB King and the only genre that for some may not feel there is enough in terms of quantity in the Sub Bass area for those who may like a lot of Heavy Metal or Dance/ Club anthems as some might be looking for that more constant visceral thumping bass but I personally like the balance as I think it would detract away from the balance of this tuned set up the Mayas has. Again after what I’ve heard so far I’m a happy camper in the Maya park so far.
I have heard plenty of IEMs of late and most that go past the clouds in the price ladder making the Mayas look like a toy but apart from a couple I’ve heard of late which one is two times dearer and the other is six times dearer! I just feel the Mayas for the money are different and something I feel is more a speaker profound in its delivery which is a feat for pair of IEMS which makes it feel like listening to the Mayas is like listening to vinyl… Analog fluidity will embarrass some of those other BA driver IEMS out there that can sound more digital in comparison with the Mayas natural timbered fluid and open sound.


Conclusion...
Apart from two minor quirks for me with maybe a tad more bass could have been tuned just a tad more without affecting the current signature would of given that little extra bit more weight in the sub bass and the issue for me personally with the Complys would be nice to have silicone tips that fit also as an alternative but it has been hard for me to pick any real negatives as this happens to be especially for the price a high performing signature IEM that made me forget wanting to listen to my JH16’s for the first time ever in five years!
Apart from that I have found this one hard to find many negatives with as for me it is the most balanced natural friendly and open soundstage non fatiguing IEM at a good price for the sound I have heard for a long time.
The epiphany moment with these Mayas was less than a minute into my first song with them and just knew they would be something special… a bit like that famous scene out of Jerry Maguire when Rene Zellweger says to Tom Cruise “You had me at hello”, well the Mayas had me at track one.
I originally thought I was finally getting to hear the Arias putting myself forward for this tour but Luke sprung the surprise on us it would be something different and ended up been the Mayas and how glad I am he did as even after hearing so many IEMS lately even in the sky is the limit price range I have not been more happy with the way the Mayas find a finely tuned perfect harmony balance between detail, dynamics, space, musicality with a sense of tonal realism. I’m off to start my Maya fund and hopefully get these soon as I miss them already.
Maya the force be with you.
It’s not a race, it’s a Mayathon…

Well, but I still want to get into the CustomIEM game sooner or later. Therefore will continue monitoring VibroLabs products.