MacFrank
New Head-Fier
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2006
- Posts
- 41
- Likes
- 18
@MONVMENTVM:
(Hi back, there
)
Thank you for supporting me. "Colored" is exactly the term I've been desperately searching for.
Neither the HD650 nor the HD600 are neutral headphones, that's true. But especially the HD600 are less coloured than the (compared to other manufacturers) quite extreme Grados - as a matter of fact some people do find the HD600 a bit "boring". To my ears it does come quite near to the way of musical reproduction that loudspeakers provide.
A Grado is a thing of emotion, a god of rock - but, and I'm sorry, at the same time it can be a brat when it comes to classic and genres like soft Folk, musicals or adult pop. Especially as I am very keen on a broad soundstage those genres don't work very well for me with Grado.
But what a GS1000 is able to do I can't even imagine, I suppose...
@kmanmx:
The HD650 are quite "dark" sounding, which means they have less bright highs and a very solid bass grounding. That makes the sound less light, less easy and allover more set. I like the setting of my HD600 (which is still brighter than the HD650) quite much, as it is a good diversion to the DT880, which is bright and more biased towards highs.
Concerning soundstage, the problem with the Grado's missing wideness in soundstage isn't that it simply doesn't sound very "wide" but that you can't locate and seperate the particular instruments easily. I don't appreciate listening to 15 violins sitting atop each other.
(just a joke
)
(Hi back, there
Thank you for supporting me. "Colored" is exactly the term I've been desperately searching for.
Neither the HD650 nor the HD600 are neutral headphones, that's true. But especially the HD600 are less coloured than the (compared to other manufacturers) quite extreme Grados - as a matter of fact some people do find the HD600 a bit "boring". To my ears it does come quite near to the way of musical reproduction that loudspeakers provide.
A Grado is a thing of emotion, a god of rock - but, and I'm sorry, at the same time it can be a brat when it comes to classic and genres like soft Folk, musicals or adult pop. Especially as I am very keen on a broad soundstage those genres don't work very well for me with Grado.
But what a GS1000 is able to do I can't even imagine, I suppose...
@kmanmx:
The HD650 are quite "dark" sounding, which means they have less bright highs and a very solid bass grounding. That makes the sound less light, less easy and allover more set. I like the setting of my HD600 (which is still brighter than the HD650) quite much, as it is a good diversion to the DT880, which is bright and more biased towards highs.
Concerning soundstage, the problem with the Grado's missing wideness in soundstage isn't that it simply doesn't sound very "wide" but that you can't locate and seperate the particular instruments easily. I don't appreciate listening to 15 violins sitting atop each other.