1.5 months later, they're finally back, my Sonarworks individually calibrated headphones! Graph of their natural response attached, hopefully it helps you all. The 2nd attachment is my calibration settings for 'hyping' EDM & hiphop back up a bit. Tips appreciated to help offset the cost of calibrating them but not required, my venmo is @michaelmcadams or pm me for paypal if you're feeling generous. Preliminary review below:
Listening on a Benchmark DAC1 mastering grade DAC with Spotify content at very high quality.
The results kinda shocked me, but also explains what I think I was hearing before calibration. With calibration on at 100% it's almost too sterile and clinical to listen to in some cases(and I'm used to listening to fully calibrated headphones and calibrated Barefoot monitors in my recording studio). It sounds more natural at 70% wetness of calibration but perhaps I just need to get more used to truly flat, brutally honest audio.
Correction kills all of the nice bass these naturally have, brings vocals way more front and center, seems to expand the stereo image by 10% (like wideness being at 9 and 3 o'clock instead of 10 and 2 o'clock), and removes the 12db 8khz boost they have which sounds annoying now without the correction. The left channel does seem to have more bass like we thought, but not as much of a dramatic difference as we probably thought. Without correction they still sound but more like a muffled Beats in comparison to corrected.
Brief summary of genres listened to:
Classic rock/Country/Acoustic rock: It sounds like panned guitar amps are literally next to me now instead of in another room, solo guitar and vocals now dominate the mix, I can hear reverb trails of vocals for way longer and clearly, natural instruments sound more realistic, overall more enjoyable now.
HipHop: Mixes like Whiz Khalifa - on my level now sound balanced in bass instead of overpowering, better vocal clarity, bass more clear instead of boomy, mixes that don't have have tons of bass needs a +6db bass boost shelf boost and a slight treble tilt to make it listenable or it sounds too boring and not like HipHop, hihats don't make my ears bleed anymore.
Jazz: Correction shines very well on everything Jazz. Saxophone sounds distinctly less nasaly/sharp, much smoother and more natural sounding, nothing sounds hyped and feels like I'm on the 2nd floor, center in relation to the band, bass is plentiful and not lacking, very enjoyable.
Classical: Thoughts mostly the same as Jazz, except I feel the need to keep it at 70% wetness of correction or it sounds a bit too sterile, perhaps because the instruments are recorded further away than in Jazz? Instruments like Cello sound much better, less brittle. Orchestral works sound much more balanced and easier to listen to without that sharp 8khz peak. Bass/treble boost not necessary but work if you want it a bit more hyped.
'Bach - Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D Major, BWV 1068: 2. Air - Orpheus Chamber Orchestra' sounds simply magical.
EDM: This is where everything sounds much more sterile and boring now due to lack of bass. Synths sound more clear, less annoying, much more front and center but less exciting. White noise during drops is less annoying and smooth. I feel the need to set the same +6 db bass self boost with +3 db treble boost, along with correction at 70% wetness to make EDM exciting to listen to (see 2nd attached graph for the correction I use in this case with the simulated after)
After making this review I've decided I'll probably keep it at 80% wetness of correction by default so that it retains some of its natural curves but is still flat within +/- 3db across the entire spectrum.
Thanks for sharing. Similar experience here, with similar but slightly different graphs.
I'm a drummer/percussionist and saxophonist and record in my home studio. Mostly jazz, but plenty of rock, funk, pop, and Trip-Hop as well.
With correction, the bass & midbass is incredibly articulate and accurate to my live room experience. For example, the attack, transients, open resonance, and decay of my more "open" jazz kick drums are stunningly lifelike. I feel as if I'm listening to my actual playing rather than monitoring a recording.
It does help a bit to add a bit of a bass shelf as well, especially when tracking. That's usually somewhere between +2.5dB to + 3.0dB for jazz and maybe a touch more for rock, etc.
I own a wide range of drum kits, classic Gretsch Roundbadge and a modern Broadkaster, and classic Ludwigs, to the newer Sakae kits. My main practice kit is a simple but great sounding Mapex Armory. With the microphones I'm using, these headphones reproduce all of these very accurately to my live, in-room experience.
Same goes for the detail and accuracy of my cymbals. Again, I use all types & brands of vintage and modern cymbals. Simply incredible and lifelike cymbals with either my Samar VL-37A ribbons or Lewitt LCT-550 LDC overhead microphones.
Though I also need to add a +1.5 to +3.0dB shelf above 10k to get that lifelike shimmer and detail in the decay. But it remains smooth and doesn't get harsh or fatiguing at all in the GQ's.
But that might be more due to my slight hearing loss in the high end due to playing drums and somewhat loud live events for too many years.
I also need to add about the same slight boost on the high end and low end to get that REALISTIC bite and grunt from my saxophones. Same goes for the articulation of ghost notes and the crack of snare rim-shots. That realism may be a bit harsh for most listeners, but it's accurate to my live, in-room experience, and that's HOW I LIKE IT!
In real life, a sharp blast from the sax or a snare drum rim-shot WILL make you flinch.
But most people are usually not too keen on that experience when listening to their everyday music.
Cello/violin/strings are absolutely beautiful as well. So rich and lifelike. The realism and micro-detail in acoustic double bass is uncanny. Check out the
Steph Johnson Trio "Nature Girl" album (my avatar).
I'll try to share my graphs and corrections when I get home next week.
Oh, my DAC/Headphone Amp and ADC are the Mytek Brooklyn/Brooklyn Bridge. Also have an Oppo HA-1.
Studio monitors are custom DIY using the BMS 5CN162HE midrange/high-frequency concentric drivers combined with 10" Ciare midbass drivers, and then two separate Infinity Beta 15" subs. Also have a pair of the small Neumann KH120A active monitors.
Sorry for the long ramble. But I definitely feel that the GQ headphones are easily worth what we paid!
The articulation and detail in the bass after correction is one of the absolute best I've experienced, and the mids & highs are incredibly detailed and resolving while remaining "natural" as well.
Good recordings of full orchestra with powerful timpani drums, chimes/bells/triangles, crisp snare drum, and cymbal crashes are spectacular, along with the richness and REALISM of the string instruments.
The pinpoint imaging, black space between instruments, and sound stage are excellent, especially for a closed-back design.
And it's just an added bonus to have the Bluetooth capabilities.