lairpost
New Head-Fier
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2006
- Posts
- 27
- Likes
- 7
I found Head-Fi a few weeks ago and have been reading and enjoying listening to my music all over again because of it.
I'd like some recommendations for my first decent pair of cans for primarily home, but some office use too...sound leakage is ok at office.
I listen to most genres of music but I tend to prefer Portishead, Fischer, Alison Krauss, Mark Knophler, Loreena McKennitt, The Peak Show, along with classic rock, Stones, Sting, Shakira, and of course Mozart and Bach, strings, woodwinds, even organs, even some trance/trip-hop. I often listen to all ~25,000 songs on random (a sampling of them)...so I want cans that do well with a wide range of music.
I prefer neutral sound, with a tendency to softer highs and accurate, not bloated bass, I like strong vocals but not excessively forward mids. I'm 40 and have protected my hearing since I was young.
My home system consists of Vandersteen 2ce Sigs, Vandersteen V2W sub, and Vandersteen surrounds, Outlaw 750 amp, Outlaw 950 pre/pro, Pioneer DV45A SACD/DVD-A. I also have a Roku for MP3 play, wonderful device.
I've had this setup for 5 years. I'm very accustomed to the Vandersteens' versatile nature, mellow warmth. I very much like them and their character. I have the mains quite far apart because of the room, and I like the wide soundstage. The Outlaw gear kicks for movies and is OK for music.
For my portable system (first ipod 3G now ipod 5.5G) I've had Shure e2c for 3 years. They work great for mowing the lawn and casual listening, but the bass is terribly bloated and highs simply don't extend.
Today I received Westone UM2 IEM.
So far I've only listened to them via line-out of ipod 5.5G. I'm not decided on the best tips yet, but so far am very pleased with the un-amped performance. I'm waiting on Gary's PA2V2 to mate with ipod. The PA2V2 will also serve as my headphone amp for home, as the 950 lacks headphone out, which is just as well as I plan to come right off the Pioneer SACD directly. Then in the future, depending, I may upgrade to a better home headphone amp and use the PA2V2 at work and for mobile use.
A friend has Senn HD650, but I'm reluctant to borrow them for fear I'll like them...I don't like the price and don't believe I need to spend that much to be pleased. I really don't want to start a collection of cans. I've battled the audiophile tweaking disease before and don't want to go there again right now. I simply want a familiar sound along with comfort along with an exposure to 'decent' headphones.
From what I've read, I don't believe I'd like Grados and some Senn may be too 'dark'.
So, my question, knowing now what I have and like to listen to...would the very compellingly priced Beyer DT880 (03) at B&H be a good start/match or should I consider others in the $150-200 range.
Thanks,
Brett
I'd like some recommendations for my first decent pair of cans for primarily home, but some office use too...sound leakage is ok at office.
I listen to most genres of music but I tend to prefer Portishead, Fischer, Alison Krauss, Mark Knophler, Loreena McKennitt, The Peak Show, along with classic rock, Stones, Sting, Shakira, and of course Mozart and Bach, strings, woodwinds, even organs, even some trance/trip-hop. I often listen to all ~25,000 songs on random (a sampling of them)...so I want cans that do well with a wide range of music.
I prefer neutral sound, with a tendency to softer highs and accurate, not bloated bass, I like strong vocals but not excessively forward mids. I'm 40 and have protected my hearing since I was young.
My home system consists of Vandersteen 2ce Sigs, Vandersteen V2W sub, and Vandersteen surrounds, Outlaw 750 amp, Outlaw 950 pre/pro, Pioneer DV45A SACD/DVD-A. I also have a Roku for MP3 play, wonderful device.
I've had this setup for 5 years. I'm very accustomed to the Vandersteens' versatile nature, mellow warmth. I very much like them and their character. I have the mains quite far apart because of the room, and I like the wide soundstage. The Outlaw gear kicks for movies and is OK for music.
For my portable system (first ipod 3G now ipod 5.5G) I've had Shure e2c for 3 years. They work great for mowing the lawn and casual listening, but the bass is terribly bloated and highs simply don't extend.
Today I received Westone UM2 IEM.

A friend has Senn HD650, but I'm reluctant to borrow them for fear I'll like them...I don't like the price and don't believe I need to spend that much to be pleased. I really don't want to start a collection of cans. I've battled the audiophile tweaking disease before and don't want to go there again right now. I simply want a familiar sound along with comfort along with an exposure to 'decent' headphones.
From what I've read, I don't believe I'd like Grados and some Senn may be too 'dark'.
So, my question, knowing now what I have and like to listen to...would the very compellingly priced Beyer DT880 (03) at B&H be a good start/match or should I consider others in the $150-200 range.
Thanks,
Brett