How Good Are Apple Ear-Buds?
I don't usually spend much time evaluating ear-buds, but I have done a fair bit over the years. The best ear-bud I've ever heard is the Yuin PK1, which simply has astonishing performance for a headphone of this type. But, it's $159 and it's rather inefficient, so you almost need a portable headphone amp to drive it to solid listening levels. The Yuin PK2 ($79), which is more efficient, isn't nearly as good sounding. Sennheiser has been making a full line of ear-buds for a long time in their MX series, and their top-tier 'buds have been a solid…
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Summary
Steve Guttenberg may still be right: millions and millions of people have heard their iDevices through these ear-buds, and while they may be the best ear-bud out there, it's still pretty mediocre sound quality.
At least Apple tried very hard to make it as good as they could. They could have just made yet another piece of junk throwaway ear-bud, but instead they gave it their best shot. They spent good money improving these little 'buds over the years so they could give them away with pride. It took the vision to know that even though they were cheap, throwaway cans…
It has to be Rudresh Mahanthappa. The riveting cry of his alto saxophone is one of the most recognizable sounds in jazz.
But those darting runs coalesce into Charlie Parker's "Red Cross." So it can't be Mahanthappa, can it? He has made 15 straight albums of original music. He doesn't do covers, right?
On his 16th recording, Hero Trio, Mahanthappa breaks through to the past—his and ours. He proudly proclaims Parker's bebop—but then "Red Cross" flies apart, into…
When you consider the fragility of phono cartridges—how easily they can be broken and how surely they wear out over time and must be replaced at great expense—you wonder why anyone would pay so much for them. At least until you've listened. Fortunately, some of these innovations eventually make their way…
Vocal sibilants have time now, beyond the initial, cleanly drawn transient, to expand and better capture the event, which helps produce a more convincing and lifelike…
Removing the cover from the unit reveals a neat,…
The…
Description: CD player with 26-function remote control, coaxial and optical digital outputs, dual 18-bit DACs, and 8x-oversampling filter. Frequency response: 5Hz–20kHz ±1.0dB. Dynamic range: 92dB. S/N ratio: 105dB. Channel separation: 90dB. Output impedance: 120 ohms. THD at 1kHz: 0.05%.
Dimensions: 17.25" W by 5.5" H by 13.5" D. Weight: 18.7lb.
Serial number of unit auditioned: S91017778C.
Price: $1200 (1991); no longer available (2020). Approximate number of dealers: 350.
Manufacturer: Luxman Corp., 1-3-1 Shinyokohama, Kouhoku-ku Yokohama-shi…
My listening venue remains, with the exceptions noted below, as described in my review of the Audio Research SP9 Mk.II and Counterpoint SA-3000 preamps (Vol.13 No.11). Both the preamps and the Quicksilver amps that drove the Acoustat Twos have been replaced with the Ensemble B-50 (Tiger) control amplifier plugged into an Ensemble Isotrans isolation transformer.
All system interconnect is Ensemble Supraflux, and speaker cable is Ensemble Hotline. The B-50 sits within arm's reach on an Arcici Superstructure II. All CDs used in listening evaluations…