Music

Audiophile Headphones and High-Resolution Audio

After we got the Bose Quiet Comfort 20i noise-canceling earbuds for Jeannette, I decided to sit down and compare them with my Bose Quiet Comfort 15 noise-canceling headphones, my Shure E3 in-ear monitors, and my Yamaha YHD-1 orthodymanic headphones. I was actually somewhat surprised by the differences between them, and I thought that they all sounded fairly good by themselves. I think that the Bose earbuds and headphones were very similar. I thought they my Shure E3 had better clarity, though the Yamaha sound was more open and natural, but lacked a little low-end. While researching the earbuds, I ran across numerous articles on high-resolution audio as well, which is loosely anything that is more than the 44.1KHz sample rate with 16-bit depth (16/44) used by CD recordings. While many of the articles proclaimed how 24/96 or 24/192 sounded so much better than the overly compressed 16/44 recordings. I also found a number of articles like this one proclaiming that HD audio is like the modern-day equivalent “snake oil” marketing hype like tubes vs. transistors or oxygen-free speaker cables… Kirk McElhearn points out that at 16-bit, you can record up to 65K volume levels, and that 44KHz is the minimum sample rate to capture frequencies up to 20KHz, the standard for high-fidelity audio. If you think back to the time when we went from 256 colors, to 65K colors to 16.7M colors, the difference was dramatic, with 16.7M colors more life-like and photo-realistic. While we were mostly content with 65K colors, and probably can’t detect all 16.7M colors, the optimal color bit-depth probably lies somewhere in between […]

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Noise-Cancelling Headphones

Jeannette’s office is being remodeled, and will be moving to more “modern” open, low-walled cubicles. She’s already worried about the noise distraction, so I’ve been looking into noise-cancelling headphones/earbuds for her. Since the dawn of time (or as long as they have been in business) I would say that I’ve not been a fan of Bose. Having worked in an audio shop while in college, we did some repairs to some of the original Bose 901 “direct/reflecting” speakers, which appears to be an array of 4″ paper cone drivers like you would find in a clock radio… While the reflecting concept was interesting, they didn’t seem to have a very full range. I preferred more open systems like the Magnaplanar or a time-phased array speaker like the Dahlquist DQ-10, upon which my home-built speakers are based. I have an older pair of Yamaha YHD-1 orthodymanic headphones, which are open back, and have a nice airy sound. However, since they are open back, they aren’t good at blocking ambient noises! When I decided that I needed noise-canceling headphones years ago, I bought a set of the original Bose Quiet Comforts, which I really liked. The sound wasn’t perfect from an audiophile perspective, but the noise-cancelling worked noticeably better than any others that I tried. After using those for several years, the sound on one side became intermittent, but I couldn’t tell if it was the cable or the electronics… When I was moving into our new open office building a couple of years ago, with low walled cubicles,

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Music

I enjoy listening to music on my stereo, and on my FiiO X7 Mark II high-resolution Digital Audio Player, too. I also listen to contemporary Christian music on KLove, a listener-supported radio station. Links for many of these artists, and many more, can be found at KLove’s Artist Links. With the introduction of satellite radio, I’m now more likely to be listening to the Message, Watercolors, or the Bridge on Sirius/XM while driving, although I typically have my iPhone connected up as well. Over the past few years, i’ve listened to a “stereo” less and less, and more digital sources such as the iTunes library on my Macintosh and iOS devices. in the past few years, I began to explore high-resolution audio and audiophile headphones in lieu of listening to my stereo with large speakers. I’ve also recently upgraded to a better balanced headphone amplifier/DAC. I have upgraded my DAC as well, and switched from using iTunes on the Mac to a more sophisticated music library manager called “Roon” from Roon Labs. It organizes and consolidates music from multiple sources in a variety of formats, including high resolution. It also integrates with high resoultion streaming services like Tidal and Qobuz. I’m running Roon on my iMac, connected to a Schiit Gungnir Multibit DAC through a USB cable. It’s balanced outputs feed a Schiit Jotunheim balanced headphone amplifier, which drive either a pair of JBL LSR305 powered studio monitors, or a pair of modified Drop Sennheiser HD6xx headphones. Below is a list, not especially in any order, of

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