Some of the best headphones I listened to this year came from a car audio company. It's true. When I hear the name Alpine, I think of two things: the car stereos and the brewery in southern California. Back in October, the tech-focused Alpine announced its $300 over-ear cans with so-called Full Frequency Immersion technology to simulate the feeling of a live show. There's even a pulsing headband that keeps up with the bass line. What may seem like an odd move for Alpine actually makes a lot of sense. A company with a history in audio, even if its car audio, should be well-equipped to make a solid set of headphones. I've been using the set for a couple months now, and the sound is stellar.
IRL: Alpine Headphones
At this price, Alpine is taking a direct shot at Beats and all the other usual suspects in the high-end headphone space. With the design in particular, the company definitely did enough to stand toe to toe with its rivals. The headband is made of a matte white plastic (there's a black option too) with black soft-touch rubber on the inside. Rather than being round, the earcups are square, but they've been rotated to look more diamond-like -- taking a cue from the angular nature of the Alpine logo, no doubt. To be honest, this choice is one of my favorite aesthetic features of the set, offering a nice departure from a seemingly endless selection of circular designs.What's inside its headphones that's the real selling point: Full Frequency Immersion tech and a 24-bit DAC. There's also that pulsing bass transducer in the headband that allows you to feel the bass while barreling through a playlist. To further fine-tune things, an iOS companion app allows you to tweak a five-band EQ. All of that looks good on paper, and I could definitely tell a difference, but I prefered to leave all the fancy features turned off. The set sounded great without being powered on, and after a few seconds, I found the pulsing to be rather annoying. It's tolerable for hip-hop and electronic music, but switch over to metal and the allure quickly fades. I did give it a full day, though, and the claim of around 10 hours of playback is indeed accurate. Despite being a wired set of cans, they do need to be recharged to power all of that built-in tech.
After nearly two months of listening, I'm still smitten with these. I've found myself coming back to them every so often. Sure, I don't care for all the audio tech that's baked in, but in passive mode, these are one of the best-sounding pairs of headphones I've listened to this year. I've worn Samsung's Level line, both of Beats' Solo2 releases and Sennheiser's Urbanite on-ears over the past few months, and the Alpine option bests them all. The obvious issue is spending $300 on a souped-up set when I don't use the added features. They may come in handy for others, but I enjoyed these headphones much more without them, finding the pair to be a worthy consideration even without the bells and whistles. If you're looking to give all that tech a shot, be my guest, but just know you're getting a great set of regular ol' headphones, too.
0 Response to "Alpine puts its car audio chops to good use... in headphones?"
Post a Comment