I’m kinda lucky to have HeadRoom, the large net/mail headphone retailer, right in my hometown (Bozeman MT). When I need cans I just cruise by and buy whatever they recommend: they’re audiophile fanatics and listen critically to everything they sell.
In the field I use ear canal headphones (don’t call ‘em “earbuds,” sez HR). They sound good, they seat well (i.e., don’t fall out), and they’re small, so you don’t look like a Martian when approaching folk outta-the-blue to interview them. I usually pay between $100 and $200 for a really good, but not top-o-line pair.
I used a Shure E4 with an Etymotic ER6 as backup. The Shure sounded better and had a thicker cord. I say “had” cuz I recently broke both (abuse), leaving me field phone-less.
So I swung by HeadRoom for new Shures, but Shure’s new E’s have much thinner cords. “Anything else as good?” asks I.
Guy pulls out the Ultimate Ears super.fi 5 Pro ($180). I buy sans listen; take ‘em home and am impressed. For the first time I hear a decent bass response from ear-canals. People say both the Shure and Etymotics have good bass, but I never thot so, even when I had the in-ear seal as tight as a [fill in offensive simile here]. But these UE’s go low, likely cuz of their dual drivers, one just for bass. (Caveat: HR mentioned the crossover could be a prob as it occurs at in vocal mid-range, but probs for them and usually out of my range of perception.)
Bass is important not just for the funk-in-recordings but also for field recording as most of the wind and plosive overdrives occur in the lower freqs, lower than most open-ear phones go. So you could be wrecking your recording and not know (hear) it. Haven’t taken the UE’s into field yet, tho, I’ll report back after I do.
Latest High Country News has a profile on a pocatello graphic designer who also makes bikes to give away — when he’s not teaching folks how to fix their own bikes… Seems to be currying a sort of low-key activist stance on fighting urban sprawl.
Internet radio is in immediate danger. Devastatingly large increases in royalty rates take effect July 15: retroactive to Jan 1 2006. Many radio and music sites can’t afford the increases, so will be forced to shut down their music streams.
Today is a national “Day of Silence” to protest these rates, and to encourage the millions of net radio listeners to take action and contact their Congressional representatives.
Webcasters across USA have special programming planned; some will broadcast complete silence.
This week’s HV cast starts Summer with some Mississippi moonshine, barbecued goat and the last of the old-time Fife & Drum picnics. A story by Ben Adair, “Otha Turner’s Picnic” (13:10 mp3):
Now, maybe we have heard everything: the 180-Gs do a’cappella covers of Negativland classics, including Casey Kasem cursing over U2 (”I Still Haven’t Found”). Among the downloads at myspace.com/180gs, from their CD is 180 d’Gs to the Future, “Christianity is Stupid” (3:55 ::mp3dl(”http://hearingvoices.com/news/wp-content/uploads/2007/06/180-Gs-Christianity_is_Stupid.mp3″)::):