headphones in Wilco movie?
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- steve albini likes it
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headphones in Wilco movie?
What the hell are the headphones the band is wearing in the studio parts of "I Am Trying To Break Your Heart"? Not the ones Tweedy is wearing, but the ones the other guys are wearing.
Just curious. Seems like I see those headphones in lots of studio photos, but I've never known what they are.
Thanks!
Just curious. Seems like I see those headphones in lots of studio photos, but I've never known what they are.
Thanks!
Looks like Fostex T20RP or T50RP, which are okay-sounding but quite durable (metal parts).
The phones can be seen pretty clearly on Glenn Kotche's head here @ 1:20 here:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=UoCZTSRvWuc&feature=related
Here's a GIS of the cans:
http://images.google.com/images?q=foste ... a=N&tab=wi
Tweedy's got Sennheiser open-backed cans in the same vid.
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The phones can be seen pretty clearly on Glenn Kotche's head here @ 1:20 here:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=UoCZTSRvWuc&feature=related
Here's a GIS of the cans:
http://images.google.com/images?q=foste ... a=N&tab=wi
Tweedy's got Sennheiser open-backed cans in the same vid.
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Last edited by kdarr on Wed Jan 23, 2008 2:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I had a pair of T20s that I just threw away a few months ago not because they didn't work but because the padding had deteriorated so bad they left black shit all over your ears. My dad bought them in the early 90s, I think. Very durable.
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- analogcabin
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I can't stand those Sonys anymore... I used to swear by them, but they're SO bright and SO loud. The ear fatigue sets in fast. Plus, if you wear glasses they push the earpieces into your temples and give you serious headaches after a while. And of course the flipping spiral cord.tsw wrote:I gotta get me some. The spiral cord on my 7506s has driven me to drink.e.maynard wrote:Fostex headphones are the ones I swear by. T-40's in particular.
Ultra durable, Great sounding, replaceable plug in cable, no idiotic spiral cord. A true studio standard!!
Erik
That and a lot of other stuff.
These days I'm all about my AKG K271's. They are huge and nerdy looking, but they sound great, they're comfy, and the cord is both straight and removable.
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- steve albini likes it
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I totally hear you on the bright/loud/fatigue thing on the 7506s. I'm done with those.kdarr wrote: These days I'm all about my AKG K271's. They are huge and nerdy looking, but they sound great, they're comfy, and the cord is both straight and removable.
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How's the isolation on the AKG K271s? I have an older pair of AKGs that I really like the sound of, but they bleed like hell. Bad for overdubs.
It's pretty damn good, actually. Unlike the venerable and wildly popular K240's, which are open-backed cans, so the iso is not so good. Open backed-cans, of course, are better in a lot of ways for vocalists, they can hear their voice in the air as well as in their head which helps a lot with pitch issues.tsw wrote:I totally hear you on the bright/loud/fatigue thing on the 7506s. I'm done with those.kdarr wrote: These days I'm all about my AKG K271's. They are huge and nerdy looking, but they sound great, they're comfy, and the cord is both straight and removable.
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How's the isolation on the AKG K271s? I have an older pair of AKGs that I really like the sound of, but they bleed like hell. Bad for overdubs.
Anyway, my point was the K271's are closed back and the isolation is good.
Actually, the only thing I don't like about them is that they have an on-off switch feature built into the headband so that when you remove them, they stop passing signal. I can totally see how you would want that, but if you have a tiny head like I do, you have to actively PULL them down over your ears or you don't get sound. Which leads to fumbling around with controls, patches, etc. going "where the fuck's my signal!?!"
But that's just me being dumb, basically.
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- Michael_Joly
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here's a little secret...
...I do all my critical mic evaluations using a pair of nearly-20 year old Fostex RP-20s. These headphones are great. Flat. Unhyped. Natural top end. And the phase accuracy between channels is superb - mono pink noise appears as a very solid and narrow image directly centered in the middle of my head. I've got about 5 sets of these things in my lab & studio because I want to use the same reference everywhere I work. I've taken the foam ear cushions off all the sets so the bass coupling is excellent - giving up a little cushioning is well worth the improvement in transducer / ear coupling.
Remember, these are ribbon headphones and not moving coils - the transient response is awesome. Plus the open-back design makes for a very clean low end that doesn't suffer from that boxy low end bloat common to sealed-back phones. More of a reference / mixing phone than a isolation / tracking phone though.
Btw, I used to use Sony 7506's on-air at WMBR in Cambridge and these Fostex RP-20s and RP-50 are leagues better.
...I do all my critical mic evaluations using a pair of nearly-20 year old Fostex RP-20s. These headphones are great. Flat. Unhyped. Natural top end. And the phase accuracy between channels is superb - mono pink noise appears as a very solid and narrow image directly centered in the middle of my head. I've got about 5 sets of these things in my lab & studio because I want to use the same reference everywhere I work. I've taken the foam ear cushions off all the sets so the bass coupling is excellent - giving up a little cushioning is well worth the improvement in transducer / ear coupling.
Remember, these are ribbon headphones and not moving coils - the transient response is awesome. Plus the open-back design makes for a very clean low end that doesn't suffer from that boxy low end bloat common to sealed-back phones. More of a reference / mixing phone than a isolation / tracking phone though.
Btw, I used to use Sony 7506's on-air at WMBR in Cambridge and these Fostex RP-20s and RP-50 are leagues better.
Huh, how about that. Thanks for the tip, Michael! I had no idea they were ribbon cans.Michael_Joly wrote:here's a little secret...
...I do all my critical mic evaluations using a pair of nearly-20 year old Fostex RP-20s. These headphones are great. Flat. Unhyped. Natural top end. And the phase accuracy between channels is superb - mono pink noise appears as a very solid and narrow image directly centered in the middle of my head. I've got about 5 sets of these things in my lab & studio because I want to use the same reference everywhere I work. I've taken the foam ear cushions off all the sets so the bass coupling is excellent - giving up a little cushioning is well worth the improvement in transducer / ear coupling.
Remember, these are ribbon headphones and not moving coils - the transient response is awesome. Plus the open-back design makes for a very clean low end that doesn't suffer from that boxy low end bloat common to sealed-back phones. More of a reference / mixing phone than a isolation / tracking phone though.
Btw, I used to use Sony 7506's on-air at WMBR in Cambridge and these Fostex RP-20s and RP-50 are leagues better.
I guess I never thought much of the RP-20s because they were what we had available at my community college audio program, and the pairs we had were all pretty beat to shit.
See, this is what TapeOp is all about! Seasoned professionals cluing in amateur douchebags like myself.
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- steve albini likes it
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Yeah, this is really awesome. I really appreciate all the info. Oh, and you were right kdarr. It is 240s that I have. And I love 'em, but yeah, not so good on the iso. Plus, bass kind of rattles one of the cans. I think it's a little bit blown out. Which is understandable since they've been around since before I was born or something.kdarr wrote:See, this is what TapeOp is all about! Seasoned professionals cluing in amateur douchebags like myself.
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