Close to the edge: The Blue Lola headphones
Close to the edge: The Blue Lola headphones - I cherish it when another earphone thinks outside the box, similar to the Blue Mo-Fi ($350 US, £275 UK) did when I checked on it a year ago. That awful kid had a great deal letting it all out: genuinely novel configuration and tech, and the sound was fair.
The Blue Lola Headphones |
Blue's less costly new model, Lola, appears to be like the still underway Mo-Fi, however Lola shed some weight, and measures 14 ounces (397 grams). Mo-Fi has an implicit battery-controlled earphone speaker, Lola doesn't, that is the principle reason it's somewhat lighter. Both models highlight Blue's fiber-fortified 50mm drivers, and impedance is recorded at 42 ohms. Lola's racecar-roused, four-point multi-jointed headband keeps the ear mugs consummately adjusted to your ears, which is like the Mo-Fi's outline. Lola feels solid, and its strangely thick ear cushions benefit a vocation separating the wearer from outside commotion. You get a truly pleasantly completed calfskin like convey case, and two links, a 1.2-meter Apple-perfect telephone link alongside a 3-meter "straight" link for home use.
Sound-wise there's a great deal to like about Lola, it's smooth, clear, and clean. Vocals have a marvelous feeling of body, and bass is satisfyingly profound and tight. On Rob Wasserman's "Performance" collection Lola effortlessly portrayed each fearlessness and shading of Wasserman's high quality bass. Treble is a touch repressed, which isn't a terrible thing on the off chance that you listen to a great deal of over packed contemporary music that can sound cruel with high-determination earphones like the Audio Technica ATH MSR7. One other thing I preferred about Lola was that it sounds awesome at delicate, medium and boisterous listening levels. I never felt the sound was grinding or excessively forceful.
For correlation I drew out my NAD Viso HP50 earphones. It's likewise an over-the-ear, shut back configuration, so this was a straight up rivalry. The NAD is a lighter, more agreeable earphone, with a more nonpartisan tonal equalization. Lola isn't that distant tonally from the 'HP50, however it added more oomph and totality to the bass. After I had the Lola on my head for some time, the 'HP50 sounded excessively incline and brilliant though the Lola presents a hotter, sweeter parity. The 'HP50 is more extensive/open sounding, and they were simpler to drive, so they played somewhat louder at the same volume setting on my Astell and Kern Jr music player.
Lola is the kind of earphone that sounded better and better the more I listened to it, that is high acclaim for sure. The Blue Lola is accessible in charcoal dark and pearl white completes and offers for $249.99 in the US and £219.99 in the UK. The cost in Australia hasn't been set yet, however would generally change over to AU$34
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