6

Master & Dynamic MW75 Review: Premium Sound, Premium Price | WIRED

 1 year ago
source link: https://www.wired.com/review/master-and-dynamic-mw75/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
Nov 20, 2022 9:00 AM

Review: Master & Dynamic MW75

These high-end headphones bring fantastic fidelity everywhere.
Master and Dynamic MW75 headphones
Photograph: Master & Dynamic

If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIRED

Rating:
WIRED
Beautiful design. Solid construction with premium leather and aluminum. Easy to use. Work well as wired or wireless headphones. Good noise reduction. Comfortable.
TIRED
Expensive. Low-level hiss with noise cancellation on.

As someone who gets to try nice things all the time, I've discovered that very few luxury items actually impact your life. A more expensive car can be less comfortable than a minivan on a road trip. Nicer golf clubs don’t solve your slice, and cheap wine gets you just as tipsy as the premium stuff.

A pair of high-end noise-canceling headphones like the new Master & Dynamic MW75, on the other hand, might actively improve your life. Whether it’s exposing minutiae in your favorite tunes or silencing a screaming toddler on an international flight, these aluminum-and-leather cans provide a combination of solitude and sound that you really can’t get for less.

As far as extravagant splurges go, it’s actually not that hard to justify a pair like these, especially if you wear over-ears all the time at work, on public transit, or to travel. Sure, they’re $599, but that’s still less than an iPhone, and these will last years longer.

Masters of Dynamics
Photograph: Master & Dynamic

If you want to spend less money on great noise-canceling headphones, you absolutely can. Master & Dynamic isn’t aiming to compete directly with Bose, Sony, or even Apple when it comes to high-end headphones. All three of those brands offer equally tech-packed cans, with equal or better noise reduction, for less cash.

Instead, this Brooklyn-based brand aims to bring a touch more style, and a touch better sound quality. I’ve been a fan of its high-end earbuds and over-ears for generations, and not just because they look cooler than the California-designed equivalents. Master & Dynamic’s offerings, like the previous flagship MW65 model, usually sound significantly better than most.

Material choices are also typically higher-end on Master & Dynamic headphones than more mainstream equivalents, as is evident immediately with the MW75 when you compare them to any of the flagship models from the above brands. These are made of gorgeous aluminum and lambskin leather, designed with the sort of timelessness you expect from a $600 accessory.

This isn’t just down to higher-end material choices.  Build quality is also a tier above models like the AirPods Max (8/10, WIRED Recommends). The headband adjusts perfectly smoothly, and they feel substantial—though not especially heavy, at a few ounces less than the AirPods Max—on my head, with lots of padding up top and on the earcups.

Behind the right and left earcup are controls for volume, play/pause, and to adjust noise canceling/transparency, and turn the headphones on or off. I’m actually glad Master & Dynamic didn’t reinvent the wheel when it comes to controls. Physical buttons make it easy to know exactly what you’re doing when on the go, and I appreciate that the design team made it easy to distinguish which button you’re pressing by making them feel a bit different on each side.

Battery life is on par with other high-end noise-canceling headphones at 32 hours, and the headphones come with a USB-C cable inside a great hard-shell carrying case that allows them to plug into a computer or phone and act as their own high-quality digital-to-analog converter—pretty awesome for those who love to listen to high-end audio on the go. If you’re without a USB port, there is also a 3.5-mm converter for standard powerless listening and a quarter-inch converter for headphone amps and other higher-end sources. That’s two wired ways, and one wireless way, to listen to the MW75, which is pretty nifty.

Sound Quality

The 40-mm beryllium drivers inside the MW75 combine with Master & Dynamic’s excellent onboard digital-to-analog conversion to provide one of the most vivid and enjoyable soundstages I’ve ever heard from a pair of wireless headphones.

I thought that the AirPods Max sounded fantastic, but these somehow beat their excellent reproduction, with the MW75 offering a soundstage so dynamic you feel like you could bathe in it. The bass in particular stands out above many other options in the category, with punchy, assertive sounds never muddying the waters for tones right above them. If you like bass-heavy music, this acts like a clear canvas to hear it anew, with records like Kaytranada’s 99.9 percent coming through like they’ve never done for me on active noise reduction models in the past. 

Then again, anything sounds good through these headphones. I love listening to jazz, classical, folk, and other acoustic music through them because the high-side tuning really lends a directness, making the digital-to-analog sound like the instruments are right there in your ears.

The M&D Connect app lets you adjust noise-canceling and ambient sound modes, as well as messing with EQ, but I found that these headphones sound best with noise canceling on high and the EQ set to standard, as you might expect most people to leave them out of the box. That said, the ambient mode can come in handy on flights or when you want to have a quick chat with a loved one, pet, or coworker (or some combo thereof).

Boo, Hiss
Photograph: Master & Dynamic

Noise-canceling quality is excellent, with the headphones easily tuning out the sounds of my HVAC system and my clacky mechanical keyboard. I’d say that it’s as good as I’ve heard from any of the top brands of late, though Sony and Bose might slightly outclass these when it comes to midrange sound reduction. I can still sometimes hear the 600-hz whine of my air filter through the Master & Dynamic algorithm. Likewise, the onboard mics are good, just not as good as those from Apple and Bose. They’re still entirely useable on calls.

The only real bug in the ointment is that the MW75 have a low level of noise-canceling hiss at all times, only audible to me when nothing is playing. It reminds me of the super low-level tape hiss when I record on analog gear. I’m a stickler for a low noise floor, and it doesn’t bother even me (literally disappearing as soon as I hear any music), but if you’re the type of person who needs no noise at all, I recommend another pair.

Overall, I’ve really enjoyed my time with the MW75 and firmly recommend them to high rollers and aspirational audio nerds alike. The sound is so good that I can forgive a bit of noise-canceling hiss when nothing is playing, and the fact that you can listen to them so many ways—wired or wireless, with or without an external digital-to-analog converter—is pretty awesome. If you like bells and whistles, especially the way they sound in high fidelity, these are a pretty awesome pair.


About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK