Sony MDR-XB700 review Sony MDR-XB700 review

ratingratingratingratingrating
Categories: MP3 & Audio Reviews    Tags: ,
We love
Cosier than a four poster bed, great bassy sound on dance tracks
We hate
Lack of detail on guitar tracks, too big to wear out

Reader Rating:

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...
Verdict
Cracking if you only listen to bass heavy tunes, not so good if you like guitars
Launch Price
£100
3 Pages
123

Sony MDR-XB700

If you want a pair of headphones to make you look like you’re at Abbey Road laying down tracks on a particularly heavy 70s cock rock record, the Sony MDR-XB700s are for you. Epic in size, they also serve up sound so loud you’ll feel like you’re in the studio rather than hunkered down by your stereo. So are they worth that £100 price tag? Read our Sony MDR-XB700 review now and we’ll give you the lowdown.

You’ll struggle to find a pair of cans as comfortable as the Sony MDR-XB700s. The cushions are capacious and will leave your bonce feeling cosseted and without that uncomfortable earache you get with other high-end headphones. But it’s the sound quality where they really stand out.

The Sony MDR-XB700s are built with banging tunes on the brain. Sling through bassy tracks and you’ll feel like you’re in the club itself (minus the shady characters in the corner and a pricey bar to keep you distracted). They handle hip hop, reggae and even the filthiest house music with aplomb. The sound packs a real punch, with little left to imagination. The bottom end is ace and if you love your tunes brash and obvious, these are a peach.


Read our Bose QuietComfort 15 review now


But that’s not to say that the Sony MDR-XB700s are without their problems. Those lovely cushions mean they’re as big as U2 in America. Consequently, you won’t want to don them on the tube, train or anywhere that isn’t the comfort of your front room. These are very much at home headphones.

Break them out at home without the aforementioned tunage though, and you’re in for problems. See, the Sony MDR-XB700s don’t do detail all too well. That means if you’re partial to some guitar action, or a bit of Americana on the side, you’ll be left wanting. It fails to pick up killer solos well and you’ll struggle to hear backing tracks clearly.

There’s no doubting the Sony MDR-XB700s do dance well. But chuck anything featuring a Les Paul at them and the fun comes to an end. A decent pair of headphones no doubt, but not great for musical chameleons.

One Response to “Sony MDR-XB700 review”

  1. [...] week we slapped on our rock-tastic Sony MDR-XB700 headphones to listen to the latest greatest hits collection from Queen. So how does Queen Absolute [...]

Leave a Reply

Please note: comment moderation may be active so there is no need to resubmit your comments.
ioSafe rugged hard drive review

it can take heat up to 815C surviving a blast of heat hotter than a house fire

ratingratingratingratingrating
Toshiba BDX2000 review

Two years after the HD DVD experiment failed, Tosh's wounds have healed and it's trotted out its debut BD spinner

ratingratingratingratingrating

More reviews

EP-offers-button-2 New year, new Electricpig! Click to see what's changed!

More news

Bioshock 2 ending leaked

Bioshock 2 is out today and the ending has already leaked on Youtube. We’ve embedded it below and you can choose to watch it if you like but Bioshock 2’s developers claim you won’t understand it unless you play the game…

Jordan Thomas, creative director at Bioshock 2 developer 2K Marin, says: “People have no context [...]

More videos

More galleries

N900 Video Fest
Suggestion Box