I use the Alesis DRP 100 because they work great with electronic drums. I have about 10 pairs of headphones and all of them sound great with music but distort when used with the Roland drums, not the Alesis!, they have a much flatter range which means they don’t enphasise the bass too much so when compared to Skullcandy or similar, they will sound thinner, but that makes them perfect for both acoustic and electronic drums. I highly recommend. I’m sure they are very similar to what you have.
Luckily for you I also have a td-25 electric roland set and I just plugged these into the heaphone jack. They sound amazing. I'm very happy with them for both electric and acoustic playing.
Thank you guys! Yes, they work really nice!! The only thing, after a couple of hours using them my ears hurt a little bit. They are great. I really like them
@@EliezerDrumz my problem is that the stick sounds from hitting rubber pads on electronic drums still bleed through on Roland's own RH300-V. I'm thinking these would block that noise out completely -- what do you think? I don't really care whether they sound amazing, I just need "good enough" sound, but need almost complete isolation from the stick-hitting-rubber sound. What do you think? Thanks for the video.
The SIH1 was good. This one is a failure. Not impervious enough, and the sound, supposed to be better, is less natural. I couldn't use it. I put another frame on it, and gave it to a kid. I use audio-protections under good open headphones. It's not ideal, but the best for my ears.
@@raulmartinez914 Silicone protections (tailor made) & DT990 pro (Beyerdynamic). The headphones must be open, if it's closed there will be too much attenuation and you'll hear by your bones : bad and unpleasant. Warning, it's for maximal protection (against tinnitus) but I miss a lot of things in the mix, it's only a transient solution. That's a solution I experimented in studio, because a fellow percussionist wanted high level feedback (insufferable) and I couldn't adjust my headphones independently. I'm gonna buy ear monitors tailor-made. Quite expensive. You need a high volume in the headphones, obviously. Don't forget the silicone !!! Listen to my last vid, to record at home, I use my old SIH1, tired and twice repaired. Leave me a comment. I'm currently into música cubana, aprendiendo español !
@@raulmartinez914 Silicone protections (tailor made) & DT990 pro (Beyerdynamic*). The headphones must be open, if it's closed there will be too much attenuation and you'll hear by your bones : bad and unpleasant. Warning, it's for maximal protection (against tinnitus) but I miss a lot of things in the mix, it's only a transient solution. That's a solution I experimented in studio, because a fellow percussionist wanted high level feedback (insufferable) and I couldn't adjust my headphones independently. I'm gonna buy ear monitors tailor-made. Quite expensive. *You need a high volume in the headphones, obviously. Don't forget the silicone !!!
@@raulmartinez914 Silicone protections (tailor made) & DT990 pro (Beyerdynamic). The headphones must be open, if it's closed there will be too much attenuation and you'll hear by your bones : bad and unpleasant. Warning, it's for maximal protection (against tinnitus) but I miss a lot of things in the mix, it's only a transient solution.
@@raulmartinez914 That's a solution I experimented in studio, because a fellow percussionist wanted high level feedback (insufferable) and I couldn't adjust my headphones independently. I'm gonna buy ear monitors tailor-made. Quite expensive. You need a high volume in the headphones, obviously. Don't forget the silicone !!!
Will these isolate recorded loud drum tracks from bleeding into mics when recording acoustic guitars? I want super isolating headphones that will stop bleed into mics while recording acoustic guitars.
Putting the mic inside the headphones is a genius idea!!!!
I use the Alesis DRP 100 because they work great with electronic drums. I have about 10 pairs of headphones and all of them sound great with music but distort when used with the Roland drums, not the Alesis!, they have a much flatter range which means they don’t enphasise the bass too much so when compared to Skullcandy or similar, they will sound thinner, but that makes them perfect for both acoustic and electronic drums. I highly recommend. I’m sure they are very similar to what you have.
Are they good for electronic drums?
Luckily for you I also have a td-25 electric roland set and I just plugged these into the heaphone jack. They sound amazing. I'm very happy with them for both electric and acoustic playing.
Yes
I have had great success with these for programming beats on samplers and drum machines, and even tracking vocals.
Thank you guys!
Yes, they work really nice!! The only thing, after a couple of hours using them my ears hurt a little bit.
They are great. I really like them
@@EliezerDrumz my problem is that the stick sounds from hitting rubber pads on electronic drums still bleed through on Roland's own RH300-V. I'm thinking these would block that noise out completely -- what do you think? I don't really care whether they sound amazing, I just need "good enough" sound, but need almost complete isolation from the stick-hitting-rubber sound. What do you think? Thanks for the video.
The SIH1 was good. This one is a failure. Not impervious enough, and the sound, supposed to be better, is less natural. I couldn't use it. I put another frame on it, and gave it to a kid.
I use audio-protections under good open headphones. It's not ideal, but the best for my ears.
Thats a great idea. I like to feel also the bass . Which audio protectors do you use and which headphones?
@@raulmartinez914 Silicone protections (tailor made) & DT990 pro (Beyerdynamic).
The headphones must be open, if it's closed there will be too much attenuation and you'll hear by your bones : bad and unpleasant. Warning, it's for maximal protection (against tinnitus) but I miss a lot of things in the mix, it's only a transient solution.
That's a solution I experimented in studio, because a fellow percussionist wanted high level feedback (insufferable) and I couldn't adjust my headphones independently.
I'm gonna buy ear monitors tailor-made. Quite expensive.
You need a high volume in the headphones, obviously. Don't forget the silicone !!!
Listen to my last vid, to record at home, I use my old SIH1, tired and twice repaired.
Leave me a comment. I'm currently into música cubana, aprendiendo español !
@@raulmartinez914 Silicone protections (tailor made) & DT990 pro (Beyerdynamic*). The headphones must be open, if it's closed there will be too much attenuation and you'll hear by your bones : bad and unpleasant. Warning, it's for maximal protection (against tinnitus) but I miss a lot of things in the mix, it's only a transient solution.
That's a solution I experimented in studio, because a fellow percussionist wanted high level feedback (insufferable) and I couldn't adjust my headphones independently.
I'm gonna buy ear monitors tailor-made. Quite expensive.
*You need a high volume in the headphones, obviously. Don't forget the silicone !!!
@@raulmartinez914 Silicone protections (tailor made) & DT990 pro (Beyerdynamic). The headphones must be open, if it's closed there will be too much attenuation and you'll hear by your bones : bad and unpleasant. Warning, it's for maximal protection (against tinnitus) but I miss a lot of things in the mix, it's only a transient solution.
@@raulmartinez914 That's a solution I experimented in studio, because a fellow percussionist wanted high level feedback (insufferable) and I couldn't adjust my headphones independently. I'm gonna buy ear monitors tailor-made. Quite expensive.
You need a high volume in the headphones, obviously. Don't forget the silicone !!!
'PromoSM'
Will these isolate recorded loud drum tracks from bleeding into mics when recording acoustic guitars? I want super isolating headphones that will stop bleed into mics while recording acoustic guitars.
are your headphones open-backs?