Performance
Now for the good stuff. As well as being probably the most comfortable
earphones we've ever worn -- and we've worn more than we can count --
they also isolate sound wonderfully, especially considering their tips
are so soft. In an office environment with some light rock playing at a
medium volume, only our heaviest keystrokes were audible, and voices,
the air conditioning and the guy who keeps coughing two rows back were
all but non-existent.
We were struck by the Images' warm voice; the powerful mid-range is backed up by a well-balanced upper bass. Listening to Infected Mushroom's trippy Albibeno, we felt the full thump of the meaty kick drum, though lacking was the deep sub-bass boom heard through Denon's bass-tastic AH-C751s.
But the best was still to come. When we moved to Jenny Owen Youngs' stunning debut album Batten The Hatches, we heard the Images' strength with vocals and acoustic music. The warmth we hinted at before does nothing special for electronica, but with a singer/songwriter recording, it conveys the mood of guitar strings, double bass, violins and vocals beautifully.
This prowess in the mid range and upper bass comes at the expense of the treble, which is left lacking the high-end finesse that makes things like tambourines, crash cymbals and tight steel guitar strings really sparkle. You're left with a slightly less open, less transparent sound; you feel like you're just hearing a recording, as opposed to actually being there in the studio when it was recorded.
If you generally find you can pick out the MP3-compressed song from the lossless FLAC version, you might find your job is harder through the Images, as their weaker abilities in the treble allows a lossily- compressed song to slip through without notice. Don't care? Then you can ignore this, our most important criticism.
Conclusion
If you're looking for what may be the most
comfortable earphone in the world for almost everyone, look no further.
Combine that with performance that will please that same general
populous, and you've got a solid earphone. Our main complaint is a lack
of fine detail in the high end. But if you're prepared to sacrifice
this for otherwise great performance and unrivalled comfort, make sure
you try out the Klipsch Images.
But remember, you're paying a premium for the tiny size. Shure's SE530s sound better and have skull-crushing bass alongside piercing treble, with their three separate drivers in each ear. They cost about the same, but you'll have to put up with their intrusive and unusual wearing technique.
Edited by Shannon Doubleday