Hip headphones linked to celebrity
WHEN iPods hit the scene 10 years ago, the small, white ear buds that came with the devices became the symbol for listening to music on the go.
Today, that's changing.
More and more people are expressing themselves with pricey headphones, with some fashion-forward music lovers rocking updated versions of the oversized headsets popular in earlier eras.
Bose has been known for its larger headphones in recent years, and now celebrities have taken note and aided in the resurgence of the ear amplifiers. In 2008, Monster launched Beats by Dre with Dr Dre, and it is the most recognizable of celebrity-branded headphones. Monster later released headphones with Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber, Diddy, Daft Punk, Nick Cannon and LeBron James.
Last year, 50 Cent, Quincy Jones and Ludacris released their own line of headphones.
Dre, the Grammy-winning rap legend who has produced hits for Eminem, 2Pac, 50 Cent and Mary J. Blige, says he is offended when he sees people using generic headphones.
"It's almost like a knife in the heart," he said while promoting the headphones last year. "We're in the studio, at least me, for years at a time trying to work on music, tweaking it, trying to get the sound right, and for people to walk around and listen to the music on those cheap white headphones is ridiculous."
But some people may have a reason for not buying Beats by Dre. The cheapest set costs US$100, and the most expensive pair is US$500.
The Sync by 50 Cent ranges from US$130 to US$400, and the lowest price for Soul by Ludacris is US$70; the highest is US$300. (Part of the sales from 50 Cent and Cannon's headphones go to charity.)
"You go out and spend three, four hundred dollars on an iPod, and then you go put your earphones in and your iPod sounds like crap," says Jimmy Lovine, chairman of Interscope, A&M and Geffen Records and co-launcher of Beats by Dre, as he was standing with Dre. "This is about releasing the sound that's in the iPod."
Monster's CEO Noel Lee took it a step further: "Most people have never heard what their iPod sounds like."
Research shows that most MP3 listeners own multiple headphones, according to Karim Noblecilla, director of product marketing for Sony's Personal Audio Accessories division.
"That's how we're seeing the market," she says. "People have two, three, even four sets for different purposes."
Noblecilla says Sony has a range of headphones targeting specific and unique demographics, from surfers to 13-year-olds. Its newest series, the Balanced Armature, is billed as the "smallest and lightest in-ear digital noise canceling headphones in the market today." It ranges from US$80 to US$500, and Sony says that although the headphones are small in size, they can "achieve high resolution sound."
Noblecilla says style and appearance have played a heavy role in headphone production in recent years. Diddy says that was his contribution to his line, Diddybeats.
"Not only did we want to have the best sound, we wanted to have the best-looking ear bud, and we want it to come in flavors," he said when his line came out.
He compared his headphones to the "sleekness of a Ferrari," and added that the look matches its high sound quality.
Oversized headphones were a big trend in the 1970s and 1980s - a time when hip-hop was emerging as a genre and people walked around with boomboxes, blasting a sound that Lee believes the iPod generation has missed out on.
"If you're in the baby boomer generation, you grew up with speakers ... (but) during the transition from an audio world to a video world, we kind of lost the audio in favor of the video development," he says. "The iPod generation ... they never got to hear really deep bass."
But 50 Cent, who says his line is "better than the others," believes his competitors aren't making headphones for all styles of music.
"I understand that they're trying to make it more attractive to a hip-hop demographic with the bass and stuff like that, but you listen to other music that isn't from that genre (and) it's way off-balance," he said in a recent interview.
The celebrity attachment to headphones helps give the product an identity, 50 Cent says.
Today, that's changing.
More and more people are expressing themselves with pricey headphones, with some fashion-forward music lovers rocking updated versions of the oversized headsets popular in earlier eras.
Bose has been known for its larger headphones in recent years, and now celebrities have taken note and aided in the resurgence of the ear amplifiers. In 2008, Monster launched Beats by Dre with Dr Dre, and it is the most recognizable of celebrity-branded headphones. Monster later released headphones with Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber, Diddy, Daft Punk, Nick Cannon and LeBron James.
Last year, 50 Cent, Quincy Jones and Ludacris released their own line of headphones.
Dre, the Grammy-winning rap legend who has produced hits for Eminem, 2Pac, 50 Cent and Mary J. Blige, says he is offended when he sees people using generic headphones.
"It's almost like a knife in the heart," he said while promoting the headphones last year. "We're in the studio, at least me, for years at a time trying to work on music, tweaking it, trying to get the sound right, and for people to walk around and listen to the music on those cheap white headphones is ridiculous."
But some people may have a reason for not buying Beats by Dre. The cheapest set costs US$100, and the most expensive pair is US$500.
The Sync by 50 Cent ranges from US$130 to US$400, and the lowest price for Soul by Ludacris is US$70; the highest is US$300. (Part of the sales from 50 Cent and Cannon's headphones go to charity.)
"You go out and spend three, four hundred dollars on an iPod, and then you go put your earphones in and your iPod sounds like crap," says Jimmy Lovine, chairman of Interscope, A&M and Geffen Records and co-launcher of Beats by Dre, as he was standing with Dre. "This is about releasing the sound that's in the iPod."
Monster's CEO Noel Lee took it a step further: "Most people have never heard what their iPod sounds like."
Research shows that most MP3 listeners own multiple headphones, according to Karim Noblecilla, director of product marketing for Sony's Personal Audio Accessories division.
"That's how we're seeing the market," she says. "People have two, three, even four sets for different purposes."
Noblecilla says Sony has a range of headphones targeting specific and unique demographics, from surfers to 13-year-olds. Its newest series, the Balanced Armature, is billed as the "smallest and lightest in-ear digital noise canceling headphones in the market today." It ranges from US$80 to US$500, and Sony says that although the headphones are small in size, they can "achieve high resolution sound."
Noblecilla says style and appearance have played a heavy role in headphone production in recent years. Diddy says that was his contribution to his line, Diddybeats.
"Not only did we want to have the best sound, we wanted to have the best-looking ear bud, and we want it to come in flavors," he said when his line came out.
He compared his headphones to the "sleekness of a Ferrari," and added that the look matches its high sound quality.
Oversized headphones were a big trend in the 1970s and 1980s - a time when hip-hop was emerging as a genre and people walked around with boomboxes, blasting a sound that Lee believes the iPod generation has missed out on.
"If you're in the baby boomer generation, you grew up with speakers ... (but) during the transition from an audio world to a video world, we kind of lost the audio in favor of the video development," he says. "The iPod generation ... they never got to hear really deep bass."
But 50 Cent, who says his line is "better than the others," believes his competitors aren't making headphones for all styles of music.
"I understand that they're trying to make it more attractive to a hip-hop demographic with the bass and stuff like that, but you listen to other music that isn't from that genre (and) it's way off-balance," he said in a recent interview.
The celebrity attachment to headphones helps give the product an identity, 50 Cent says.
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