Why Audiophiles Hate Bose | TDNC Podcast #93

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • Bose is a household name when it comes to speakers and headphones -- so just why do audiophiles hate it so much?
    Image credits:
    901 on stands: en.audiofanzin...
    901 drivers: medias.audiofan...
    901 active EQ: www.raincityaud...
    802 image: en.audiofanzin...
    802 controller: en.audiofanzin...
    Bose headphone display: i.pinimg.com/o...
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    This Does Not Compute
    PO Box 131141
    St. Paul, MN 55113
    ---------------------------------------­------------------------------------
    Music by Lakey Inspired ( / lakeyinspired .
    Intro music by BoxCat Games (www.box-cat.com).

Komentáře • 7K

  • @elModo7
    @elModo7 Před 6 lety +2498

    *BOSE:* _Best Overpriced Sound Equipment_
    Well I'll give them credit, beats are even worse.

    • @Dave102693
      @Dave102693 Před 6 lety +19

      ▐ ᴇʟᴍᴏᴅᴏ7▐ idk why Apple bought them. Maybe it's because of its music services?

    • @elModo7
      @elModo7 Před 6 lety +159

      Nah, just because like iphones, ipads, imacs...
      Manufacturing is cheap, components are cheap, but can be sold at a high price because most people are going to buy them anyway.

    • @squidwardstesticles5914
      @squidwardstesticles5914 Před 6 lety +177

      B uy
      O ther
      S ound
      E quipment

    • @Dave102693
      @Dave102693 Před 6 lety +35

      ▐ ᴇʟᴍᴏᴅᴏ7▐ that's why their shit shouldn't be expensive. Apple pisses me off with that bullshit.

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar Před 6 lety +31

      Apple bought Beats for Jimmy Iovine and his mega contacts with the music industry. The rest was just incidental. Also the quality of their stuff has been increasing ever since they left Monster, the masters of overpriced, underperforming shite.

  • @SgtPUSMC
    @SgtPUSMC Před 6 lety +38

    I used to work in a stereo store in the mid to late 80's. We carried some pretty decent stuff like Klipsch, KEF, Jamo, Boston Acoustics, JBL, etc... We briefly carried Bose but quickly abandoned the idea because nobody liked them when we could compare them A to B in the same room, same music, same amp. Bose decided that we were in violation of their terms by allowing comparisons like that and terminated our agreement. We didn't care, we blew out the few Bose products we had and never looked back.
    Ever since that experience, I've never been tempted to fall for the Bose marketing hype.
    KEF, on the other hand was magical. I wished I could afford them.

    • @Strangerer69
      @Strangerer69 Před 5 lety +2

      It's like that at Best Buy. They have their own separate row of headphones so you can't go back and forth between their headphones and competitors. If consumers had such a choice, it would negate all the advertisement costs the manufacturers incurred.

    • @powerfulcornelius3285
      @powerfulcornelius3285 Před 5 lety

      Thank you for sharing that experience. I will never forget your story and it really made me look at Bose completely different. 🤔

    • @jamescarter3196
      @jamescarter3196 Před 5 lety +3

      They disallowed product comparisons! That’s quite a nail in their coffin.

    • @JiveDadson
      @JiveDadson Před 5 lety +1

      At a local Fry's Electronics, Bose has always had its separate demonstration area. It is highly controlled. You can only sit or stand in a designated place, and you can only play music they have pre-selected. Comparing Bose to others is intentionally impossible.

    • @frankrice1253
      @frankrice1253 Před rokem +1

      I watched this on a 3-2-1. Still sounds ok. He's right. "Good enough"

  • @IBISMK1
    @IBISMK1 Před 6 lety +684

    *ignored video to read comments*

    • @konaguzzi1
      @konaguzzi1 Před 6 lety +16

      wish I had as well, not very well put together and really only backs up why people dont like them some good contradiction going on in there

    • @Hdngy8
      @Hdngy8 Před 6 lety +7

      IBISMK2 . Synopsis
      Bose EQ
      Bose stuff looks good
      Tsunami looming

    • @jsharp9735
      @jsharp9735 Před 6 lety +4

      There are videos on youtube ?

    • @jamiedalke1331
      @jamiedalke1331 Před 6 lety +11

      Same. The dudes weird hair was creeping me out.

    • @funstruck1
      @funstruck1 Před 6 lety +3

      Looking glass. IMO you should allow others to speak for themselves!

  • @fredjohnson9856
    @fredjohnson9856 Před 5 lety +365

    Audiophiles don't like Bose speakers because they are not accurate...wow that took me way less than half an hour.

    • @yeezet4592
      @yeezet4592 Před 4 lety +31

      And they cost more than they should

    • @Skrenja
      @Skrenja Před 4 lety +6

      Fred Johnson Who cares? They are hifi speakers. You’re not mixing records on them. I have a pair of Neumaan kh120a’s and they are razor flat and honestly not something that’s great for casual listening.

    • @46wireboy
      @46wireboy Před 4 lety +25

      @@Skrenja Not HiFi.

    • @ArchLinuxTux
      @ArchLinuxTux Před 4 lety +1

      Ya. BOSE is tring alter where and when you hear sound, whicj is not worth what they think its worth.

    • @silvermediastudio
      @silvermediastudio Před 4 lety +13

      I skipped through this thing every 3-4 minutes, waiting for the information to start.. go to the end and was not surprised, your comment has more substance than this waste of bandwidth.

  • @fpink3
    @fpink3 Před 5 lety +284

    I've worked in the high-fidelity loudspeaker industry since the 1970s. I'm now retired. I always worked for companies that produced loudspeakers that directly competed with Bose products. This commentary video makes too many generalized assumptions about Bose and the examples are technically vague. It should have been about five minutes long.
    What looks like a "very high profit" margins in Bose designs (low cost to manufacture/high retail price) has always been irksome to Bose's competitor manufacturers and many retailers. But the technical expertise that goes into Bose product design and manufacturer is still impressive. Certainly, it's a huge advantage over the typically smaller company that hand-assembles a complicated product that inevitably fails more in proportion to that complication.
    I'm sure the companies I worked for (and many other similar competing companies) made "better sounding" and/or "more accurate" loudspeakers than the Bose products made at the same time. But the respect I felt towards Bose grew over the years as I considered the company's accomplishments. This respect was buttressed by the fact that only the most recent of the companies I worked for still exists under original management.
    Even with their success, Bose is under-appreciated. Bose is now a juggernaut that defies comparison with almost any other company in the audio business--certainly any company that just makes "speakers"--or "headphones"--or "car speakers". Harman International (now a Samsung subsidiary) was the only real rival.
    Bose's products are bullet-proof and are remarkably consistent due to a very well-designed (and expensive to set up) manufacturing process. This is not the way "audiophile" products are created. It's a very real advantage for Bose. Bose then markets their products expertly, with profit margins large enough to ensure the company can continue to thrive and support its customer base.
    On a more personal note, there's also the hundreds and hundreds of New England residents that Bose has consistently employed over the years. I've talked to many of them. As a group, they had lots of good things to say about the experience and precious little worthy of complaint.

    • @buzzcrushtrendkill
      @buzzcrushtrendkill Před 5 lety +32

      Many of these self professed "audiophiles" listen with their eyes more than their ears. It's all inference. Just like solid body electric guitar "tonewood".

    • @cl2nden1st89
      @cl2nden1st89 Před 5 lety +7

      buzzcrushtrendkill Humans being humans will be swayed by their other senses (e.g. sight) and not just hearing. That’s just a fact

    • @carlosoliveira-rc2xt
      @carlosoliveira-rc2xt Před 5 lety +24

      More nonsense. Bose always spent more on advertising than product innovations. They produce speakers for decades practically unchanged and overcharge for the privilege. If you look at the consistent critique against Bose, you see it is always the price vs performance ratio.

    • @fpink3
      @fpink3 Před 5 lety +27

      @@carlosoliveira-rc2xt Yours is a minority (dare I say elitist?) viewpoint. Bose has the largest R&D budget of any audio-only company (by a wide margin).The "superb performance" advantage for audiophile products just isn't relevant to a majority of loudspeaker owners. As far as "unchanged" goes, Bose constantly streamlines their product's design and manufacturing processes. The Bose 901 and 501 each must have had a dozen iterations. Sure, they all look the same, but from a manufacturer's viewpoint, each had improvements that made them a more desirable product. Not surprisingly, you probably weren't paying close attention. Also, their headphone division is famously innovative and successful.

    • @malefiz3534
      @malefiz3534 Před 5 lety +14

      love it to read long reviews about companies for sound products that lack the most importnat part: sound quality...

  • @cosplayeranime
    @cosplayeranime Před 4 lety +132

    I would like to have this guy's ability to stretch 5 words into over 30 minutes of words; that would come handy for my essays.

    • @Smurph-pm9xh
      @Smurph-pm9xh Před 3 lety

      @Yuto Nohdomi unpacking now

    • @Smurph-pm9xh
      @Smurph-pm9xh Před 3 lety

      Sorry my bad. Like ur video bout audiophiles

    • @emilen2
      @emilen2 Před 3 lety

      @Dash Thiago Get a room.

  • @goos4711
    @goos4711 Před 6 lety +86

    What I don’t trust about Bose is, at their price point they don’t show their specs.

    • @stimpsonjcat26
      @stimpsonjcat26 Před 6 lety +6

      At their price you can do better. Any comparable JBL/Infinity system will have more accurate sound and be quite a bit cheaper.

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter Před 6 lety +13

      If they showed all the releveant specs nobody would buy the products.

    • @kgbeezr75
      @kgbeezr75 Před 6 lety +2

      Their specs would be an embarrassment. And the one comeback they could have - "listen to us side-by-side for proof" they can't do because they don't allow that either...for obvious reasons. ;) Best to just not print the numbers and then go spontaneously deaf if anyone calls you on it. It's worked for them for decades.

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter Před 6 lety +3

      Their objective is a different one. The objective is providing the best possible user experience with the least amount of effort invested on the hardware side.
      That's not for me. It is probably as well the reason why they never became relevant in Germany. You see huge Bose stores in Asia, though, in prime locations where the rents are exorbitant.

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter Před 6 lety +4

      In the audio segment there are plenty reputable companies. It is more that people don't know how to interpret specs. Why for example the audio disaster Beats sold so well? A buying decision made based on hero marketing, and on a quick listen that boomy bass might sound impressive. Junk for a lot of money. You can get better for half the price, i.e. from Audio Technica and Sennheiser.

  • @glaubhafieber
    @glaubhafieber Před 9 měsíci +9

    I love the shop who suggested beyerdynamic headphones and said this is our demo unit, take it home and if you’re happ, come again,pay and get new ones in box. Never bought audio from another store ever since

  • @prophismusic
    @prophismusic Před 6 lety +1132

    In theory Bose "attempts to enhance" the audio quality, where an audiophile wants to hear the most accurate / pure representation of a recording, not an enhanced version.

    • @Nunez87
      @Nunez87 Před 6 lety +71

      this sums up the video.

    • @x-iso
      @x-iso Před 6 lety +18

      well, last time I was on concert where Bose was used with annoying bright logos on both sides of the scene, the sound sure attempted to 'enhance' the heck out of my hearing, so much that I had to literally plug my ears with fingers. never had it that terrible before. but it was likely also local sound director's fault.

    • @KR-nm6wm
      @KR-nm6wm Před 6 lety +2

      Well said... period!

    • @SightCentralVideos
      @SightCentralVideos Před 6 lety +2

      Perfect summary!

    • @mrheru8627
      @mrheru8627 Před 6 lety +3

      Finally.... someone nail it

  • @ToastyOs
    @ToastyOs Před 6 lety +207

    For audiophiles under 30, the true nemesis is definitely Beats. Oh god.... beats...

    • @gorillaau
      @gorillaau Před 6 lety +3

      The beats go on.... and the beats go on.

    • @ilpatongi
      @ilpatongi Před 6 lety +5

      Honestly I don't know why it should be a nemesis, just don't buy them.
      Unlike the GPU market, audio equipement can be bought for cheap and if you want vintage stuff (especially amps) it's even cheaper.
      You should know this

    • @ganypasion8932
      @ganypasion8932 Před 6 lety +4

      who cares hes still racking up millions so were the ones whos idiots not him im sure hes totally losing sleep knowing hes selling shitty headphones hahahahahahahaha

    • @jonuiuc1
      @jonuiuc1 Před 6 lety +1

      Sonos sound bars too

    • @ToastyOs
      @ToastyOs Před 6 lety +3

      Jeremy Clarkson as time goes by more and more devices (mainly laptops) are being shipped with Beats Audio as the built in audio processor. You can turn it off, but then they take your low-end as hostage and compress the music anyway. So to avoid the Beats influence I need to carry around my own DA interface. Of course I'll avoid this in future.
      As for headphones, my only regret is that inexperienced listeners will not know how far removed their music is from source. And all their non-hiphop music will sound subpar and they won't know why.

  • @ReasonablySane
    @ReasonablySane Před 5 lety +49

    I sold hi-fi in the 1970's. When the Bose 501 came out, Bose invited us to a Seattle hotel to get the full skinny and demo of the new 501's. They gave all of us salespeople the pitch, then hit play on an open reel tape deck and we heard an announcer go over the design and play some audio clips of various genre's of music. The 501's sounded absolutely AMAZING. I became a huge fan of Bose - for about 15 minutes.
    After the tape played and during the break they let us listen to the albums they had there I pulled out Juice Newton and played Queen of Hearts. It sounded like crap.
    They had eq'd the tape to be played, specifically, on the 501's. With a normal hi-fi, they were just another mid-fi speaker. And an over-priced one at that.
    Ever listen to a 901 without their special processor. Yeah, crap. They always were.

    • @kingkobra1956
      @kingkobra1956 Před rokem +5

      That's because the 501's were crap and I'm a bose fan. Bose has put out some garbage over time.

    • @JessicaFEREM
      @JessicaFEREM Před rokem +3

      yeah Bose doesn't make good speakers, but they do make good EQ's
      I'm sure the speakers in my QC15's don't sound that good, but by forcing you to use their hardware EQ, you wouldn't know it and they did a good job at EQing it imo

    • @sPi711
      @sPi711 Před rokem +5

      Just for your information, the EQ processor for the 901 is a crossover network unique to that speaker. And it's sophisticated enough so that you can control what comes out of the box. Every speaker you can name, outside of a single driver full range system, has a crossover designed to get a good (flat, It is hoped and claimed) response from those three separate speakers (If it's a three-way system) running in that cabinet. Take any set of speakers; I don't care how expensive and rip out the crossover from inside the speaker cabinets and see how they sound.

    • @givemethejob3293
      @givemethejob3293 Před rokem

      So true Donald, just look at the era late 60's and onward a lot of speakers sounded considerably worse than the 901's of course in todays market where DSP is used widely improvements can be made across the board. How many speakers of the 901 era actually went below 45 htz? Now even very high end setups are using subs. 901's still have the large sound stage so not just the person in the sweet spot gets the full sound.

    • @MrMooseSlayer
      @MrMooseSlayer Před rokem +2

      @@sPi711 And just for your information Crossover networks and EQ are completely 2 different things. There is no crossover function going on in the 901. Each driver is running "full-range". EQ boosts or lowers frequency bands in the signal chain to get a "flat" or desired response. Crossover networks divide frequencies between drivers to send only the frequencies that each driver will reproduce. Crossovers are necessary in multi-way systems due to the fact that most higher frequency drivers can't handle the power that the lower frequency drivers can. So removing the crossover network can damage the more delicate drivers. So yes, if you remove the EQ from the 901 or the EQ from a multi way speaker, the 901 would be exposed for what it really is. A heap of really expensive Chinese paper cone drivers and plastic. I've rebuilt many of these things, I know what's inside the magic box. I've built many 2, 3 and 4 way speakers that needed zero EQ to sound fantastic.

  • @samthesung4902
    @samthesung4902 Před 5 lety +10

    In the late 80's early 90's I liked what Bose was doing. the direct reflecting concept was an interesting one to me then because I was looking for that "live in my living room" sound. I owned 301's and 201's. Around 1990/ 1991, I was a big fan of the sub-woofer/ satellite engineering concept and believed that moving frequencies below 80Hz to a dedicated stand alone cabinet was a wise choice because the human ear cannot hear directionally below 80Hz and by doing this you free up the possibility of handling the mids and highs with more specifically designed cabinets, drivers, crossovers, and amps to better reproduce a full spectrum of sound. Then Bose debuted the Acoustimass system. My own uncle was taken in by the marketing hype put forward by Bose and he dropped over $1000 on a speaker system for their house. One 5 minute listen and I had to be taken aside by the family and told not to tell uncle G what they had done to him. He liked it, and was proud of it, so let him have his enjoyment. The tiny little speakers for the highs and mids were so cheap and in tiny little plastic swivel boxes they couldn't reproduce audio anywhere near the frequencies above 80Hz so they had to set the crossover higher sending lower midrange to the so-called "subwoofer" box. Now the "sub" was completely directional. I could hear the poor thing over in the corner behind the loveseat huffing and puffing away. What a scam. It was clear, Bose did have engineering prowess, they did have a marketing department up to their elbows in ideas about how to turn a profit, and they did have products that could produce sound that could "trick" the uneducated or the naive into shelling out cold hard cash for inferior designs and sub-par sound quality. At that point it was clear to me that Bose was the Ponzi scheme of the audio world. Preying on weak, impressionable, underinformed and uneducated consumers, particularly the elderly, like my Uncle G. No people, that's not how it is supposed to work. A real sub-sat system that has great drivers in well designed enclosures with expertly engineered crossovers made with quality parts can be the pinnacle of accurate, transparent sound reproduction. Once you have heard it and appreciated it, you cannot stand what Bose does to the consumer. It's unconscionable, and it should be considered borderline fraud.

    • @JoeCamel-fn7dl
      @JoeCamel-fn7dl Před 11 měsíci

      Way back when I purchased my Bose 901’s comparing them to the JBL L100’s, I loved both of them but bought the 901’s. The kicker was both speakers were being driven by a Bose amplifier putting out around 275 watts RMS which I didn’t buy then and is no longer available. Seeing that the 901’s can handle 450 watts RMS compared to 200 watts for the JBL’s, in today’s market it will cost a fortune for an amplifier to listen to the 901’s as I did. I called Bose for a solution to my dilemma and their suggestion was to buy a new amplifier Bose now makes. When I checked out it’s specs, for around $700 you get 80 watts RMS maximum per channel. At this point I will either leave my 901’s in my cedar chest or sell them least I run across a 700 watt 2 channel power amp some non audiophile have to Goodwill for a new surround sound receiver.

    • @JoeCamel-fn7dl
      @JoeCamel-fn7dl Před 11 měsíci

      correction: donated to Goodwill

    • @JoeCamel-fn7dl
      @JoeCamel-fn7dl Před 11 měsíci +1

      I am not anti-Bose as I still like their Wave radios and their $150 sound link which I compared to more expensive blue tooth speakers. Bose sounded the best in this category. Wait for a sale if you can. Micro-center had the Sound Link for $125 about 3 weeks ago.

    • @lanceevans1689
      @lanceevans1689 Před 8 měsíci

      Spot on. And THAT is why we dislike Bose. Not that we want someone to hate.

  • @richardd.9816
    @richardd.9816 Před 5 lety +221

    I am a retired audio engineer and have been in many recording studios in North America and have never seen any Bose equipment in a professional studio. I believe Bose uses audio tricks and gimmicks to make audio sound to what most people think is good. The exception is their line of noise reduction pilot headphones, however I think they are overpriced. BTW, most studios used JBL 4311s, 4312s and 4 inch Auratones to mix with. The little Auratones were to check the mix for car stereo. Just my two cents worth.

    • @damon7890
      @damon7890 Před 5 lety +4

      Richard D. JBL is the best. Have never used anything but them

    • @richardd.9816
      @richardd.9816 Před 5 lety +5

      I agree, I use JBL 4311s from the 1980s in my home.

    • @notek_music
      @notek_music Před 5 lety +2

      Richard D. What would you suggest for a Beginner in the audio engineering world?

    • @Greatdome99
      @Greatdome99 Před 5 lety +6

      I've had a pair of JBL L-100s since 1973 and they're still wonderful--and in perfect operating condition.

    • @thekitowl
      @thekitowl Před 5 lety +4

      I’ve never been in studio where Bose equipment is used either. I find their sound too top & bottom for my ears which wouldn’t suit a studio anyway. Just bought some Adam speakers to mix on , bit pricy but nice.

  • @billychapman8711
    @billychapman8711 Před 6 lety +611

    We don't hate bose....we just know better

    • @WarthDader74
      @WarthDader74 Před 6 lety +18

      Sony is the best hi-fi brand in the world

    • @alanfrayser9941
      @alanfrayser9941 Před 6 lety +54

      WarthDader74
      Only if you're 12

    • @WarthDader74
      @WarthDader74 Před 6 lety +23

      +Alan Frayser Sir, I am in my 70's and worked for decades with selling audio equipment. During all those years I sold a lot of different brands, and experienced which ones had the best quality. Sony was definitely the brand that had fewest repairs, and the inner components was of very high quality. Sound quality was also excellent. All the negative things you hear about Sony nowadays, is not true at all and are spread by competitors.

    • @robin-gu6uy
      @robin-gu6uy Před 6 lety +2

      Yeah so what's good? I have 200 to spend

    • @williampark979
      @williampark979 Před 5 lety +12

      Mordane Sennheiser headphones man✊🏽

  • @ZipTiePros
    @ZipTiePros Před 5 lety +134

    I'm a Klipsch fan myself. My media room is purely Klipsch and I love the way it sounds. Yet, I still purchase Bose Bluetooth speakers as they sound great in any environment. To me it's incredible how such an enjoyable sound can come out of a speaker that small. So in that regard, I don't mind all that digital wizardry and use it as it is intended; a portable speaker.

    • @mth0d
      @mth0d Před 5 lety +4

      i like the quiet comfort lineup, and the soundlink lineup. but the bigger speakers usually is lackluster

    • @somestuffithoughtyoumightl6985
      @somestuffithoughtyoumightl6985 Před 5 lety +8

      JBL👍🏼

    • @jasonpohle369
      @jasonpohle369 Před 5 lety +2

      Love my SoundTouch 30, what an amazing sound for a Bluetooth speaker

    • @wesb217
      @wesb217 Před 5 lety +2

      Have you listened to Klipsch the one BT speaker

    • @hengineer
      @hengineer Před 4 lety +2

      I still have the original Soundlink, with the USB receiver and remote and it still blows away any other bluetooth speaker I've owned, even the Soundlink III. I just recently discovered that using the remote you can actually get it into bluetooth pairing mode (had no idea it was bluetooth) and use it with anything other than the USB receiver. its not just quality of sound, its also overall loudness without distortion. Used it at many a party and its still going strong.

  • @budwzr8199
    @budwzr8199 Před 4 lety +93

    BOSE: Boy Our Shit's Expensive

  • @dand8282
    @dand8282 Před 6 lety +21

    Audiophiles don't like integrated systems; they relish picking out each component and cable and upgrading pieces of the system over time. Bose products are highly integrated, which leaves audio hobbyists with nothing to do after purchase. You don't see racers racing with automatic transmissions; enthusiast like to tweak... Also, a lot of Bose products are designed to provide background music, whereas separates tend to be used for active listening / music appreciation. Even as an audiophile, I think that for an office, back porch, or kitchen you can do a lot worse than Bose's sound, compactness, and aesthetics for the price range. They also make the best mass-marketed system-in-a-box I've heard since Cambridge Sound Work's old-school 5.1 system...

    • @123lowp
      @123lowp Před 6 lety +1

      I have a Bose System in my car. It's shit.
      I have Yamaha HS8 studio monitors for my home studio. It's great.

    • @D3fcon141
      @D3fcon141 Před 6 lety +2

      You're definitely right about hobbyists wanting to be more in tune and in control of what they love.
      Car guys will buy tunable cars with manual transmissions. The average person will buy a 4-cylinder FWD compact car because they don't care.
      PC guys will build their own PCs with glass side panels, RGB, and the best specs they can get for the money. The average person will buy an OEM laptop because they don't care.
      It applies to any hobby. Average people will keep buying Bose because it sounds good to them, and they don't care enough for better audio. Audiophiles, however, will not.

    • @youAbajajTube
      @youAbajajTube Před 6 lety +1

      Nonsense, Bose is utter garbage.

  • @mikewhite9818
    @mikewhite9818 Před 5 lety +333

    30 minutes to say what you could have said in 5 minutes.

    • @ocudagledam
      @ocudagledam Před 5 lety +2

      Preach it, Mike White!

    • @EgonSpengler1977
      @EgonSpengler1977 Před 5 lety +16

      Bet that’s what’s your wife says 😂

    • @carlingtonme
      @carlingtonme Před 5 lety

      YES....

    • @nealjazz
      @nealjazz Před 5 lety +22

      This is the most unintelligent comment used. It seems as though it is widely used by people with no true desire for complete information/explanation of a subject. Maybe because their pea sized brain cannot comprehend more than one piece of small info at a time, only has the attention span of flea, has way too much room inside the head in which it is encased (in other words, there is a lot of empty space inside that head), or, the host of said pea brain just spends way too much time trying to be a smart ass. What ever the case may be, it is an extremely idiotic response. It wastes time, energy, and space on the page (not to mention the fact that it advertises the commenter's low level IQ). If one watches/listens to a host, and doesn't find what they were expecting from him/her, then, why not just go on to the next source without wasting everyone's time by writing a comment only worthy of a moron.

    • @mikewhite9818
      @mikewhite9818 Před 5 lety +23

      nealjazz Intelligent people do not need babble. The facts will suffice. 5 minutes is all you need. Unless you are a babbling fool then you go on and on and on and on for no good reason.

  • @yagopone7404
    @yagopone7404 Před 4 lety +112

    Watching this with my Bose headphones lol

    • @emanuellgustea122
      @emanuellgustea122 Před 3 lety +1

      Me too

    • @emanuellgustea122
      @emanuellgustea122 Před 3 lety +1

      @Rusty Andrews point blank period they sound good. Never found a pair of consumer headphones that are better. Everyone is obsessed with bass and bose doesn't make bass heavy headphones. They're more for vocals and detail

    • @biboKralle
      @biboKralle Před 3 lety +1

      @@emanuellgustea122 So you never tried out more than Bose stuff? :)

    • @emanuellgustea122
      @emanuellgustea122 Před 3 lety

      @@biboKralle i have. I've tried sony, skullcandy, sennehiser, jbl. Stuff like that

    • @BradyNielsen
      @BradyNielsen Před 3 lety +1

      @@emanuellgustea122 oof. Skullcandy is junk. Sennheiser has a huge product lineup of varying use cases, and can be fantastic or shit depending on your use case. You should try the AudioTechnica ATH-M50x cans with a Fiio DAC/amp (I use a Fiio i1, but they are discontinued). I’ve compared them side by side with Bose headphones and they’re magnitudes better for the same price.

  • @squallywally
    @squallywally Před 4 lety +1

    I don’t know why CZcams recommends old content but I do have a comment. Bose has done a brilliant job. They are a company that’s in it to make money. They are experts. They have clear target markets. They have convinced the average person their products are great. They still sound better than anything the average person has heard. Think about other industries such as Harley Davidson. They have taken a product that has changed little over the decades and has built a following that is unprecedented in business. You still have to have a product that’s good enough to get people buy. They both are experts selling to their market demographics and creating exceptional perceptions. They have spent a lot of money and time telling average people their speakers are exceptional and many average consumers associate Bose with high end quality. That’s what they call great marketing.

  • @Iamironman76
    @Iamironman76 Před rokem +5

    I must say that the Bose mini soundlink 2 is the best balanced Bluetooth speaker I have heard for that size. There is no reason for me to even compare to others. Had it 5 years and it still works beautifully. I had the old Bose acoustimas set with bass module with a big NAD amp in 1999. They sounded pretty darn good with the right recordings and worked very well for home theater. But I did not buy for perfection. More for convenience and small physical imprint and they were great. The build quality is very solid.

    • @127Foxtrot
      @127Foxtrot Před rokem +1

      100% agreed, if you're happy with the sound, that's all that matters. I also have a Soundlink Mini 1, and the original Acoustimass 5's hooked up to a Cambridge amp, plus Acoustic Energy speakers and REL subwoofer. I love my Bose gear for the sound they make, and have no qualms with the marketing that hooked me in. The sky is the limit when it comes to audiophile snobbery... eg, "if your system doesn't come close to my $100K B&W Nautilus system, don't bother talking to me".

    • @marctestarossa
      @marctestarossa Před 8 měsíci

      I absolutely love the Soundlink Mini 2. If they are positioned well in the room and I know where the people listening to them will be, the sound this little thing produces is huge. But of course they're not meant for critical listening. It's convenient to set up, to move around the room and to give the "impression" of a big sound. And I don't actually care if the sound really is that big or it just pretends to be. And I see how this small box does some trickery. But if the trickery works, why would I care? ^^ 99 % of the time I listen to music it's through headphones. And I also have the QC 35 II and they're the headphones that get the most use. Do they sound good? Yes. Do they sound amazing? No. But they're sounding "good enough" while being extremely convenient, reliable, having very good ANC and most important plus for them is that they are simply the most comfortable headphones I ever had sitting on my head. But do I use them for working on my music or critical listening? Of course not. You even see it in the name of the headphones: they make the world quiet while being extremely comfortable, and that's what they're loved for.

    • @fabiogonzalez4413
      @fabiogonzalez4413 Před 7 měsíci +1

      What you failed to realize it’s how much you pay vs what others equipment you could’ve bought with better quality and would last as long as boss.

    • @marctestarossa
      @marctestarossa Před 7 měsíci

      @@fabiogonzalez4413 in general this is a very complicated topic. For example when the QC35 was released, it was so innovative that there simply was no competition for ANC headphones. When the Soundlink Mini came out it was simply an amazing deal for pairing convenience with (perceived) sound quality. And now I'm looking at a BOSE system for amplification for busking because they just created the best package of convenience, portability and sound quality. But all of those products are in no way meant to be a solution for audiophiles. Do your research, put your expectations in the right spot and after that make the right purchase decision.

  • @kalban112
    @kalban112 Před 6 lety +15

    In my country (Czech Republic), the main problem with Bose is, that it's so overpriced, that only little group of people even know that Bose exists. Normal people just don't care about Bose, because of the price. Proffesionals thinks that Bose is just super expensive toy and only people, that sometimes buys one of Bose headpones are hardcore Apple fans.

  • @TimSimpson
    @TimSimpson Před 6 lety +312

    Audiophiles don't "hate" bose, we just prefer stuff that works differently. Bose do a lot of stuff that works well for what audio professoinals might call an untrained consumer - but they do know their market, and have a brand that they've very carefully positioned to be desirable to those that like showing off a "premium brand" on their desk or shelf. We know better. we look at empirical data and measure, and judge on performance over marketing.
    This doesn't mean we hate it - that word is overused and is just more media hype

    • @MrWalker1000
      @MrWalker1000 Před 6 lety +1

      Tim Simpson what's better than Bose SoundLink 3 ? I think Sony is the best mainstream

    • @TimSimpson
      @TimSimpson Před 6 lety +2

      I agree - the MDR-1000X cans are awesome. I'm editing vlog sound with a sony 7.2 set. gaming with the PlayStation headphones, and I use sony MDR-HW300 (wireless sender) when operating cameras at gigs (so I don't forget about the cable and yank the camera ever again ;) ) ... 6 sony cameras here too.. mixed with an old canon and a few blackmagic's...

    • @nikhil2gupta
      @nikhil2gupta Před 6 lety +5

      I am one of those untrained customer you mentioned ..
      My purpose is mostly listening songs n watching movies..
      What is alternative to the costly Bose products? Please help

    • @TimSimpson
      @TimSimpson Před 6 lety +4

      Personally I tend to go for the sony gear - the price is good for what you get, I like the sound space they deliver and the construction is great. The sound system/media head I have is 14 years old and going strong. The only reason I would upgrade it is for improved HDMI version for 4k/3D.
      Alternatively there's been massive improvement in soundbars.
      Sound is very much a personal taste thing - some people like more bass, some more mid-tone, and then the space you are going to put it in has a huge impact on how something performs.
      I know this is a useless answer - but it depends on what works for your tastes.
      What I will say is don't go budget, or "fancy" - make sure that what you get is solidly built, and it will last you for years. cheap stuff will rip it self to bits and end up costing more in the long run.

    • @Minecraftrok999
      @Minecraftrok999 Před 6 lety +12

      Nikhil Gupta
      Sony is decent, though not perfect.
      One pair of headphones you might want to check out are the Audiotechnica ATH M50X, I absolutely love them.

  • @Athandatu
    @Athandatu Před 5 lety +115

    This entire video sounded like he was talking about those overpriced and underperforming BEATS products

    • @RFIDemocracy
      @RFIDemocracy Před 4 lety +6

      Yeah but Beats look good with the track suit

    • @owngun
      @owngun Před 3 lety

      I have the beats studio since 2012 and the beats pill xxl since 2013. Cant say anything bad about them. They were worth every penny.

    • @bihas2389
      @bihas2389 Před 3 lety

      I got my beats a few years ago. Have nothing bad to say tbh.

    • @tenetik5816
      @tenetik5816 Před 3 lety +2

      I know what you mean. I got a pair and the of beats studio 3’s and they stopped working on the first day.

    • @BradyNielsen
      @BradyNielsen Před 3 lety +2

      Biggest complaint about Beats is the price for the quality. They’re poorly constructed and completely squash the high end. They are a fantastic fashion accessory though.

  • @ChrisDomnik
    @ChrisDomnik Před 6 lety +18

    Bose is a style brand when it comes to consumer audio, much like Beats by Dre. It's better than the cheap stuff, and that's enough for most non-audiophiles. The real draw is the brand.

    • @kaarthuisplus
      @kaarthuisplus Před 3 lety +1

      The real draw is the comfort of their headphones, the noice cancelling and lastly sound.

    • @PurushNahiMahaPurush
      @PurushNahiMahaPurush Před 3 lety +2

      @@kaarthuisplus This! I will never understand why people behave as if Bose are like Skullkandy or Beats. They are not. They know their shit. Its just that audiophiles are not their target market. Bose QC headphones have some of the best comfort, NC and call quality I have ever seen in wireless headphones. Not to mention the sound is not that bad as people are saying. They actually sound good in most cases. Good sound is incredibly subjective anyway.

    • @invinciblenowyt
      @invinciblenowyt Před 2 lety

      @@PurushNahiMahaPurush Exactly, I have had my bose QC 35 2s for a couple of years now and they are very comfortable (have worn them for 13h straight on a flight), have very good noise cancellation that helps me concentrate and are overall a good headphone for day to day use and are perfectly fine for the average user. You can also have best of both worlds if you want to, audiophile gear and some headphones for work or flights for example.

  • @Pseudo_Boethius
    @Pseudo_Boethius Před 4 lety +3

    The only Bose product I've personally ever purchased was a cute little orange Bluetooth speaker for my wife, small enough to fit in her purse and charges via a normal micro USB connection. I bought it without even hearing it, it was the size and color I new she would like, the sound of quality of a small speaker certainly was going to suck no matter what. I gave to her as a present, and helped her to set it up, and was AMAZED at the sound that little dingy speaker could make! Absolutely amazed! I paid $80 or $90 for the speaker, which was certainly a bit (but not too bad) for a small portable Bluetooth speaker, but I think it was worth every penny. And this comes from a certified Bose hater....
    The speaker is a "Bose SoundLink Micro, Portable Outdoor Speaker" ... and yes, it's weatherproof. For someone who wants a very small Bluetooth speaker with amazing sound, I can't recommend this little guy highly enough.
    But when my wife is at home, she prefers connecting to my $300 Marshall Kilburn II Portable Bluetooth Speaker... :-)

  • @DavidKowalski
    @DavidKowalski Před 6 lety +62

    Essentially, all informed people (even audio lovers) hate scammers of all kinds. I think audiophiles hate Bose mostly because they dislike the way Bose misleads the general public by taking advantage of their ignorance. Bose owes its home audio success to skilled marketing and somewhat to customers who insist on having very small speakers (though even with a small size there are much better options [such as KEF] in the same price range). The 901's are the best home product Bose ever produced -- but even those are inferior to similarly priced products from other manufacturers. The size and shape of speakers should be determined by the sound they create, not the novel look they achieve. Both objective and honest, subjective testing reveal that Bose really does not have high fidelity. I sold high-end/mid-fi audio for many years and the store at which I worked had to eventually drop Bose since after people compared Bose to other, similarly priced products, they were inevitably astounded at how much better the other products sounded and we consequently very rarely sold any Bose products. Bose sells in the big box stores to people sold by the marketing rather than the sound quality.

    • @Deebz270
      @Deebz270 Před 6 lety +4

      Exactly. Every word bang on.

    • @invalid8774
      @invalid8774 Před 6 lety +4

      And a lot fits on Apple which is why the pc enthusiast community hates them so much. Though Apple is way better at this than Bose ever was.

    • @nova290r
      @nova290r Před 6 lety +1

      KEF♡

    • @codezero6023
      @codezero6023 Před 6 lety +1

      Bose taking advantage of people’s ignorance? Sounds like Microsoft

    • @nickguy6820
      @nickguy6820 Před 6 lety +4

      Yup. They sound "impressive" at first during a demo. But, like that Beats junk, it really gets tiresome after a short while. Neutral, accurate audio is so much easier to listen to.
      They're just too expensive, too manipulative, and only work "well" in a very limited environment. There's always a better option, usually for a better price and without the shady marketing.
      If you're on an airplane, and want decent audio with noise cancellation, the headphones are... OK... but there is still better stuff out there, that won't irritate your ears after 15 minutes, and won't cost you >$200.

  • @alejandrobolanos4655
    @alejandrobolanos4655 Před 4 lety +24

    The title drew me in but I just don't think one needs over half an hour to say why

  • @orchidleo
    @orchidleo Před 5 lety +9

    bought klipsch about 15 years ago still perform as well as when they were bought. i rate them A+

  • @tracyblair3064
    @tracyblair3064 Před 5 lety +22

    My favorite catchphrase from when I sold hifi gear: "Bose - Better sound through marketing." 😁

  • @marcfriedman7779
    @marcfriedman7779 Před 3 lety +36

    My father was in the retail audio business and friends with Dr. Bose. If you looked at his history you would know that his first concept was to create greater high frequency dispersion to increase the "sweet spot" as you walked perpendicular to the speakers. The first popular FM tabletop radio was the KLH 21. I still have one. Sounds great. The Bose wave radio is a phenomenal product, way ahead of its time, back then. What Dr. Bose did, whether you like his products or not, was push the industry to his concept. Go to any concert. They typically have high frequency speakers pointed in overlapping directions to reinforce his original concept. He was a firm believer that no 2 people hear the same thing the same way. Therefore eg. one person likes Polk, the other JBL. Neither one is right. That's audio

    • @crysstoll1191
      @crysstoll1191 Před rokem +3

      I'll take Polk and JBL over Bose crapola. I had a set of Polk 5s way back when. They sounded very good (esp with some real power). Never heard a Bose system that was any good.

  • @nickcostanzo9251
    @nickcostanzo9251 Před 5 lety +7

    As an owner of Bose QC 25's and Senheiser HD 280 pro's, i enjoy both for different reasons. If i want to hear accurate highs and lows in a song, i prefer the Senheisers. If i'm making music, i use the 280's so that i can understand the music better. However, when listening for fun, i prefer my QC25's. Bose is more comfortable, the noise cancelling is awesome, and they have a warm sound that i enjoy (even though it might not be "accurate").

    • @kennmossman8701
      @kennmossman8701 Před 5 lety +1

      I also have used both and still prefer Sennheiser regardless. Furthermore my Bose started to fall apart after 6 months whereas the foam on my Sennheisers lasted over 3 years.

    • @RockyGrenade
      @RockyGrenade Před 5 lety

      I stopped using QC25 regularly as I just knew they would break easily... Just not lasting material. You could say I'm just "rationing" usage.

  • @DouglasMilewski
    @DouglasMilewski Před 6 lety +24

    I think that Bose designs their speakers to sound better to non-audiophile listeners for the way that non-audiophiles experience music. That's why non-audiophiles love their Bose setups. They're high-end mini-vans, which may cost as much as a sports car but really have a different purpose.

  • @ov3rkill
    @ov3rkill Před 6 lety +76

    I always thought Beats by Dr. Dre is the villain/archnemesis of audiophiles.

    • @D3fcon141
      @D3fcon141 Před 6 lety +9

      I'm not an audiophile, and only a few minutes in, but he seems to dislike Bose because they market their products as high end as more professional and higher quality companies.
      Beats knows what it is. It's for middle schoolers who want bass, bass, and more bass.

    • @youAbajajTube
      @youAbajajTube Před 6 lety +6

      Let us use a food analogy.
      Beats is Burger King and BOSE is taco Bell.
      Audiophiles are people who would eat at decent restaurants that use high quality ingredients.
      Get it?

    • @John_Ridley
      @John_Ridley Před 6 lety +17

      Beats by Dre is McDonalds food being sold at Applebee's prices. Bose is Applebee's food being sold at steak house prices. There's hate enough for both.

    • @StuninRub
      @StuninRub Před 6 lety +13

      youAbajajTube That's fucking bullshit, most audiophiles are hiveminded idiots like yourself. Morons like you will bitch about mainstream brands while coveting thousand dollar cables.

    • @KarryKarryKarry
      @KarryKarryKarry Před 6 lety +8

      Game: Find the Bose peddler in this tread.

  • @AlejandroBelloRD
    @AlejandroBelloRD Před 6 lety +25

    You nailed it right. Been a fanatic audiophile until about stereo gave way to the surround sound era (early 2000s). I hated Bose not only because they cheat with EQ, but they also charge way more than good, honest, top of the line audio brands AND they custom tweak their store demos in the way you're denouncing it.

    • @chrisantoniou4366
      @chrisantoniou4366 Před 6 lety

      I believe that the demo music Bose used were recorded in an anechoic studio so that when reproduced by Bose "direct/reflected" speakers it sounded "better" than the same recording on a quality conventional system.

    • @ten._.s
      @ten._.s Před 6 lety +1

      I agree... I did a frequency response test and the Bose failed badly...

    • @JuanHernandez-uj6to
      @JuanHernandez-uj6to Před 6 lety

      Give me an earphone recommendation

  • @ronswoboda8310
    @ronswoboda8310 Před rokem +3

    Had a pair of bose 901 series 2 with a 12 band equalizer; they sounded amazing! Sound was so clean....one of the reasons; no distortion from crossovers that were used in conventional speakers.

    • @jedi_mapperp4073
      @jedi_mapperp4073 Před rokem +1

      Need a LOT of power to run the closed (no venting) series I and II

  • @rockman369
    @rockman369 Před 6 lety +9

    Just recently purchased the Bose quiet comfort 30 and I am really loving them, sound quality is perfect for me because the most important aspect of these headphones are the noise cancelation and the Bluetooth features. For the type of work I do they are perfect.

    • @christiangeiselmann
      @christiangeiselmann Před 6 lety

      Rock Man v I am using Sennheiser headphones (open type) fir work at home, Bose QC 15 (or so) for work while travelling, ans also Phillips and one other well known Brand noise cacellation headphones. I love the Phillips ones, but their problem is that they catch cell phone signals. So by and large I am most satisfied with the Bose ones.

    • @olgil
      @olgil Před 6 lety +1

      Rock Man Glad you enjoy them but don't listen to Sony's or especially Bowers and Wilkins' alternatives unless you want to suffer from buyers remorse when it comes to sound quality.
      One thing Bose definitely has over the competition is comfort though. They're light and very comfy.

    • @BrawndoQC
      @BrawndoQC Před 6 lety +1

      olgil I tried those and the Bose QC30 (buds) and QC35 (cans) sound better. No remorse here.

  • @andrewryder3075
    @andrewryder3075 Před 6 lety +54

    As a designer of audiophile product, I believe I can shed a little further light on the topic...
    Bose - (as pointed out in the video) - has never considered itself an "audiophile brand."
    Brands like Acoustic Research, B.A.T., Boulder, B&W, Conrad Johnson, Krell, Mark Levinson, McIntosh, Quad, Stax, V.A.C., Wilson Audio, etc. have always focused on the "less is more" concept - (putting fewer, but higher quality components in the signal path) - and on dedicated pieces - (separate amplifiers, preamplifiers, sources, processing, cabling, and speakers - such that you have the flexibility to upgrade, change or "tune" to your liking specific portions of the signal path independently of each other. The emphasis of these companies is on accuracy of reproduction - (i.e., "how close is the sound to the sound of the original performance?" or "How revealing of detail, nuance, instrumental placement, and recording environment is the sound?")
    The goal of Bose has traditionally been to position itself as a "lifestyle brand" - (a là Bang & Olufsen) - with emphasis on convenience, styling, and features. Ultimate fidelity to the source is not the primary goal, as long as the sound is generally liked by non-enthusiasts - (i.e., "How good does it sound to the average listener?")
    It is often said that a well-made recording will almost always sound better on an "audiophile" system, but that a poor or mediocre recording will usually sound better on a Bose. In other words, the audiophile system will reproduce exactly what it's presented with, warts and all; the Bose system is capable of making something sound "better than it is", (but only when it's not that good to begin with).
    The other problem that audiophiles have with Bose is that many audio enthusiasts have multiple speaker systems - each one having different attributes; the signal processing employed by Bose speakers to achieve their response adversely affects those speakers, as well as "messing up" the signal going to any subsequent components in the audio chain.

    • @foreveremain
      @foreveremain Před 6 lety

      Andrew Ryder ń

    • @gorillafunk725
      @gorillafunk725 Před 6 lety

      If it sounds like crap it IS

    • @tkandme3
      @tkandme3 Před 6 lety +6

      Andrew Ryder b&o Krell, Mark Levinson, Wilson are mostly junk unfortunately. Bose Professional & Panaray is of high quality, and simply one of the best. They do have different divisions. Bose consumer, and Bose Professional which includes Panaray and some speakers utilizing the B&O and JBL brand.

    • @gorillafunk725
      @gorillafunk725 Před 6 lety +3

      @@tkandme3
      You have hit on an incovenient truth. Bose domestic consumer goods to me are simply unlistenable BUT..... Bose pro gear does not sound bad at all. Mark Levinson used to be some of the best you could buy but appear to have lost their way. Krell same downward spiral. Wilson is way overpriced for passive loudspeakers and has some issues. B&O is a mixed bag but that has never changed from their early days. At least they embrace active domestic loudspeaker tech.
      Use DSP in new & innovative ways and remain the only HiFi in the Gugenheim museum of modern art. Their low mass phono cartridge tech was and still is plagerised by many others. Because it is good and it works. So felt I must pull you up on that.
      Cheers

    • @jas_bataille
      @jas_bataille Před 5 lety

      B&O makes very interesting tech available to many. Their ICEPower class-D amp is absolutely mind-blowing IMHO, and having this kind of amp on consumer laptops and screens is great.

  • @wesmarks9018
    @wesmarks9018 Před 5 lety +4

    I have a pair of probably 30 year old 10.2’s. I’ll never get rid of them. Do they sound as good as some other things out there? No, but the nostalgia factor is there and they are unique and I enjoy the sound on specific music.

    • @TheHubeef
      @TheHubeef Před rokem

      With the right AMP set up, they do sound the best still.

  • @TJRtheOriginal
    @TJRtheOriginal Před 5 lety +9

    Thanks for making an objective video about BOSE. I'm a musician and BOSE makes portable PA systems for working Musicians designed for live Gigs (Vocals, Guitar, Keys, Bass Guitar, etc.) For years, I used PA systems by the standard musician gear manufacturer's: Fender, JBL, etc. This gear was always heavy and cumbersome and one day after playing two gigs on the same day, on one of the hottest days of the year. I thought there has to be a better way. I went to my local musician's gear store with this question and was introduced to the BOSE PA system. It was EXPENSIVE. But I could return it in 30 days if I wasn't happy. Compared to my previous set up: The Bose was light, portable, and super easy to set up, and it sounded GREAT! At every gig, I played customers (IE: Audiences) would compliment me on the audio quality. So would the venue owners who booked me. Every musician who worked with me agreed that it was the best sounding PA system they have ever used in a live application. In the past, I would play a restaurant, and there would always be someone who complained that we were a bit too loud and could we please turn it down a bit. This stopped after I got the BOSE. No one ever thought we were too loud, yet everyone in the restaurant, including the owner, said they could hear us perfectly. As a working musician, it was the best investment I ever made.
    Bose released a little mini PA (BOSE S1 Pro) designed for the solo musician. I heard it at the NAMM show and was very impressed. I did a review of it on my channel, and an "Audiophile" who saw the video LOST HIS MIND. He started trolling and harassing other commenters on my channel. I had to ban him. (and delete his comments). He didn't seem to understand that all of his precious Audiophile manufacturer's weren't making equipment for musicians in live applications.
    For this reason, the term "audiophile" has always been synonymous with A**H*** for me ever since.

    • @lunam7249
      @lunam7249 Před 4 měsíci

      no. no musician in the history of the world has ever ever ever used bose equipment in a live show or gig, that includes dj/ nightclub/ music group...ever!! your obviously a paid bose employee shill.... ok... we all get it...

  • @robsemail
    @robsemail Před 4 lety +5

    DSP is one of those things that requires a bit of context to understand. I worked in radio decades ago, and a DSP was the purely analog unit that equalized the volume level of the records, such that quiet passages in songs were made to sound louder and punchier, with a slight reverb. Often one would notice a distinct difference in the sound of a favorite song on vinyl or CD at home, and the sound of that same song on the radio, because the radio signal has been fed through a piece of analog equipment called a DSP, or Dynamic Signal Processor (might have been Dynamic Sound Processor, I've forgotten). Anyway, I wonder if radio stations still use this physical piece of equipment, or if it's all done through software now.

    • @brmbkl
      @brmbkl Před rokem +1

      jargon mix up. nowadays the term mostly refers to digital sound processing.

  • @michaelnomellini
    @michaelnomellini Před 4 lety +3

    I listened to the whole thing. I used to be an audiophile. I had subscriptions to Audio, High Fidelity, Stereo Review. Subscriptions for over 20 years. I also sold audiophile equipment, high end and mid. I spent over $16,000 back in the 1980s. I have three pair of Bose 901s. I have LOVED them. I remember buying my first pair at Soundworks in SF. We could switch any input (I used cds). And of course we could switch any speaker. Well, the Bose 901s were playing. Sound was amazing. Deep bass, clear highs, stable presence. Several people tried to find what was playing. They put their ears to the Wharfdales, JBLs, Klipsch, and the Magneplaner electrostatic ($36,000/pair) All speakers were top of the line and very very large. The Magneplaners were 6 ft tall. They were shocked to find out that the sound came from the Bose. Well, I got my first 901s and I still love them. By the way, my equipment includes Onkyo Grand Integra power amps, preamps, tuner, cassette, Kenwood receiver. Pioneer cd, adc accutrac turntable, Garrard Zero 100 (my favorite), Sound Design eq,, Bsr eq, Onkyo turntable, JVC CD changer, and lots of other stuff.

  • @Xsetsu
    @Xsetsu Před 6 lety +18

    The talk at the end about basic tribalism is the truth of it. I am a PC enthusiast and an audiophile. I try to refrain from doing it, but it's hard not too sometimes.

    • @Xsetsu
      @Xsetsu Před 6 lety

      I have problems with Bose for many of the same reasons. The same goes for quite a few other audio brands, but the point being that it's still tribalism at the end of the day no matter how justifiable.

    • @Xsetsu
      @Xsetsu Před 6 lety

      I wasn't arguing whether it was justifiable or not.
      I don't like Bose or Beats because I belong to a more sophisticated listening group, audiophiles. I really don't. Yes, audiophiles do know a thing or two about sound equipment, but it doesn't take away from the idea that an audiophile is part of a group/type of people aka a tribe. It's not a derogatory or condescending thing. Human's "social intelligence" is what set us apart from most other things, especially other great apes, on this planet. Tribalism is very much a part of that.

  • @ganormand
    @ganormand Před 4 lety +17

    1964, was building my own amplifiers and speakers. Discovered that If I turned around most of speakers (reflecting), the music sounded more "live" than if all pointed at me. 1965, was working at high end audio store when the 901 made its debut. Fell in love with the realism its unique design produced. Couple years later, started wedding/barmitzvah band and was looking for main speakers. Got JBL, EV, Peavey and Bose-put them at back of room and did comparison tests. Yes, there were deficiencies in some frequencies, and maybe not as clear as the others, but the Bose was the only speaker that sounded "live" NOT like it was sound coming out of a box-it was transparent. Used 802s with and without the huge Bose subwoofers for thousands of band jobs-from small cocktail parties or wedding ceremonies to auditorium sized balls and dances. No one ever came up and said, we are not gonna book you again because your speaker system wasn't good enough. Other pluses were: the plastic cabinets stacked easily, were light and easy to put on handtruck or carry. The cases made nice steps up to the bandstand when needed, and, probably most important: they were the only speaker I knew of that had 160 degree dispersion, which allowed us to set up on the long side of ballrooms and cover all the guests without having to play too loudly, or set up side fill speakers. I installed a Bose system in our new church building and everyone commented on how smooth it was. No, it's not perfect, but used within its stated limits, worked great for me(and a lot of other musicians I know)

  • @joshuakielty
    @joshuakielty Před 6 lety +54

    I'm listening to this on my Bose QC35's and I love them! They are insane for noise cancellation

    • @xcaliburx8240
      @xcaliburx8240 Před 6 lety +4

      The over the ear headphones or any head or earphones by Bose is the only that makes them better but their home theatres or anything else by them is just trash compare to other brands out there and just way over prized. We just get fooled in to buying Bose because of how much money they put in to marketing. You will be mind blown if you listen to high end marantz or Yamaha.

    • @jonlaine635
      @jonlaine635 Před 6 lety +2

      well rip my 370€ I want to fucking die now

    • @RICHARDFLORES2100
      @RICHARDFLORES2100 Před 6 lety +2

      I’m listening on my bose overear. And he sounds great. Lolll

    • @Mikexception
      @Mikexception Před 6 lety

      May be some people considered that high price as the single point proofing high audio quality. They did not notice obvious difference of concept expressed in word Lifestyle - while that was the advantage to pay. I do not think Bose fooled people as it was nor recommended to declared audiophiles for which BOSE always had another shelve. .

    • @angadsngh01
      @angadsngh01 Před 6 lety

      Even sounds amazing

  • @TheBreadlord
    @TheBreadlord Před 5 lety +24

    I buy Bose headphones for the noise cancelling technology. Sound quality makes no difference _to me_ above a certain level, but a long plane journey virtually requires my QCs.

    • @benedicvelasco
      @benedicvelasco Před 4 lety +1

      The Sony ANC headphones will sound better imho

    • @leroyrs
      @leroyrs Před 4 lety +2

      @@benedicvelasco The Sony 1000xm3 sound bassy and muddy. Same for the inear version. I sent them back and kept my QC35ii.

    • @nathantyrell4898
      @nathantyrell4898 Před 4 lety +1

      WTF ,the sound quality of Sony are a complete mudfest
      I'm a guy that cares about sound not an audiophile extent but as the guy in the vid said
      I know how I want my sound..to sound
      Now I know that sound is a subjective thing but there things which are objective
      Such as the CLARITY of the sound and how heavy the bass is
      Now,SONY lacks clarity and sound muffled AF compared to Bose .. clearly
      Yes Sony xm3,2 may have heavier pounding bass but unless you're a basshead
      It just drowns out the rest of the frequencies
      STOP SAYING SONY HAS BETTER SOUND!!!!!

    • @mida8261
      @mida8261 Před 4 lety

      I absolutely LOVE my Sony headphones for their sound quality. With that said, for going on a plane, my QC's come into play because I still have yet to own a pair of cans that can do noise cancelling as good as my Bose headphones.

    • @adamkee97
      @adamkee97 Před 4 lety +1

      @@leroyrs True, I tried my friend's Sony xm3 and I got dizzy in no time. I'm gonna try out the QC35ii and NC 700 in their experience store soon.

  • @qanaluella7124
    @qanaluella7124 Před 6 lety +22

    I don't know about the rest of the world, but here in Denmark many of us who are autistic and are sensory sensitive uses them to block out sound. Many of us are sensory sensitive where light, sound, smell, taste and touch feels much more extrem.
    Having the Bose Quiet Comfort 35 for me, I love it. That I on an app can change how much sound I can block out. Sometimes I play low music, but really... It's just about blocking out a very noisy world. And for that the Bose are great.

    • @1802_thisIwasGiven
      @1802_thisIwasGiven Před 5 lety +1

      Try the new Sony 1000 m3 it was reviewed as a better noise cancelling headphone compared to the bose 32 quiet comfort and is cheaper priced.

    • @collinbeal
      @collinbeal Před 5 lety

      Yeah as an autistic man, I got the Sony WH-1000X mkiii to cancel out noise when I'm at home in a household of 6 people because it allows me to isolate myself while still having pretty great sound quality by comparison.

    • @hyperhektor7733
      @hyperhektor7733 Před 5 lety +2

      wtf so demark is the country of autistic people? i dint know that sorry for you

  • @kieranb3815
    @kieranb3815 Před 4 lety +2

    Theres also those people who think they are elite. They think they can hear a difference when they cant, can see drop frames when they cant. They invest so much time in to their hobby that they get easily insulted by the smallest issue.

  • @connorduke4619
    @connorduke4619 Před 5 lety +3

    I have a TEAC streamer, Marantz amplifier and Dynaudio speakers and can heartily recommend all of them. All have brilliant quality in their own right, are excellent for the price and the clarity of the Dynaudio speakers is well matched to the warmth of the Marantz amplifier. Corner-cutting, over-priced, data-hiding, psycho-acoustic, deceptive marketing, doesn't anywhere near cut it against these genuine quality manufacturers using high quality components and design work.

  • @matthewrarig6760
    @matthewrarig6760 Před 6 lety +123

    I’m not an audiophile. I can appreciate good sound and happen to really like Bose, but that’s just me. Everyone’s opinion is different, and I respect all of them.

    • @Mellyouttaphase
      @Mellyouttaphase Před 6 lety +9

      I agree. I am not an audiophile and I have loved Bose products but I find this super interesting!

    • @djbryanladd
      @djbryanladd Před 6 lety

      There are times where I run in a venue professional audio which has a divider with another Entertainer on the other side. When they run a Bose system I have to turn mine down because limitations of what those speakers are problem is they can't match spls traditional speakers and I have to turn my volume down and frequencies down because they can't keep up

    • @Dirtydunton
      @Dirtydunton Před 6 lety +1

      It's not that Bose sounds bad per se, but you can build a system for the same price that would likely change you mind radically.

    • @randallfloyd4476
      @randallfloyd4476 Před 6 lety +3

      i like bose...I love Klipsch.

    • @ahyowhatsup
      @ahyowhatsup Před 5 lety +4

      To sum up every other comment: because you're just an average peasant that doesn't care. Audiophiles are so much better than you

  • @fernandoalvarez9613
    @fernandoalvarez9613 Před 5 lety +3

    I’ve had my Bose 3-2-1 for 12 years and it’s still kicking and it’s survived many drunken nights at full blast.

    • @realaudioreviews
      @realaudioreviews Před 5 lety +1

      bose is trash, enjoy your crap sound

    • @TV-yj9mh
      @TV-yj9mh Před 4 lety +1

      COLLECTOR30 Hate Bose cause u can’t love yourself

  • @krikorhadidian897
    @krikorhadidian897 Před 4 lety +1

    I am not an Electronic engineer nor musician. I listen and record good music for many years. I have four Reel to Reel tape recorders, plus two KEF Q-series three way speakers 150w each and a set of BOSE Acoustimass cube speakers with a woofer. Whatever the Audiophiles and other speaker companies say about BOSE, because BOSE has a far better SOUND. I listen my KEF speakers, and then I listen to my BOSE Acoustimass. Let's be practical. "Seeing is believing". "Listening is Believing". Italian proverb says, "Practica Pasa El Gramatica". When you listen BOSE, the vocalist, the piano, like they are performing in front of you; very HI-FI. That is why Audiophiles they don't like BOSE, because he is the BOSS. Thank you. L. A.

  • @pavelgajdik7486
    @pavelgajdik7486 Před 5 lety +13

    I used to listen low bit-rate MP3 music on relative cheap PC speakers, however my wife was enthusiast singer and once on whim we went to to private expensive demo to go listen songs you know in setup where CD recording is not over-boosted to clipping point and where whole setup sounded surprisingly clear.
    It was truly revealing to hear things that you never heard in songs and didn't even know there were there.
    Though B&W Nautilus sounded really great, they were too big and with price hardly anyone can afford so we went to few more "realistic" demos to check dozens different brands and ended selecting KEF R300 over JBL Studio 530.
    Currently using KEF R300 speakers connected to $399 Chinese SMSL M500 DAC and $60 Chinese Loxjie A10 poweramp which sound better than several times more expensive stuff from other brands.
    I don't consider myself audiophile as I always go for quality at affordable price but I heard Bose before, event their more expensive stuff and I would put them somewhere on bottom of the stuff I ever listened to.

    • @pcproffy
      @pcproffy Před rokem

      Take a tab of LSD, and then listen to your HiFi music setup. Talk about hearing sounds you never noticed before! 🤯

  • @rajakumarparuchuri327
    @rajakumarparuchuri327 Před 3 lety +2

    Almost 10 years before, I had my first audition of Bose speakers done - I was simply amazed by what a speaker of that size could do. I used to think that bose is the best audio company in the world (Still a lot of people do think the same - No arguements, preferences matter.).
    However, when I thought I should buy a HT system for myself, I started to research different other options available. That is when gates were open to an different audio world. I understood about what should you expect in a HT system. It is not just looks / plug and play - I was looking for configurability, value for money and transparency.
    I personally did not find any of these 3 in bose.
    They do not specify what is the driver size / material / driver frequency response, crossover - anything for that matter.They just say that their base is thunderous... how low does it go. Does it go below 20 Hz..? no answers. What is the frequency response? They are absolute secrets. It is absolutely impossible to use or configure EQ per your liking - I can not use things like REW etc.. The worst I felt of all is, their demo stages - They do not let you change a track you know, they do not let you change the speaker position, they even did not let me to connect my mobile and observe how it sounds. They did not even let me use bluetooth. Well, when I was not even allowed to try a preferred track of mine - it makes no sense for me to spend my money in it. Charging a ton for not having configurability and transparency? I am not for it. However, I am definitely not against Bose, I still like the looks and usability aspects of bose - they are very good there.

  • @theshootindutchman
    @theshootindutchman Před 6 lety +9

    Nice job! You hit all of the areas that I would have hit if I was doing this video, don't think you missed any 😁

  • @professorjams
    @professorjams Před 4 lety +4

    Bose 901 speakers are worth every penny, durability, and sound quality are fantastic. My albums sound as fresh on my 1973 Bose 901’ as they did in 73....they also look cool.

  • @PeterBrockie
    @PeterBrockie Před 6 lety +378

    "No highs, no lows. Must be Bose" :P

    • @FinalManaTrigger
      @FinalManaTrigger Před 6 lety

      Ahahahaha! All these phrases and acronyms for BOSE are great, I'm dying here!

    • @motorpsykler
      @motorpsykler Před 6 lety +5

      IDK when this originated, but I remember hearing it in the early 90's.

    • @gregkramer5588
      @gregkramer5588 Před 6 lety +11

      I remember it from the 70s. The 901 was the main reason why.

    • @mandani01
      @mandani01 Před 6 lety +3

      Bose is like "boses" in Filipino which means voice, all the meat of the voice is in the Mids, No highs, No lows, must be Bose :)

    • @fermitupoupon1754
      @fermitupoupon1754 Před 6 lety +3

      So basically the opposite of anything labelled as "gaming" when it comes to audio. It'll have painfully crisp highs and stomping lows, but no real mids.
      Makes me wonder what would happen if Bose made a gaming audio product... It'll either sound amazing or make no sound at all.

  • @HazmanFTW
    @HazmanFTW Před 6 lety +12

    I went to the local Bose store a few months ago for some over ear headphones for on my PC, they only had 2 different types of wired headphones and 3 different sample tracks. I was unable to plug in my own music device to listen to the music I want to listen to rather than the 3 pop tracks they had one there. I left and went to a better store and they allowed me to sit there for an hour or so listening to my music on their wide range of headphones before making a purchase.

  • @Mark_5150
    @Mark_5150 Před 6 lety +12

    Listening to this at work on my QC25's, a must for the noise cancelling. Granted, not the best sounding headphones I've owned.
    The thing is about sound is that most people, especially audiophiles, are using some sort of EQ or DSP. If you don't like the sound, tune it to your liking.
    Don't kid yourself, other brands do the same thing with specific tuning for the sale at the store, not just audio, but TV's as well. Ever eat a Big Mac that looked like the Ad, ever take your SUV on the perfect mountain camping trip? It's all marketing.

  • @reidromero6602
    @reidromero6602 Před 4 lety +2

    First pair of headphones were some Bose AE2i's. Still use them till today (although i had to replace the ear pads) and they sound pretty good. They aren't harsh and also aren't super thumpy either as to be expected.

  • @infinite1der
    @infinite1der Před 6 lety +35

    Bose systems sound "good". But, to me, they don't reproduce the sound that the audio engineers want me to hear. And that is my benchmark: how closely can gear X in room Y reproduce what the engineers intended? I WANT to hear the harsh pounding of hammers on a piano. I WANT to feel the low-end of the pipe organ while watching Intersteller. I don't want Bose's representation of what THEY think I want to hear. I don't HATE Bose, I dislike what their products do to the, let's say uninformed consumer. I've learned to bite my tongue when someone wants to show me their home theater system telling me how great it sounds. I get it; sounds are subjective, and you like what you like.

    • @joeechevarria3162
      @joeechevarria3162 Před 6 lety +1

      You are absolutely right in that Bose does not r produce exactly as engineered but in order to actually get that reproduction you’d need a $20k system. Not exactly ideal. Everything else is just a simulation of the real thing..

    • @GJ-dj4jx
      @GJ-dj4jx Před 6 lety

      Exactly. I don't like this idea of psycho acoustics. Means Bose can be a force in music industry forcing music to sound as they want it to sound.

    • @Smedleydog1
      @Smedleydog1 Před 6 lety

      Jose Echevarria - Isn't any speaker just "simulating" the real thing?

    • @GJ-dj4jx
      @GJ-dj4jx Před 6 lety

      Smedleydog1
      Not when it's using algorithms to achieve predetermined sounds of what Bos thinks the majority likes.

  • @nikkic36
    @nikkic36 Před 6 lety +8

    I use sennheiser hd25 headphones. Flat response, loud if needed, comfortable and you can buy every part to repair them. Mine are about 15 years old and they’re used every day

    • @djdoolittle1315
      @djdoolittle1315 Před 6 lety +1

      nikki callaghan me too! Decent cans m8 🎶

    • @Deebz270
      @Deebz270 Před 6 lety +1

      I've been using Sennheiser for over four decades. Good cans. Studio quality.

    • @goodun6081
      @goodun6081 Před 6 lety

      nikki callaghan, Sennheisers are good; AKG 'phones are also good, at least the old ones are, mine go back several decades plus. The best sounding headphones I ever had were Stax electrostatics, I forget the model but they weren't driven via a Transformer from the amplifier's speaker output, instead I had a Stax preamp that also had a class A headphone amp built into it specifically designed to drive those phones and they were magnificent. They definitely have limits to how loud you can play them, but they sure sounded fine! Unfortunately, when I sold the preamp I couldn't use the headphones by themselves so they went with the preamp. I believe Stax is now out of business, but I remember that some years back they had a tube type driver amp and matching dedicated electrostatic phones that cost something like a couple Grand, I bet they were good, but I never heard them and I certainly couldn't have afforded them.

  • @robertm2000
    @robertm2000 Před 6 lety +15

    If you look it up, Amar G. Bose sued critics who didn't like his products. And another reason is his speakers' weird configurations. Remember the 901? tEach one had 9 speakers, that cost about $4. apiece! Once kids found out where to get those speakers, and how to set a graphic equalizer to get the same response curve, college kids practically wore out the supplier of those speakers, building their own versions of it.

    • @SyncF
      @SyncF Před 6 lety +1

      robertm2000 Sued for criticizing ther mediocre headphones? More pathetic than I thought.

  • @erayzor2000
    @erayzor2000 Před rokem +3

    I recently inherited a ‘Bose’ power amplifier from 1980 (its really good). But it turned out to be made by musical fidelity!

  • @robinvikstrom9763
    @robinvikstrom9763 Před 5 lety +4

    This video was great! Thank you for taking the time to explain all this. It's a questioned I've long been looking for an answer to that isn't just "Bose sound quality sucks" because frankly, it doesn't. It might be overpriced, and not as "pure" as with other systems as you explain, but it doesn't suck and this video explained things a lot better.

  • @-Conn-
    @-Conn- Před 6 lety +7

    I judge products based on their sound, and their sound alone. I don't care much about a brand name or build quality. If a product uses cheap parts but manages to make it sound better than a more traditionally built speaker with higher quality parts, I will pay more for that product. I can't speak for all Bose products, but I am a huge fan of the Bose Soundtouch 300. BestBuy sets up these demos in random locations and have no custom layout to the space in which they are placed. Owning one, I can tell you that it sounds just as good at home as it does in the store. Can you get better? Obviously, but in my opinion it's very much worth the cost.
    That said, I have definitely heard other Bose products that sounded exceptionally 'meh' with a very disgusting price tag. I can sympathize to the hate towards them for trying to use their superiority complex to overcharge for cheap products. As was stated, it's fairly similar to Apple. Still, I'd suggest judging each product for yourself based on how they perform rather than shunning the name.

  • @rklmbd2934
    @rklmbd2934 Před 6 lety +6

    Early Bose was truly innovative. The early 901s included someone coming to your home to set it up. And we all forget that the first cubes were the first system ever (AFAIK) to split the bass into a dedicated, direction agnostic box. In car systems, computer speakers, home theater all leverage this now yet just 30 years ago, they didn't! They've always been about usability and overcoming the room.
    Just to add, you don't need a large driver for bass. You need to drive a large volume of air that's all and you can do it with an array perfectly well.

    • @gregkramer5588
      @gregkramer5588 Před 6 lety +3

      Subwoofers in a seperate box were around long before the cubes. There innovation was tied to how to reduce cost but get people to think they were good a first listen.

    • @ilpatongi
      @ilpatongi Před 6 lety

      Air displacement can't be achieved with 4" drivers you know.
      You can never get true bass without at least an 8", not even with a TLine enclosure.

  • @derekwhidden9730
    @derekwhidden9730 Před 5 lety +2

    I believe it was about 25 years ago, I was in a Circuit City and testing the speakers in their sound room. I think the Bose Acoustimass speakers had just come out. They sounded amazing. But they did not have that bass punch that you expect with loud audio. And yes they had the acompanying subwoofer. I settled on the Cerwin Vegas.

    • @kingkobra1956
      @kingkobra1956 Před rokem

      Good choice. The Acoustimass was garbage.

    • @givemethejob3293
      @givemethejob3293 Před rokem

      They didnt have a sub woofer they had a remote base driver, very different in the frequency response.

  • @MH5tube
    @MH5tube Před 6 lety +7

    I think a lot people see friends and family buying Bose or Apple and feel like those companies are using marketing and pricing structures to prey on the public's general illiteracy in terms of audio equipment or computer hardware.

    • @BrawndoQC
      @BrawndoQC Před 6 lety +1

      No, some of us are adults and can make a decision of our own.

    • @MandalaOfThe7
      @MandalaOfThe7 Před 6 lety

      Even if it's a really poor one.

  • @therushden
    @therushden Před 6 lety +4

    My last two cars have had upgraded bose stereos in them. Better than stock but I personally wouldn't pay for it from new. I anyways think of bose as pub speakers. Small and loud.

  • @tconnordavis
    @tconnordavis Před 6 lety +11

    Watching this listening with my Bose headphones...

  • @larrysmith5413
    @larrysmith5413 Před rokem +2

    I have had three pairs of Quiet Comfort headphones. I was a global traveler and used them hard. I still have my third pair. I use I POD classics and I swear by the wired ear buds. My wife own a pair of noise cancelling ear buds and blue tooth earbuds which she adores. I own a computer sound system with sub and satellites which still sounds great. I consider myself a fairly decent audiophile. Bose certainly has their place in my gear list.

  • @InterFelix
    @InterFelix Před 4 lety +7

    I just got the Sony WH1000XM3 Headphones because of the Noise cancellation abilities they have. They make all of the difference on long train rides. Also, they sound fantastic over bluetooth, but that‘s no wonder, since the resolution of the LDAC-Codec is better than CD quality ever was. Also, if used by cable with the battery completely drained, they still sound amazing. No DSP here.

  • @LA-db9xj
    @LA-db9xj Před rokem +8

    Still ENJOYING my Bose 501 Series III speakers in my main vintage audio setup. Purchased them new in 1983 over in England at RAF Lakenheath as a civilian employee. Had them refoamed about a year ago. I wouldn't even entertain the idea of getting rid of them!

  • @qwertimus
    @qwertimus Před 6 lety +7

    Bose have some terrific noise cancelation tech, that's pretty much their only pro though…

    • @kungfool69
      @kungfool69 Před 6 lety

      i currently work at an audio store, and spend all day pointing this out. Their headphones are good, but Sony is better right now. WH1000X are much better sounding headphones compared to QC35, cost less too, and are more fun to use. I still get paid more to sell the Bose, so not all is lost!

    • @ArthurCheesebag84
      @ArthurCheesebag84 Před 6 lety

      They make decent dj speakers.

    • @dj4540
      @dj4540 Před 6 lety

      Sony is better though.

  • @johnbradshaw3205
    @johnbradshaw3205 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video! An observation I have offered elsewhere is that the people I know who buy Bose are all very happy with their equipment and keep it for a long haul. On the other hand the audiophiles I know are always chopping and changing equipment and stuff rarely enjoys more than a brief honeymoon. That indicates something I think. I have been a bit snobbish about Bose in the past but we bought a soundbar 700 and sub for our bedroom TV and to serve as a bedroom audio system and I have to say it is very good. Very expensive but my wife liked it and although it would not have been my choice I have to say it was extremely easy to set up and performs very well.

    • @46wireboy
      @46wireboy Před 4 lety

      1) If you buy Bose you are brainwashed. 2) Why seek audio nirvana if you are stuck obliviously at (1).

    • @johnbradshaw3205
      @johnbradshaw3205 Před 4 lety +1

      @@46wireboy I think it depends on what you want out of audio equipment. I have a nice stereo set up which sounds good to me and some rather high end headphones but I am not sure it really makes that much difference to enjoyment of music relative to the Bose soundbar we have. Audio equipment is a tool, it exists to facilitate enjoyment of music. I don't think audio nirvana exists outside of enjoying live performances and if you just want to enjoy recorded music you really don't need to spend much.

  • @Bhatakti_Hawas
    @Bhatakti_Hawas Před 6 lety +8

    Thumbs up to the Hokusai painting on your wall

  • @willsxx1
    @willsxx1 Před 4 lety +3

    I just got a great deal on some 901’s series VI, never could have afforded them 25 years ago but at the price I got them I had to, they are everything I thought they would be...glad I waited though ;)

  • @willyolio9590
    @willyolio9590 Před 6 lety +40

    If Bose is suing or threatening people who post negative reviews, that's reason enough to not give them any money, regardless of how good their products might be. Screw these shady mafia-like companies.

    • @johnhudelson2652
      @johnhudelson2652 Před 6 lety +3

      willyolio There is a German word böse, which means bad or evil so the name Bose fits the outfit quite well.

    • @gorillafunk725
      @gorillafunk725 Před 6 lety +2

      Funny cause its true. The name says it all.

    • @david1235102
      @david1235102 Před 6 lety +1

      Can you provide evidence or proof?

    • @gorillafunk725
      @gorillafunk725 Před 6 lety +1

      @@david1235102
      SERIOUSLY? If relatated to the german def for B'O'SE the O is pronounced EW & look it up on line or in any German/English dictionary.
      If related to threatened litigation unless it went to court there would be no records you could check. Aside from newspaper microfilm records if it made the news. Aside from records of a writ being issued if settled before trial or out of court. Good luck with that!

    • @bryanedewaard858
      @bryanedewaard858 Před 6 lety +1

      Bingo. This was the biggest reason. They vanished from the audio press because they actively pursued a chilling effect by suing anyone who wrote anything negative. Same shit people do here on YT when they strike videos they don't like. Bose was a bunch of trolls.

  • @markkeohane9850
    @markkeohane9850 Před 5 lety +1

    Very interesting vid, if perhaps a tad long.
    I was just in the market for a bluetooth speaker to use with my phone. I listened to a few and read reviews and bought a Bose Revolve. I don't care about how it does what it does. All I care about is how it sounds. (Although it's also good that it's good-looking and highly portable, being the size of a beer can.) And it sounds great. And everyone I've shown it to is amazed at the quality of the sound for the size of the speaker. I don't intend to use this in any serious way around my house - I have a couple of Dali Zensors if I want to fill the lounge and blow the windows out - but as a cart-around the house, take wherever you go solution that sounds very good it's terrific. And maybe I'll buy a second one and hook them up in stereo for when we are out on the patio in summer and just need something pleasant in background. It's also a great hotel room companion; I spend a couple of nights every week away from home and this is a fantastic option for putting on some decent-sounding music while reading or working, or using instead of the crappy laptop speakers, or taking into the bathroom while having a shower. I love it.
    I guess I'm in that mass market; at least as far as convenient, day-to-day audio is concerned. Back in 1989 I worked with a guy who had spent £400 on his speaker CABLES. In 1989! I'm not in that category and never will be. But in that mass market I do want to have something that's great to listen to and at the top of its class sound-wise and I think that's what the Revolve is. I'm very happy with it. Sure, it costs more than most other options but I can afford it and to me it's well worth it.

  • @SeanMaisonneuve
    @SeanMaisonneuve Před 8 měsíci +5

    I used to sell Bose back in the early 2000’s. I can confirm that their store setups used to be calibrated, but that was simple and easy to do. If you bought the same system it would walk you through the setup process and speaker placement. Then, it would calibrate itself to your room. To this day I still remember how amazing they sounded. Especially when it came to movies and live music, where “Virtual Sound Stage” would separate the brass from the strings, etc. Another nice touch was when you opened the box containing your $7000 system (today’s $$$) there was a letter talking about their mission statement. One of the things they pointed out is how other speaker manufacturers focus on punch and hard hitting bass and other sounds that simply aren’t real. Bose is definitely the king of sound tech and innovation.

  • @jamesfrederick99
    @jamesfrederick99 Před 5 lety +11

    I am a singer, guitar player, and do DJ work and host Karaoke. I have owned many many PA systems and music equipment for sound amplification. EV, Peavey, Fender, Behringer, York, Kustom, JBL, Yamaha, ect. I am impressed by the Bose L1 System. I no longer drag around two 15-inch main speakers, 18-inch subwoofers and stands, plus all the wires that go along with it. I was able to improve my sound quality while scaling down the weight and size of the PA equipment needed for shows at restaurants, bars, weddings, parties. I use two L1 systems and it fulfills all my needs in a very small footprint. I now love Bose.

    • @buzzcrushtrendkill
      @buzzcrushtrendkill Před 5 lety

      Careful. The theme of this comments thread is information bias only.

    • @jamesfrederick99
      @jamesfrederick99 Před 5 lety

      I get that. I know that Bose is not a solution for everything and everyone. For my needs, it fit. I refuse to bash a brand.

    • @jacobwilson6434
      @jacobwilson6434 Před 5 lety

      U shoud look at the new S1 Pro. Its amazing.

    • @jacobwilson6434
      @jacobwilson6434 Před 5 lety

      You shoud look at the new S1 Pro.
      P.A system.

    • @buzzcrushtrendkill
      @buzzcrushtrendkill Před 5 lety +1

      @@jamesfrederick99 Thats great. I actually have Bose equipment myself and enjoy it. This whole thread is just sillyness. Its all inference, conjecture and brand name bias. Mixed in with aire of superiority and needs of boastfulness Audiophiles are basically those with OCD.

  • @nvc.
    @nvc. Před 6 lety +7

    Heard 5 min of what you said. Not much made sense to me.. companies like Tannoy, b&w, kef, svs, klipsch or in that alignment, take pure sound quality in consideration first, simple as that. Bose is more of a lifestyle companie, they use a lot of dsp to camuflage the inferior sound that theire speakers produce. To some people thats ok and it will sound nice, but for people that understand and expect the full frequency array of sounds will imidiatly reject the sound of bose products because they know that its an artificial sound that they are listing to. People that dont care about true sound quality or never heard it will think that bose equipment sounds awesome because they simply dont know better.. its easy to understand..

    • @sstew14
      @sstew14 Před 6 lety +2

      That pretty much sums up exactly what he said...

    • @nvc.
      @nvc. Před 6 lety

      Sstew ok then.. i guess he entered in detail, but i was a bit confused in the begining..

  • @dennylegendre6048
    @dennylegendre6048 Před 4 lety +2

    I love my Bose 901 series VI. It sounds great for what I listen to. Reggae, Soca , R&B and Old school hip hop.

  • @jjavankan
    @jjavankan Před 6 lety +7

    Great video and good story but.....
    Everyone is different, every ear is different and also important, everyone's got his own perception of good and bad quality. It is something very personal. I don't hate Bose and I don't hate Grundig! For my personal sound experience I like to use Quad and Bowers & Wilkins speakers. But this is very personal. I've had Technics and Kef for years and loved it. People need to learn to let anyone have fun with the stuff they like. Everyone is different and about the price?.... Nobody has the same amount of money to spend on just a stereo set. If you are happy with the sound, well.... That's all that counts... 👍

    • @audiotomb
      @audiotomb Před 6 lety

      The measure is live music
      Just because you haven't heard better doesn't your not listening to equipment that doesn't measure up

    • @cdshawn
      @cdshawn Před 6 lety

      I take bose second-hand, and put in better speakers put big sub amps on their passive Subs and you can't come to my house and tell me I'm missing any frequencies.

  • @ThriftyAV
    @ThriftyAV Před 5 lety +27

    None of my gear would be considered "audiophile" level. I'm a bang-for-your-buck price/performance guy. So it's not just audiophiles who think Bose sucks.

  • @revwhitecloud
    @revwhitecloud Před 4 lety +3

    I've had bose 901's for years and everywhere I've played them has given me numerous compliments. You can't use cheap amplifiers with them because they're power hungry.

    • @jedi_mapperp4073
      @jedi_mapperp4073 Před rokem

      Only series I and II needed LOTS of power due to no venting. With series III and later the venting made the speakers MUCH more efficient and really good 20W receiver could drive them pretty well. I use a conservatively rated 100W per channel Bose SCR.

  • @skrutinizr9372
    @skrutinizr9372 Před 5 lety +1

    Bose provides a service to people who don't really know how to 'tune' and set up an audio system- plug it in and it seems that a lot of people like how it sounds. I don't, but I have an acoustimass system for my son's game system surround setup because it's small. Back in the day, the Energy Take speakers slaughtered the Bose when it came to sound quality- but Bose just made it easier for those unwilling or unable to determine what they like.
    It like when a gear head drives a new car, they can imagine how they can change the car into what they want with different tires or performance parts. Some people just want to buy a car they think they like and just drive it. Every industry has these types of products and they do very well in the marketplace. In just about anything, the most popular is rarely the "best."

  • @Valnoten
    @Valnoten Před 6 lety +158

    Beats by Dr. Dre - "Hold my beer"

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj Před 6 lety +18

      Heh, even deaf people hate those

    • @CyberlightFG
      @CyberlightFG Před 6 lety +8

      Where can you get the " hold my beer" edition? Is it limited?

    • @MrNitramekul
      @MrNitramekul Před 6 lety +4

      Win of lose, we hit the bose.

    • @marcalampi5036
      @marcalampi5036 Před 6 lety

      Martin Lindgren haha

  • @stevekim8748
    @stevekim8748 Před 5 lety +12

    I think for the modern models noise cancelling headphones and earbuds (QC 25/ 35/ IE 20), Bose is right now the best for cancelling noise but for pure sound quality, they are merely adequate. However, in really noisy environments like inside an airplane, mowing the lawn, using the vacuum, the noise cancellation more than makes up for the sound quality. Overall, the modern noise cancelling headphones and earbuds sound really good in certain applications and are superior to traditional over the ear headphones due to the improvement in signal to noise. Also, I don't hate Bose. Like many companies, Bose has made good, average, mediocre, bad, and terrible products when keeping value in mind. I just happen to favor their modern noise cancelling headphones and earbuds for certain applications and I think the pricing for the value that you get is good in that situation. In addition, my experience with their customer service was top notch. When my IE 20 had issues, a repair was done quickly and Bose even sent the package shipping box. Bose: Audiophile, whatever that is supposed to mean, no. Pleasing sound in noisy environments YES. Anyway, I'm curious what you all think.

    • @aleksander4698
      @aleksander4698 Před 5 lety +2

      What ruins sound quality the most? Noise.
      The Bose noise cancelling earbuds QC20 are a godsend! Who gives a shit about sound quality when you can save your ears from damaging levels of dB, receive abnormally clear calls and audio, while at the same time have the most practical and comfortable fit? In any slightly noisy environment, even just for zoning out sounds when working, they are amazing.

    • @stevekim8748
      @stevekim8748 Před 5 lety +1

      @@aleksander4698 I absolutely agree with what you wrote. I might add that Bose noise cancelling headphones and earbuds sound pretty decent albeit colored but pleasant overall.

    • @Paruchuribros
      @Paruchuribros Před 5 lety +3

      Try Sony 1000mx3 and talk

    • @sandydennylives1392
      @sandydennylives1392 Před 5 lety

      @@aleksander4698 The Sony have better sq.

  • @ryanmosey5932
    @ryanmosey5932 Před 6 lety +41

    Watching this on my iPad with my Bose QuietComfort II Headphones lol. I guess I must be a rookie or something, but I love Bose and love my music on these headphones!

    • @jameso669
      @jameso669 Před 6 lety +4

      you poor thing you have never truly herd anything ever

    • @Soldano999
      @Soldano999 Před 6 lety

      Do you by any chance live in an urban area, and are 25 to 35 with a Middle class income ?

    • @ryanmosey5932
      @ryanmosey5932 Před 6 lety +2

      Soldano999 I live in a suburb of LA. I am in that age group with a good income. Why?

    • @francescob3574
      @francescob3574 Před 6 lety +6

      Why do people bucket people because of their age and income? Sound can be relative to the listener and to assume someone’s purchase choices based on those factors is silly.. Also I own some audio technica noise cancelling headphones and the noise cancelling technology bose uses is far superior. If that is an import requirement for the purchase and the users lifestyle, then it’s a solid choice.

    • @charisma-hornum-fries
      @charisma-hornum-fries Před 6 lety +4

      I love those too. Especially the noice reduction is such a valuable tool when living in a noisy environment of everyday life and the capability of blocking out outside noise. I also find the bluetooth connection more stable than most other wireless buds.

  • @someonespecial1525
    @someonespecial1525 Před 7 měsíci

    14:00 What you're describing here is exactly what the Sennheiser reps used to do during product events. They had some-sort of audio widening effect device hooked to a portable audio player (I honestly think it was a simple portable CD Player... this was 20 years ago). I remember seeing the lines running under the table, and following them, and the representative (who I knew) shooing me away with a smile.

  • @brickson98m
    @brickson98m Před 6 lety +11

    I think PC enthusiasts (Myself included) hate Alienware more than Apple. Apple does plenty of things right, and they are "high end" in a way. They have a very clean, user friendly interface, and a software/hardware combo that just works. Alienware on the other hand just over charges for every desktop PC they make.

    • @1979wazza
      @1979wazza Před 6 lety

      brickson98 MotovlogsAndGames haha. The first thing I thought was dell.

    • @bannanafruitsalad
      @bannanafruitsalad Před 6 lety +1

      To be fair, their monitors are pretty great, though. Still very expensive obviously, but more reasonable than their towers.

    • @XX-121
      @XX-121 Před 6 lety

      na i hate apple more. alienware is still a pc.

    • @RogueBoyScout
      @RogueBoyScout Před 6 lety +1

      Alienware.... LOL.... Paying for gimmicks.....

    • @Tchmstr1984
      @Tchmstr1984 Před 5 lety

      PC would be Dell / Alienware
      Android would be Apple

  • @orleans3647
    @orleans3647 Před 6 lety +152

    BOSE stands for Buy Other Sound Equipment.

    • @DarkPa1adin
      @DarkPa1adin Před 6 lety +10

      Branded Overpriced Sucky Equipment?

    • @sccanj
      @sccanj Před 6 lety +1

      Hahaha

    • @XX-121
      @XX-121 Před 6 lety +4

      Beginners Only Scam Execution
      Bad Output Sound Equipment
      uh, Bacteria-ridden Oozing Scab Entree??? idk

    • @rax816
      @rax816 Před 5 lety +3

      No it's big old sexy elephant 🐘

    • @Fizzy.500
      @Fizzy.500 Před 5 lety +4

      Orleans Better Order Something Else

  • @justingardner4555
    @justingardner4555 Před 6 lety +20

    A 30 minute video just to explain that 1) Bose is good but overpriced and 2) the company puts crap speakers into overengenered enclosures.

    • @ilpatongi
      @ilpatongi Před 6 lety

      Yeah basically. And that's why it's a good video

    • @ethanhallberg1801
      @ethanhallberg1801 Před 6 lety

      over-engineered*

    • @kael13
      @kael13 Před 6 lety

      Yeah what a waste of time. 5 mins and I’m done.

  • @natanpierce495
    @natanpierce495 Před 7 měsíci

    I am a hobbyist/ audiophile. I Own 2 sound systems in different rooms. My main listening room contains NAD (mostly) equipment. I have 2 Turn-table decks- both a Dual tables. (Dual 701 and Dual CS 5000) My old and still working very well cassette deck is a Harmon Kardon. My CD players are both NAD. I have "East-coast" speakers in my main room- (Bang & Olufsen) and 2 "West-Coast" speakers in my living room, JBL. In my theater is a projector on a flat wall (72") and a Yamaha ADR with 5.1 JBL speakers. I have a Rotell CD/DVD player and Sony VHS. In my garage, when I work on my motorcycles, and cars, I have a Denon amp with Bose 501 speakers. I also own a pair of Bose headphones. OK, so now you know what I have. Why the Bose in the garage? They were my wife's when I first met her and she got rid of her stereo and gave the speakers to me. They work ok for a garage. My headphones? I only purchased them because they were comfortable. That's it. I hate things uncomfortable pressing on my ears. When I want to listen to Yes or Jazz or classical, I will not listen through my headphones, but through the speakers. I did go into the Bose sound store back in the late 90's when I was looking for equipment. I never liked how I couldn't compare my speakers with theirs, or how they didn't have anything but their own in the store to listen to. When I was in the market for some good equipment, I went into a HiFi store and compared many different items and that's how I came up with my build. 35 years later- the whole system still sounds amazing. But it is very very outdated. If I had some money, I would consider purchasing something else and get rid of some of this. But not my Duals, not my B&O's and not my Rotell. And mostly, not my NAD power envelope 300 watt amp.

  • @dolanddrumpf6344
    @dolanddrumpf6344 Před 2 lety +11

    I love my Bose Acoustimass from 1986. They still hold up perfectly after 35 years.

    • @givemethejob3293
      @givemethejob3293 Před rokem

      They do when you push it a bit, mine to are 1st gen and I tried a set of small book shelf speakers in place of the cubes and they sounded better. I also hooked up the bass unit using Naim thick cable and QED quodos to the cubes which improved all the responses considerably, twice a good, terrible acoustimass cable like most supplied cable fit for the bin.

  • @WoundedEgo
    @WoundedEgo Před 5 lety +4

    Their hearing aids are great. And I like their "SoundLink" speakers.

  • @Individual_two
    @Individual_two Před 6 lety +4

    Bose catches much heat, some of it deserved. However, in the club-level pro audio world, their mini line arrays (e.g the L-Series) changed the game for solo and small combo acoustic acts. These are expensive, but simple to tweak, easy to load-in/out, and are EQ'ed and DSP'ed to emphasize vocals using the ubiquitous Shure SM57/58 mic series and piezo pickups on acoustic-electric guitars. The L-series mini-arrays have good coverage, reasonable feedback rejection and clear intelligibility. They work better in the typically bad acoustics of a small venue than say a pair of QSC K-series, which are the current"gold standard" of traditional club PA's.

    • @mrroye
      @mrroye Před 6 lety

      I play small clubs and I actually rejected the L series Because I needed two to get stereo. That would have made them far too expensive . I was interested in the lighter weight but I use leslie effects and chorus etc. Stereo works much better for my taste.I have no problem with equalization as I am led to believe ( by this article) that audi0philes do.

    • @jameso669
      @jameso669 Před 6 lety

      equalization is a great you cant have sound without it not one single person here would say equalization is a bad thing

  • @Johnathan_Waters
    @Johnathan_Waters Před 4 lety +1

    I am somewhat into sound quality, and analog at that (I have several tape decks, Nakamichi, Denon, etc) that I listen to at home. My main casual system is a Harman Kardon AVR235 with .... the BOSE Acoustimass system from about 1991 or so. They sound great IMO (for a small space such as mine anyway). I also have the BOSE "upgrade" sound system in my Mercedes Benz ML55 AMG that I think really sounds awesome. Take it for what you will...