AUDIO-TECHNICA ATH-M50xBT2 Review

The latest Bluetooth version of Audio-Technica’s M50x design is another winner, with excellently strong and musical wireless performance. Read our AUDIO-TECHNICA ATH-M50xBT2 Review.

WIRELESS HEADPHONES

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AUDIO-TECHNICA ATH-M50xBT2 Review

Since its introduction during Audio-Technica’s 50th anniversary celebrations back in 2012, the M50x headphone design has been widely lauded for both personal and studio monitoring use, and since then not a year has gone by without a special or limited edition arriving with either technical tweaks or some new colour scheme, This year the colour variant was chosen by public vote, with the winning hue being a deep Jaffa orange ‘Lantern Glow’.

Indeed there have been so many versions of the M50 that the nomenclature has sometimes got a little out of hand. But here the ‘BT2’ at the end of the model name is unmistakable: these are Bluetooth versions, updating the original BT version that was released in 2018.

No noise-cancelling

Wireless, then, but no noise-cancelling here; these are straightforward Bluetooth (or cabled) headphones.

And to be honest, that can be a good thing. Regular readers of our headphones reviews will know that sound quality invariably alters significantly when you flick the noise-cancelling switch, and that noise-cancelling is an inherently destructive process in sonic terms. Yet many users leave NC on by default when it’s available, so designers often choose to voice such headphones to sound best when NC is engaged, leaving the non-NC modes sounding odd, even though the path is more pure. We often end up saying such designs really only sound their best when you use a cable and turn off the electronics — not really a satisfactory recommendation when you’re buying a pair of wireless headphones!

So omitting NC, as here, can potentially assist the overall sound quality; there’s plenty of passive isolation anyway from the firm but not pressured fit here, while omitting NC also, of course, saves money on the price, here pretty good at $, which is $ lower than the closing price of the original BT version, and only $ over the price for the cabled M50x.

Equipment

The M50xBT2s arrive in a straightforward rather than a luxurious box, with very minimal use of plastic, a folded soft bag rather than a solid case, and inside that bag a double-ended mini-jack cable for wired use, and a USB-C charging cable, which we immediately employed to top up whatever charge they had shipped with. Audio-Technica quotes up to 50 hours of continuous wireless use on a full charge, and a useful three hours when given a 10-minute rapid charge.

These headphones are, given their proposed portable use, not to mention their monitoring heritage, a closed-back design, built solidly of primarily strong plastic but with an adjustable steel headband, and a soft leatherette for the earpads and a full wrap of the headband. They have oversized 45mm drivers, mobile-friendly 38-ohm impedance, and sensitivity of 99dB/W/m. The frequency response is quoted at 15Hz up to a high-res-capable 28kHz (though no envelope stated), and a microphone allows call-taking.

The provision of Bluetooth codecs for music is interesting: the base-level SBC, of course, and the Apple-friendly AAC codec for something rather better, but the third option is not one of the more common aptX variants but rather Sony’s LDAC. This has been incorporated into Android Oreo 8.0 and above, but surprisingly few phone manufacturers are actually activating it, perhaps because it requires a licence from Sony, albeit a free one. You may, however, be able to activate it yourself (details here: tinyurl. com/activateLDAC).

AUDIO-TECHNICA ATH-M50xBT2 Review

The LDAC codec can potentially deliver lossy high-res audio wirelessly, if the connection is made at LDAC’s maximum 990kbps. If your connection quality drops, however, so can the LDAC speed — down to 660kbps or 330kbps, the latter two taking you below CD quality. If you force the higher quality, you may get drop-outs.

The LDAC codec can potentially deliver lossy high-res audio wirelessly, if the connection is made at LDAC’s maximum 990kbps…

But much of that codec discussion is over-rated in practice anyway. Apple device owners will be listening below CD quality with AAC and we don’t reckon they’ll even notice. Android phone users further benefit from Google Fast Pair.

Performance

The sound here is big and bold, perhaps surprisingly so for a monitoring headphone derivative. But there’s also a lesson in patience here — do not judge these headphones the first time you plug them in. For their first few hours playing we thought them bass-dominated and rather thick. We left them running, and the next day merely considered the bass to be very full. We then left them playing for days via cable, to run in. By the end of the week things had settled into a general kick-arse attitude, which we continued to enjoy until the end of our listening.

Their solidity of sound is a tonic for classic rock, but they also achieve impressive excellent clarity and openness, partly thanks to a quality DAC inside, partly from those oversized 45mm drivers. Something as well-played as the Steve Miller Bands’ The Joker is opened up into a wide soundstage, the lead and harmony vocals well-toned, positioned and differentiated. Each and every instrument is enjoyable in its place.

They managed to deliver the metal of the guitar strings opening REM’s Drive as wonderfully edgy, and perfectly rendered the transition to full chords that follow, with the mix so clear we could follow the echo tricks employed on Stipe’s vocal — medium-length echo for most of it, but taken out for intimate line-enders. Bass guitar was rock-solid but didn’t bloat up to impact the rest of the frequency range.

It is a ‘closed’ sound; play classical pieces and there’s little delivery of ambience in a recording, and strings are softened rather than made brilliant. Play Keith Jarrett’s ‘Koln Concert’ and the piano notes have attack, but the sense of venue is largely absent, losing the space around the piano in which his little moans and foot-pedal thumps can be heard on more revealing systems and headphones.

AUDIO-TECHNICA ATH-M50xBT2 Review

With most music, however, this doesn’t prevent enjoying a good guitar jangle, nor does it reduce vocal cut-through; all these things are enjoyably well balanced. Meanwhile there’s that bass — solid and not pushed. A 20-200Hz bass sweep sounded completely flat, not a bump to be heard. Very rare.

This translates into solid and unbloated performance down low. Youngsters today may think they have the monopoly on bonkers bass, but a trip back to 1996’s ‘The Chakra Journey’ compilation under Return to the Source’s club label will soon put them right. The depth of the electronica here can overwhelm headphones tuned to bass excess, but the M50xBT2 simply rolls the stuff out, keeping the electronica pulsing deep but tight in support of all the rising tribal hands-in- the-air fizziness. There’s no shortage of available level via Bluetooth either, so that by the time you’re into Green Nuns of the Revolution’s Plexus Fire it feels like your head’s been to Goa and back.

AUDIO-TECHNICA ATH-M50xBT2 Review

(Thankfully the second CD is all ambient chill; we needed that.)

So good was the Bluetooth performance here, so lacking in anything to criticise, that we almost forgot to try them with a cable. When we did so, passively (there seems no option to power them up under cabled operation), we didn’t hear the usual improved clarity. There was perhaps a little more punch and openness, but if anything we preferred the frequency balance via Bluetooth; cabled bass seemed perhaps a tad too strong. Preferring Bluetooth over cabled sound is another great rarity, and shows how very well tuned the M50xBT2 headphones are for their primary purpose.

Conclusion

The importance of the M50x to Audio-Technica’s brand can be gauged by them having a category of their own at audio-technica.com.au, above Headphones, Microphones and Turntables, indeed.

The ATH-M50xBT2 continues that success — solid, strong, wonderfully musical, perfectly and powerfully tuned for wireless operation. They took out a Sound+Image Award as Best Wireless Headphones (without ANC), so from us it’s a big recommendation.

• Strong powerful sound

• Bluetooth as good as cabled

• Solid build

• Good price

• No noise-cancellation

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