Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Hardware Review: WESC Bagpipe Headphones



I was on the hunt recently for a new pair of headphones, perferably something that had a pretty good price, but had a nice output of sound, not to mention a hint of style, so I did my research and ended up decided on finding the best WESC headphones I could. I know what you're thinking, "WESC is a clothing brand! FART FART FART" or "THEY SELL THOSE AT THE MALL IN CLOTHING STORES! PEE PEE PEE" but I went ahead with it anyway, and ended up getting the $150 Bag Pipes, and disappointed I am not!

It took less than a few days to get them shipped to me from the wonderful turntable lab and they arrived in a stylish package, which is besides the point, y'all probably (don't really) wanna know how they sound!

In a word, splendid.

My most experience with "good" headphones were various types of (horrid) skullcandy's, most notably the Skullcrusher's, which have a built in subwoofer that turns your favorite songs into piles of bassy shit that are impossible to hear, so luckily these Bag Pipes don't do that. My $150 bought me a lovely amount of bass, that's just enough to let those dubstep songs feel...dubsteppy, but not too much to turn my favorite Kinks songs into...dubstep. The biggest compliment I can make is that these bad boys cancel sound like a motherfucker. It's caused me to be highly paranoid when I listen to music, people just "sneak" up on my ass when my favorite Coheed songs are blasting my ears. That's because I can't fucking hear a thing besides the crisp, clean, and ear-filling noise of whatever I'm hearing at the time.

The functionality of the headphones are great, with there being plenty of twisting, turning, and folding these babies can do that make them feel like your old transformer action figures...just more sturdy. I definitely get the impression that you could use these to do some DJ'ing, or just easy listening. They are like buying a great flatscreen...just in a sexy silver instead of plain black! They look absolutely badass, I love the color scheme, the modern look, and the wicked sweet curly chord, it's just great! I love these things, and I'd definitely recommend you go find a pair!

Pros: Stylish, sounds clean, crisp, and sexy as fuck. Functionality is great, and doesn't hurt they make me horny?

Cons: Too sexy? Oh and I could have used a nice adjustable switch for the amount of bass to clarity found on other WESC headphones. Oh well...they still make me a horny bastard. :)

Here's the specs for those of you who understand them.
- Type: 57mm PRO drivers, (DJ quality)
- 1khz Sensitivity: 119 dB
- Impedance: 60 ohms
- Frequence Range: 20-20 001 Hz, (great amount of bass)
- Plug: Gold-plated 3.5 Stereo (fits in your iPod, comes with adapter for DJ equipment)

Hardware Rating:
9.1 / 10

---Matt

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Powerglove - Saturday Morning Apocalypse Review


Ever been playing some classic NES and just thought "THIS COULD USE SOME FUCKING METAL!?!?" Chances are that you haven't. Wonder why you never thought of that? It's because you are stupid. In 2005 a few metalheads with a passion for classic video games were genius enough to start making their favorite 8-bit theme songs into power metal epics. Their first full-length, Metal Kombat For The Mortal Man, came out in 2007 and featured songs from Mario, Sonic, Mortal Kombat and many others. Since then the band has been rapidly gaining popularity and have toured with quite a few bands including Psychostick, Arsis, and even Dragonforce. But even with the success of Powerglove's first album, you had to wonder how long they could keep it up. I mean, there are only so many classic video game songs that would translate well into metal covers, and luckily Powerglove realized that. On "Saturday Morning Apocalypse," Powerglove have moved from covering songs from video games they loved as children to TV shows and Movies. But don't worry fans, you will still get the same kind of nostalgic feel from these epic covers.


To no surprise, Powerglove's music centers around the memorable melodies created by the theme songs they are covering. The melodies are always played beautifully with harmonized guitar leads and are usually backed by a chugging lower riff and some double bass heavy drumming. Many of the songs also have impressive solos and interesting bridges. All of these elements are nothing new to the metal genre, but Powerglove manages to execute them insanely well with songs that they shouldn't work with. Though these metal cliches are somewhat necessary to make these covers work, it does make for a lot of repetition. Powerglove still try their best to branch out from their core sound whenever appropriate and in turn there is a fair amount of experimentation on each track to make them unique. "This Is Halloween" and "Batman" make good use of string and choral samples to give the songs a much darker, apocalyptic feel. "Transformers" utilizes synthesizers to give it more of the futuristic sound you would associate with the show. "The Simpsons" even features vocals that make it standout from the rest of the instrumental tracks.

Saturday Morning Apocalypse is a wonderful sophomore album that really proves that Powerglove is a talented metal band with a knack for making childhood songs fucking metal. I would definitely recommend this to any metal fan and non-metal fans should still be able to enjoy it for the novelty of the concept. Let's just hope Powerglove can keep impressing us and not run out of fun songs to cover.

Rating: 8.5/10

-Tynan Evans (mrstuprigge)


Check out one of my favorite tracks from the album below!