Grado RS-1 Reference Series Headphones

Published On: January 11, 2009
Last Updated on: October 31, 2020
We May Earn From Purchases Via Links

Grado RS-1 Reference Series Headphones

Our reviewer was "bowled over by the sheer clarity" of these headphones and described them as "an utterly naked, translucent, uncolored sound." He added that the "bass extension and control set new standards for open-backed dynamic headphones"...

Grado RS-1 Reference Series Headphones

  • The staff at HomeTheaterReview.com is comprised of experts who are dedicated to helping you make better informed buying decisions.

grado-rs1i-reference-headphones-reviewed.gif

Nepotism sucks. As a rule, that is. We can all name at least one or two companies which have been flushed right down the toilet by the prodigal son, and those of us who wax nostalgic about firms which survive past the originator's retirement just hate it when what was once the
founder's sperm turns into the destroyer of his legacy. So it is with great relish that I can report that Grado is positively flourishing under the aegis of son John. And what has been the device with which John has re-affirmed Grado's greatness? Headphones.

Additional Resources
Learn more about Grado Headphones and the Grado brand here.
Read a review of the Grado SR80i Headphones here.

Yes, headphones, and not just the stunning little bargains like the SR-60, SR-80 and SR-125. John was prescient enough to recognise, at least three or four years back, that the high-end community was rediscovering headphones, for whatever reasons: apartment dwelling precluding the enjoyment of maximum SPLs; the (possibly coincidental) arrival of terrific headphone amplifiers from HeadRoom, Krell, EarMax and others; the simple realisation that headphones sound wonderful if you can get past the in-the-head anomalies. Indeed, there's probably no single type of component which delivers as much bang for the buck as headphones. But Grado's weapon isn't the £89 wonder. The real killer happens to cost a serious £695.

This, of course, is pocket change to your typical Stax headphone owner, who'd probably spend more than that just for an energiser. But the Grado is a dynamic headphone, and most of us tend to think '£50' or so when it's something powered by a headphone socket. Then again, readers who actually recall older headphone models will remember that the current
Grado RS-1 Reference Series headphone was preceded by equally expensive dynamics from the same family. And then there was that incredible wooden Sony a few years back...

I mention the Sony because the Grado RS-1's most distinctive features are the wooden ear cups. But unlike the Sony's veritable furniture, the wooden bits on the Grado look just like arboreal facsimiles of the company's non-organic models. But what wonders are worked by a
gorgeous, honey-coloured trace of Mother Nature! If you need to feel green about this, the amount of wood involved is so small that a mere sapling could provide a couple years' worth of production

Read more about the RS-1 headphones on Page 2.

Grado-RS1-Headphones.gif

There's not a lot else to tell you about the RS-1 because John

Grado

is not the most voluble of men. His East Coast origins have been subsumed by caution, so all we're allowed to know about the RS-1 is that it uses dynamic transducers in an open-air configuration, the cups being open-backed. The frequency response is stated as "12Hz-30kHz" (about which I will not comment since my CD players cut off at 20Hz), 1mV delivers 96dB's worth of SPLs and the nominal impedance is 32 Ohms.

Other niceties which allude to its exclusivity are driver matching to 0.05dB (yes, point-oh-five), vented diaphragms, the aforementioned, beautifully-carved wooden "air chambers" and something called "UHPLC" copper for the voice coils and connecting cord. Think up you own meanings for the acronym. What's important is that the RS-1 is so comfortable that you'll soon forget you're wearing a pair. What you'll never forget is sound that's so smooth, coherent and palpable that you might even think about forswearing speakers, except for multi-listener sessions.

I know, I know: it's pretty hard to get worked up about headphones, and not just because they're mildly anti-social. The reality is that none of us can even remember the last time we heard a truly bad pair, not counting bogus brands and the ones that come free with personal hi-fis. Honestly: can you say, with hand on heart that any of the headphones you've tried from the 'proper' brands like AKG, Beyer, Sennheiser, Audio-Technica, Jecklin, Koss, ad infinitum have actually been so bad that you couldn't live with them? I thought not. So you decide according to whatever other considerations might sway you: fit, weight, styling, even country of origin. And there's nothing wrong with that as long as we're talking about headphones costing under 100. When you go past that point, well, you need a reason.

Grado has seen to it that you have one. It's the kind of listening experience that earns the accolade 'memorable'. Now I don't want you to think that, historically-speaking, we're talking about something as earth-shattering as the original Quad ESL, the Decca Gold or your first orgasm. The Grado RS-1 ain't that good. But the first time I heard an RS-1 prototype through a HeadRoom amplifier, with a signal feed straight from the CD player, in the midst of a crowded room at a hi-fi show, I knew that I was in the presence - 'in' being the operative word - of something which would soon possess a devoted following.

It came down to two things, not counting a price way below that of my own personal reference headphones, the Stax SR-Omega-plus-tube-energiser. The first was a clearly discernible out-of-the-head sensation, given that no headphone I can name can provide a completely out-of-the-head experience without the aid of something like binaural processing to push things outward. But the Grado spread enough of the sound beyond the outer edges of one's ears that you could be forgiven for thinking that Grado has cloned the Stax method of sonic presentation, only in a dynamic driver context.

Secondly, I was bowled over by the sheer clarity the Grado possessed, an utterly naked, translucent, uncoloured sound neither clinical, hygienic, nor hyper-detailed. It possess a 'non-sound' betraying no character that could sully the notes, and the bass extension and control set new standards for open-backed dynamic headphones. The contrast with Staxes, and the reason why I want to be buried wearing a pair of the Japanese electrostatics, is one of temperature. The Staxes possess - or add, if you prefer - a touch of warmth to the vocals which makes the experience all the more convincing for me. Call me a perv, but I just love the sensation of someone breathing in my ear, and that's what I get with the Staxes. With the Grados, I always picture John Grado telling me what's what. Which isn't as odd as you'd think, since John Grado is no shrinking violet. And I'm sure he won't blush if I say that the RS-1 is a masterpiece.

Additional Resources
Learn more about Grado Headphones and the Grado brand here.
Read a review of the Grado SR80i Headphones here.

Subscribe To Home Theater Review

Get the latest weekly home theater news, sweepstakes and special offers delivered right to your inbox
Email Subscribe
HomeTheaterReview Rating
Value: 
Performance: 
Overall Rating: 
© JRW Publishing Company, 2023
As an Amazon Associate we may earn from qualifying purchases.

magnifiercross
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram
Share to...