Easy to find the perfect fit, the HD505 Copper just lets you get on with the music, or business, depending on how you’re using them. Be it for mixing or casual listening, the neutrality shines through, without making the music sterile and this is perhaps its most endearing quality. One of the usual weakness of open-back designs is the low-end response, but the HD505 seems to conquer this hurdle with aplomb. The bass is extended, articulate, and integrates beautifully into the rest of the frequency range. It digs deep when needed but does so without ever feeling boomy or overbearing.
The soundstage has that familiar open, airy quality. Transients are fast and clean, with no lingering resonance inside the ear cups, which is often the Achilles’ heel of closed-backs around this price range. You get speed, space, and slam—a rare trifecta in this category.
Cue up Chris Stapleton’s Bad as I Used to Be from the F1 Movie OST and the HD 505s respond with clarity, energy, and tone that gives the track exactly what it needs. Stapleton’s signature rasp is rendered with breathy realism, while the grit and twang of his guitar have just the right amount of bite. There’s air between the notes and texture in the voice—an experience that feels like the audio equivalent of sipping small-batch bourbon: smooth, warm, and just rough enough around the edges to feel authentic.
There’s no artificial sparkle or exaggerated V-shape EQ here and some may miss the last iota of top-end “air” but for the most part, what you get is a balanced, musical sound signature that respects the source while keeping things engaging and natural.