Headphones

★ Top Pick (Closed-Back)

Beyerdynamic DT 770 Pro (80 Ohm)

Best for: Tracking sessions, mixing in untreated rooms, long sessions

The closed-back mixing headphone that studios worldwide have defaulted to for 30 years. Flat response, legendary velour pads, and 80-ohm impedance that runs off any interface. ~$145.

Why it made the list

The DT 770 is the headphone you see in every recording booth. Closed-back design gives solid isolation (great for tracking with a click or recording near a noisy environment). The 80-ohm version runs directly from any audio interface without a headphone amp. The frequency response is exceptionally flat — the slight brightness at 8kHz is predictable and consistent, which means once you learn the curve you trust the translation. The velour pads don't compress over long sessions and don't make your ears sweat. Build quality is real — these last years. This is the standard pick.

Pros Industry-standard translation Velour pads (most comfortable in class) 80-ohm (no amp needed) Durable metal construction Closed-back isolation for tracking
Cons Non-detachable cable Slight brightness at 8kHz (learn the curve) Not portable-friendly
Headphones

★ Top Pick (Open-Back)

Sennheiser HD 600

Best for: Mixing decisions, stereo panning, natural soundstage

The open-back reference. HD 600s are what mastering engineers reach for when they want headphone decisions that translate to speakers — wider imaging, natural decay, and the famous Sennheiser mids. ~$200.

Why it made the list

Open-back headphones create a wider, more speaker-like soundstage because sound escapes through the rear cup. Panning decisions, reverb depth, and stereo spread are dramatically easier to judge on open-backs. The HD 600 has been the reference for open-back headphone mixing since it launched — the midrange is perfectly balanced (crucial for vocals and instruments), the decay is natural, and the response is flat enough that mix decisions hold up. Not for tracking (sound bleed is the tradeoff), but for mixing? These are essential.

Pros Wide, natural soundstage (speaker-like) Balanced mids (best in class) Mix decisions translate to speakers Removable cable (replaceable) Industry-proven reference
Cons Open design means sound bleeds (not for recording) Needs quiet room to use Slightly underwhelming bass below 40Hz
Headphones

Best Mid-Range Closed

Sony MDR-7506

Best for: Tracking, monitoring, high-SPL listening, broadcast standard

The broadcast industry standard. Every TV studio, radio station, and film set has a drawer full of 7506s. Accurate, loud, and built to survive abuse. ~$100.

Why it made the list

The MDR-7506 has been the broadcast monitoring standard since 1991 — not because Sony lobbied hard, but because they're accurate, durable, and loud. The closed-back design isolates well. The coiled cable is indestructible. The response has a slight presence boost in the upper mids that reveals sibilance and compression artifacts clearly — useful for catching mixing problems before they reach distribution. At $100, there's almost nothing to argue against.

Pros $100 (elite value) Foldable and portable Broadcast-proven durability Accurate upper mids Coiled cable (indestructible)
Cons 63-ohm impedance (needs decent headphone output) Slightly bright (learn the curve) Ear pads wear and need replacement
Headphones

Open-Back Budget

Beyerdynamic DT 990 Pro (80 Ohm)

Best for: Electronic producers who want open-back character at $150

Open-back imaging at an accessible price. Wide soundstage, bright character, and the Beyerdynamic build quality that survives years of studio abuse. ~$150.

Why it made the list

If you want open-back for mixing but the HD 600 is out of budget, the DT 990 Pro is the move. Wide soundstage, excellent imaging, and Beyerdynamic's famous velour pads. The response is bright in the high-end (especially 8-16kHz) — this matters for electronic producers who want to hear air and detail. Same caveats as all open-backs: not for tracking, needs a quiet room.

Pros Open-back imaging at $150 Velour pads (Beyerdynamic standard) Wide soundstage Bright character (useful for detail)
Cons Bright character (not ideal for acoustic/vocal mixing) Non-detachable cable Not for tracking (bleed)

Buying Tips & What to Avoid

Calibrate your ears to the frequency ranges that matter.
Use Titan Audio's EQ Frequency Chart to understand where each headphone and monitor should be used in your workflow.
Frequency Chart Tool →