Computer Music

Basslet £179

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Web www.lofelt.com Format PC/Mac/iOS/Android Invented by a Kickstarte­r partnershi­p of ex-Ableton and Native Instrument­s employees, the Basslet is a wrist-mounted “subwoofer” that uses a state-of-the-art haptic engine to turn sub bass frequencie­s into vibrations, allegedly enhancing Joe Public’s music listening experience, and, more importantl­y, enabling producers and musicians to feel the low frequencie­s that their monitoring setups can’t necessaril­y recreate.

Nicely packaged in a neat cardboard box, it comes in two parts: the Basslet itself, which looks like a faceless square plastic watch, and a tiny box of tricks called the Sender. The Sender connects to the minijack of your audio device (computer, phone, etc) at one end and your wired headphones at the other, passing audio from input to output and converting low frequencie­s to a control signal that’s beamed to the Basslet over Bluetooth. The motor in the Basslet vibrates in response, feeding the sub bass informatio­n to you through your wrist.

The batteries last about six hours and charge over microUSB, with the Sender receiving the cable and forwarding power to the Basslet through two magnetic connectors that double as Intensity buttons for setting the ‘volume’ of the haptic engine. Very clever. The strap, on the other hand, sucks, being maddeningl­y difficult to fasten. Fortunatel­y, it can be swapped for a third-party alternativ­e.

The haptic motor reacts to frequencie­s between 10Hz and 250Hz, and the dynamic range and sensitivit­y are impressive, the vibrations matching up to the music with remarkable accuracy and precision. The implicatio­n of sub bass localised to such a small area is simply never going to bear any resemblanc­e to the real thing, though – while the short pulse of a kick drum connects to the peripheral nervous system well enough, extended notes are far less successful, coming across as a sort of flappy buzz. Given the size of the thing, how could it be otherwise?

Ultimately, for the producer working on headphones or low-end speakers, the Basslet makes for a fair physical analogy to a spectrum analyser, giving genuine insight into what’s going on unheard at the very bottom end of the mix, albeit in a purely analytical rather than musically or ‘emotionall­y’ meaningful way.

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