The Guardian (USA)

Beats Solo Pro review: Apple's on-ear noise cancelling headphones

- Samuel Gibbs

Apple-owned Beats is moving into the on-ear noise-cancelling world with the Solo Pro, using the same chips that make the PowerBeats Pro and AirPods so good.

The £269.95 Beats Solo Pro blends the design of the firm’s existing Solo with the wired EP headphones for an attractive, modern and fairly sleek design.

On-ear headphones sit with the cushions pressing against the ear, as opposed to the larger over-ear headphones that enclose your ear and sit against the side of your head. The Solo Pro are fairly large for on-ear headphones, with the cushions covering my ears.

The leatherett­e ear cups are wellpadded and the soft-touch silicone headband stays in place on your dome. The ear cups articulate to fit as flat and as firmly on your ears as possible, while the metal arms slide into the headband for size adjustment.

Despite a firm grip, the Solo Pro are among the most comfortabl­e onear headphones I have tried. Over-ear headphones are definitely best for extended listening sessions but the Solo Pro stayed comfortabl­e for up to a couple of hours before my ears needed a break.

At 267g, the Solo Pro are about midweight for headphones. The arms fold into thirds to collapse down but the thick ear cups means they do not get quite as small as I would like for travelling. They ship with a soft recycled-felt case for protection but they feel robust enough to just toss in a bag.

Specificat­ions

Weight: 267g

Drivers: 40mm

Connectivi­ty: Apple H1 chip, Bluetooth 5.0, Lightning charging Bluetooth codecs: SBC, AAC

Battery life: 22 hours ANC on, 40 hours ANC off

Connectivi­ty and controls

Apple’s H1 wireless chip handles Bluetooth connectivi­ty, the same system built into PowerBeats Pro, AirPods 2 and AirPods Pro. It enables instant-pairing and multi-device switching with all Apple-made smartphone­s, tablets and computers, plus hands-free “Hey Siri” support for the firm’s voice assistant and audio sharing on iPhones and iPads.

The Beats app on Android also provides some of the same functional­ity. You can pair your headphones using the app – it will show battery level when you turn them on in a little on-screen pop-up and manage various settings.

The Bluetooth connection to a variety of devices including an iPhone 11 Pro, Samsung Galaxy Z Flip and Microsoft Surface Pro 6 was rock solid. You can use them wired with a special Lightning to 3.5mm cable (£35) but it is not included in the box.

The outside of the right ear cup hides volume and playback controls under the large Beats-logo disc. Press it up or down to adjust volume. Press the logo in once for pause/play, twice to skip forward and thrice to skip back. Press and hold it to activate Siri on an iPhone, iPad or Mac, or Google Assistant on an Android phone.

A small button on the bottom of the left ear cup swaps between noise cancelling on, off and a transparen­cy setting, which pipes the sounds from the outside world into the headphones. Press and hold the button to pair another device.

The headphones turn off and on by folding and unfolding them but taking them off does not pause the music, as has become common with high-end headphones.

Sound and noise cancelling

The Solo Pro have some of the more effective noise cancelling I have tried with on-ear headphones, which typically struggle to compete with a large set of over-ear noise cancellers.

Road noise, engine drone and background office noise was reduced, while noisy commuters were slightly quietened. The headphones do a fairly good job of passively blocking out noise without noise cancelling active, too. They can’t quite match B&W, Bose or Sony but the Beats aren’t that far behind.

The Solo Pro are also some of the best-sounding Beats headphones I have listened to. They produce clear, precise sound that is almost clinical at times, with well-controlled and punchy bass, pleasing mids and crisp highs.

You can hear every note in complex tracks such as the Who’s Baba O’Riley. Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong sounded particular­ly good in Summertime, while they handled classical music well, too.

Dr Dre sounds good, so does highenergy electronic­a such as Edge by Cicada. But they sound best with punchy rock and pop. Play Highly Suspicious by My Morning Jacket and they really come alive.

The Solo Pro sound best with active noise cancelling turned off, producing deeper, richer bass including the pulsating low tones in Crystalliz­e by Lindsey Stirling.

Battery life

The Solo Pro last just over 22 hours between charges using noise cancelling. They are rated to last up to 40 hours with noise cancelling switched off.

Charging is via Apple’s proprietar­y Lightning cable, including those supplied with iPhones. A USB-A to Lightning cable is included in the box. A 10-minute charge provides enough battery for up to three hours of playback, while a full charge takes one hour and 45 minutes.

Sustainabi­lity

Apple doesn’t provide a rating for the number of charge cycles expected from the battery in the Solo Pro but it is replaceabl­e and the headphones are generally repairable.

It costs £82.44 to replace the battery and £166.44 for other repairs out of warranty.

The Solo Pro are made of up to 36% recycled plastic, while the felt case is made of recycled plastic. Apple also offers trade-in and free recycling schemes, including for non-Apple products.

Observatio­ns

It feels as if the control disc on the right ear cup should turn for volume control but it doesn’t

The headphones were more comfortabl­e on the ears with the headband pushed further back on my head than normal

Call quality was good with both ends of the conversati­on clear, although the other end could hear some background noise at times

Price

The Beats Solo Pro cost £269.95 and are available in a range of single and two-tone colours.

For comparison, Marshall’s Monitor II ANC cost £300, Bose Noise-Cancelling Headphones 700 cost £350, Bowers & Wilkins PX7 cost £350 and Beats

Studio 3 Wireless cost £300.

Verdict

The Beats Solo Pro are a great set of on-ear noise-cancelling headphones.

They sound good, have solid noise cancelling and are comfortabl­e and stable on your head. Bluetooth connectivi­ty is rock-solid and the battery lasts long enough for the weekly commute or flights.

Apple’s H1 chip enables a whole host of convenient features with the firm’s devices, while the Beats app brings some of them to Android, too.

It is disappoint­ing that a 3.5mm to Lightning cable is not included in the box, and they are certainly expensive. But at least you are not just paying for a big flashy brand any more.

If you like on-ear headphones and want a good-sounding, noise-cancelling set, then you can’t go far wrong with the Beats Solo Pro – particular­ly if you use Apple gear.

Other reviews

Bowers & Wilkins PX7 review: Bosebeatin­g noise-cancelling headphones

Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 review: less business, more modern design

Marshall Monitor II ANC review: classic headphones gain noise cancelling

Microsoft Surface Headphones review: close but no cigar

Sony WF-1000XM3 review: updated noise-cancelling earbuds sound great

AirPods Pro review: a touch of Apple magic

Beats PowerBeats Pro review:

Apple’s fitness AirPods rock

 ??  ?? Apple’s latest Beats Bluetooth headphones are comfortabe on-ear headphones with noise cancelling. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
Apple’s latest Beats Bluetooth headphones are comfortabe on-ear headphones with noise cancelling. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
 ??  ?? The headphones fold up for travel. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
The headphones fold up for travel. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

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