Bass Boosted | Extreme
When you crank the low-end frequencies to 400%, you stop hearing the music and start feeling it. Science says low frequencies trigger a visceral, primal response. It’s that club-scene energy delivered directly to your $20 earbuds until they rattle.
But hey, if you’re looking for that brain-rattling, floor-shaking, neighbor-annoying energy—turn it up. Just don’t blame us when your teeth start vibrating.
We’ve all done it. You get a new pair of headphones or a sub-woofer for the car, and the first thing you do is find the most "blown out" track possible. It’s a rite of passage. If your rearview mirror isn't shaking, is the music even on?
Let me know your favorite track to test your speakers with!
There is something inherently hilarious about a perfectly normal pop song being obliterated by bass. It’s the "deep-fried" aesthetic of the audio world. When the beat drops and the audio quality dips into a crunchy, static-filled abyss, that’s where the magic (and the memes) happen.
When you crank the low-end frequencies to 400%, you stop hearing the music and start feeling it. Science says low frequencies trigger a visceral, primal response. It’s that club-scene energy delivered directly to your $20 earbuds until they rattle.
But hey, if you’re looking for that brain-rattling, floor-shaking, neighbor-annoying energy—turn it up. Just don’t blame us when your teeth start vibrating.
We’ve all done it. You get a new pair of headphones or a sub-woofer for the car, and the first thing you do is find the most "blown out" track possible. It’s a rite of passage. If your rearview mirror isn't shaking, is the music even on?
Let me know your favorite track to test your speakers with!
There is something inherently hilarious about a perfectly normal pop song being obliterated by bass. It’s the "deep-fried" aesthetic of the audio world. When the beat drops and the audio quality dips into a crunchy, static-filled abyss, that’s where the magic (and the memes) happen.