Come with me as I take a look at the Letshuoer EJ07M, Letshuoer’s midrange tribrid beast priced at $600. With Letshuoer touting the EJ07M to be a stage monitor, can it accurately represent music in its rawest form? Let’s find out!
WATCH UNBOXING HERE: https://youtu.be/e918lERq3rw
FIRST IMPRESSIONS:
- Simple yet adequate unboxing experience and inclusions
- Comes with one of the densest carrying case I’ve seen
- Good IEM build quality with a somewhat disappointingly drab cable
- Subpar comfort with a good seal but suffers from air pressure build-up
- Slight u-shaped sound signature
- Hard hitting and deep bass presentation with a somewhat subpar midbass detailing
- Relatively clean midrange with a slight lack of lower midrange body and good upper midrange clarity
- Inoffenssive, smooth treble
- Crisp imaging and separation but decent staging
The EJ07M being Letshuoers definitive midrange tribrid puts it in a position to compete with similar tribrids, hybrids or even all BA sets that continuously dominate the midrange market. A competitive market means you need to do something to stand out. What does the EJ07M do to stand out?
The opposite of standing out. This is one of the safest midrange that I’ve heard from experience with the entire frequency range complimenting each other without taking too much attention.
The bass is present and it’s here to stay with a rather deep and hard-hitting low-end emphasis to give your tracks a level of heft to get you to move your body to the beat. It smoothly glides down with grace to the midbass and lower mids where it tries its best to avoid coloring or smearing over the lower mids with it doing the job a little too well as I found the lower mids and midbass to lack tactility and occasionally body, but it does in turn make this entire region clean without sounding overly tucked.
The midrange is expectedly not really the star of the show, but still presents the vocals and instruments in the lower midrange with a respectable amount of presence but definitely not for those seeking for an engaging, bodied, or nuanced lower midrange. It’s sufficiently presented without skipping a beat, but gliding instead.
The upper midrange was where I was surprised with how clean it was presented without really going too deep into bringing out all the details. It’s understandably forward without an over-emphasis that drives vocals sounding too in your head which I quite enjoyed as it brought out the lower midrange more.
The treble speaks volumes in a sense that, well, you need to crank up the volume if you’d really like sparkle. It’s a safe treble presentation that neither shines on you nor shrouds you in darkness which I quite enjoyed until I started craving the sharpness and incisiveness that sets in its price range like the SA6 MKII provided. That’s not to say that the SA6 MKII is perfect in the treble region, a lot of people complain about how it’s a little bit too revealing which puts the EJ07M more up their alley.
Techs are what I was honestly less impressed with in the EJ07M. Separation is good as well as imaging and layering where it does not struggle with more difficult or complex tracks, but more often than not I found myself feeling a little claustrophobic with the staging. It’s not overly cramped, but it’s neither the widest I’ve heard in its price.
What the EJ07M lacks in flair makes up for in sheer inoffensiveness. It’s a very smooth yet well-balanced u-shaped set that neither shakes your buzzoms nor strips your music to its fundamentals. It’s a well-tuned, balanced set that regardless of what you throw, will play it with absolute certainty and enjoyability.
Thank you for reading my impressions of the Letshuoer EJ07M. If you’d like to order one, consider using the non-affiliated link below: https://letshuoer.net/products/ej07m-best-in-ear-monitors-for-singers-drummers-studio
If you have any questions or concerns, contact me on my Facebook page or at obodioreviews@gmail.com