Ear Protection

TamaGroove

New member
Hey guys. What do you guys use when you are playing along with music at home, practicing with the band, or playing live to protect your ears? I am looking for either in ear headphones (shure SE 215 for example) that I can use as in ear monitors for live gigs and for practicing. But I also want something like Vic Firth Drummer headphones that are going to cancel out sound so I don't have to blare the music in my headphones which would completely defeat the purpose. Thanks guys! Can't wait to hear input.

Shure SE215-K Live Sound Monitor, Black: Amazon.ca: Electronics

Amazon.com: Vic Firth Drummer's Headphones: Musical Instruments
 
I used the drummer headphones for a while and absolutely loved them. Especially if your kit is mic'd up and you pump it back into the headphones.
 
Sounds really basic but... whats wrong with ear plugs? 50c a pop, and as long as ur not singing and every1 else is amped...
 
Ear plugs serviced me for years, but I got gun muffs 2 years ago or so for Christmas, and the difference is night and day. Ear plugs are pretty uneven frequency response, really bassy sounding, with gun muffs I kept the high end definition. Also, gun muffs are pretty cheap, and at roughly $10 a pop, for 2 years, I probably saved a ton of money on ear plugs. And these can probably last for several more years.

Since they are not headphones, I still have to use earplugs when playing/recording with headphones since all my headphones are just standard units that do no sound isolation.
 
Sounds really basic but... whats wrong with ear plugs? 50c a pop, and as long as ur not singing and every1 else is amped...

This ^^^^^

Are you playing wembley stadium? Just use the squishy ear boogers. I've used them live and at practices for 20+ years and I can hear everything fine - including myself when I have to go all Phil Collins and sing and drum at the same time.

For home goofing around I use construction worker/gun range sound killing ear muffler things.

For tracking, Vic Firth drummer's cans.
 
When I'm mixing in a loud environment I use Etymotic brand ear plugs--more expensive than the standard ones but with a flat frequency response so I can still do an adquate mix without having to take the ear plugs out.
 
I usually just wear the same headphones that I use for general listening, which is currently a pair of Sennheiser HD 25-1 II's.

They work pretty well, they give a great amount of isolation whether I'm playing music through them or not. They do tend to fall off if I get into it, though.
 
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