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Urbanears Kransen

 & Tim Gideon Contributing Editor, Audio

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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Urbanears Kransen - Headphones
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

The Urbanears Kransen is a budget earphone pair that delivers intense bass response at a very affordable price.

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Pros & Cons

    • Powerful deep bass response, no distortion at top volumes.
    • Earpieces snap together for easier, tangle-free stowing.
    • Too bass-heavy and not enough high-mid or high frequency presence for purists.
    • Light on accessories.

Urbanears Kransen Specs

Phone Controls
Type In-Ear

The era of cheap earphones sounding like garbage has swiftly become history. It's now possible to recommend pairs around $50 or less now, when a few years ago I cringed at the thought. The Urbanears Kransen, at $39 (direct), is an in-ear pair with a smart, simple design and gobs of bass response. Typically, you'd expect earphones in this price range to either have no real bass or to distort the bass like crazy, but the Kransen brings the low frequency response and manages to avoid distortion. Purists seeking a flat-response or crisp sound signature should look elsewhere, though; this is an option for bass lovers, balanced out with just enough high-mid presence so that things don't sound muddy. The Kransen doesn't quite edge out the Editors' Choice JLab Fit, but it's a solid set at a good price.

Design

Available in ten colors, the Kransen's( at Amazon) look is modern and simple. The plastic on the earpieces is a matte surface that matches the cable's color, and the only deviation from the uniform color scheme is a small metallic panel on the inside of the earpiece (and hidden from view when the Kransens are in your ears) that has the logo and "L" or "R" etched into it. The fit is lightweight and secure.

An inline remote control and mic are located along the left ear's cable at about chin level, and at about mid-chest the rubberized cables join into one cloth-lined cord. The single-button remote can play/pause music, answer calls, or skip tracks with multiple button taps, but it offers no way to adjust the volume. The Kransen is light on accessories, only shipping with three total pairs of eartips and no carrying pouch. At the bargain price of $40, however, a lot of accessories shouldn't be expected.

Urbanears Kransen inlineThe Kransen is armed with some clever design aimed at helping you keep your earphones tangle-free when stowed in your bag. The two earpieces snap together when not in use, and the rubber area at the end of the cable has a hole that the 3.5mm connection can slide into after you've looped the cable, acting as a sort of twist-tie and keeping the cable from tangling.

My only fear here, and this is not something I can test in my relatively short time with the product, is that the cabling inside could snap. The connection point of the cables to the earpieces and the cable's end are the two most likely places for a cable to break, meaning you'll need to get a new pair of earphones. Adding pressure to the end, as using this loop feature does, makes me pretty nervous about the longevity of the Kransen…but you can always choose to not use this feature, and there's no way of being certain that my fears are warranted.

Performance

On tracks with serious sub-bass content, like the Knife's "Silent Shout," the Kransen does not distort even at top (and unsafe) listening levels. These earphones also manage to push out a heavy dose of powerful low-end, impressive in this price range. The secure in-ear fit may help the bass response seem a bit more powerful than it is, but the drivers are still well-equipped to deliver deep lows. At more moderate listening levels, the sense of big bass is still quite present,

On Bill Callahan's "Drover," his baritone vocals are given a bit of added low-end richness (which they hardly need), and the drums get an extra dose of low-end, too. This often kills the mix on bass-boosted earphones, but the Kransen combines the healthy lows with enough high-mid and high frequency presence to balance things out. Without a doubt, this is still a bass-lover's earphone pair and not for anyone seeking a particularly crisp or flat-response sound, but it doesn't eliminate the high-mids and highs to the extent that things sound muddy.

Jay-Z and Kanye West's "No Church in the Wild," which features some hefty sub-bass synth hits that punctuate the beat, comes off as another bass-forward affair. Those synth hits are delivered with almost subwoofer-like force, but the attack of the kick drum loop here misses its sharp edge that helps it slice through the beat. The vocals stay out in the forefront of this dense mix nonetheless, and the song remains balanced enough so that bass lovers can still hear the other aspects besides the bass.

Classical tracks like John Adams' "The Chairman Dances" actually sound excellent on the Kransen. The bass boost lent to the lower register strings gives things a nice round sound, while the higher register strings and percussion already possess a natural advantage over the rest of the orchestra, so they're less affected by the dialed-back high-mids and highs of the earphones. Again, purists won't love this sound, but the Kransen delivers a nice balance of rich bass response with at least some crispness in the high-mids here that it can't seem to attain on mixes from other genres.

If you're looking for the big bass experience and have a bit more money to spend, the in-ear SOL Republic Relays( at Amazon) delivers powerful lows and balances them, somewhat, with the rest of the frequency range. If you're after a more balanced sound overall, with less booming bass response, the TDK EB950( at Amazon) and Sennheiser CX 685 SPORTS( at Amazon) both offer a solid, balanced listening experience. And if you wish to go even cheaper than the Kransen's budget price, the Editors' Choice JLab Fit offers solid audio and more accessories. For $40, however, the good-looking Urbanears Kransen is a worthy option that delivers distortion-free, thunderous low-end for the budget-minded bass lover.

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Final Thoughts

Urbanears Kransen - Headphones

Urbanears Kransen Review

4.0 Excellent

The Urbanears Kransen is a budget earphone pair that delivers intense bass response at a very affordable price.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

Tim Gideon

Tim Gideon

Contributing Editor, Audio

My Experience

I've been a contributing editor for PCMag since 2011. Before that, I was PCMag's lead audio analyst from 2006 to 2011. Even though I'm a freelancer now, PCMag has been my home for well over a decade, and audio gear reviews are still my primary focus. Prior to my career in reviewing tech, I worked as an audio engineer—my love of recording audio eventually led me to writing about audio gear.

My Areas of Expertise

  • Headphones and earphones
  • Wireless and computer speakers
  • USB mics
  • Bluetooth headsets

The Technology I Use

Probably because of their prevalence in the recording studios I worked in a long time ago, I am most comfortable on Macs—I'm writing this on the 2019 iMac I use for testing. I also have a MacBook Pro that gets plenty of similar use.

My workspace has a mini recording studio setup, and the the gear I work with there is a mix of items I've used forever (Paradigm Mini Monitors and a McIntosh stereo receiver) and newer gear I use for recording and review testing (such as the Universal Audio Apollo x16).

I'm obsessed with modern boutique analog synths—some of my favorites instruments in this realm are the Landscape Audio Stereo Field and HC-TT,  the Soma Enner, the Koma Field Kit, and the Lorre Mill Keyed Mosstone.

From my studio days, I'm comfortable using Pro Tools, and in recent years have branched out to other realms of creative software, like Adobe Premiere and After Effects.

I stream music, but I also still buy albums, digitally or on vinyl, and encourage anyone who wants fair compensation for musicians and engineers to do the same.

I also play lots of Wordle.

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