I'm a trained musician and have composed a few tunes in my time, so I know a thing or two about composing and listening to music. I used to have a highend audio system but nowadays spend most of my time listening to music coming from my computer speakers or from headphones attached to my mobile phone or various music players. It's for these reasons that I wasn't too excited when a pair of Dr. Dre's Beats By Dre Headphones arrived. For starters, the box they came in was huge and second, they're of the higherend variety (more than $300) headphones; not something that I thought would be good for listening to music through a computer or iPhone.Before I tell you about my experience, let me tell you a bit more about these headphones. According to the information I've read, Dr. Dre worked with Monster Cable and Robert Brunner, an industrial designer, for more than two years to perfect these headphones. In Dr. Dre's words:"People aren't hearing all the music.""With Beats, people are going to hear Monster Beats what the artists hear, and listen to the music the way they should: the way I do."Based on the quotes above, I found myself suddenly very intrigued.PackagingThe box that the "kit" comes in is quite large, unnecessarily so, in my opinion. I can only assume that it's because the headphones are pricey and that they wanted you to feel something substantial. Once you open the box up you see a zipped carrying case (containing the headphones), batteries, a 18 to 14 adapter with 24k gold contacts, a couple of cablesone of which features a builtin answer button and microphone, a cleaning cloth, and a getting started guide.Fit and comfortThe headphones are billed as having spaciously designed ear cups. I actually noticed Cheap Monster Beats that right away. Most headsets I've tried with ear cups completely cover your ear and actually sometimes cause you to sweat. This was not the case with the Dr. Dre Beats; they felt comfortable and featured a lot of adjustability.Ease of useTo get started I opened up the battery compartment, cleverly hidden in the left ear cup. I then connected the cable with one end going into the headphones and the other into my iPhone. In a separate test I plugged the headphones directly into my MacBook and played music through iTunes.If you want to pause your music, there's an integrated mute button on the center of the right ear cup, and if you want to take a call, you can click the microphone button on the cable and talk. When you're done, just Monster Beats by Dre Studio Michael Jackson Limited Edition Headphones click again.Sound qualityThis is the part that shocked me the most. I figured that these headphones were probably just all marketing, with Dr. Dre and Monster Cable behind it. Thankfully, I was pleasantly surprised. Within seconds of turning the headphones on, I played the included samples. I immediately heard crisp highs and bass pumping lows. The most surprising thing about it was that I barely had the volume on half. Some headphones deliver a bass and a decent high but you usually have to Monster Beats By Dr Dre Studio Maserati Headphone crank the volume. This was not the case with the "beats".Since the sample music was at a bit rate of 1536 kbps, I figured I should try some of my own music, at a bit rate of 192 kbps. Again, I was floored. Not only did I hear the highs and lows, but I heard background noise in a live broadcast of a James Taylor song that I've heard hundreds of times, but never before heard the noises. I also felt like the sound was coming from behind me at tmes, which is no small feat for a pair of headphones.now, you can find cheap one form ce4sale Beats Solo HD High Definition On-ear Headphones with ControlTalk white