Sennheiser Orpheus HE-90
Sennheiser’s legendary electrostatic — the HE-90 Orpheus, long the reference for “the best.” A rare glimpse from the Archive.
Our take
The HE-90 is the electrostatic legend: effortless, delicate, and airy in a way dynamics struggle to match. It runs off its own HEV90 tube energizer, not a normal headphone amp. This curve is a genuine piece of history from the Archive — see the caveat below on the low end.
Measured by Jamey Warren on a Head Acoustics HMS II.3 artificial head — raw response, left/right averaged, normalized to 0 dB at 1 kHz. From the Sonic Temple Archive(2008–2014, one unit per model). Honest limits: seating variance runs ±0.4 dB in the mids to ±3.9 dB above 12 kHz, and open headphones read bass-light on this fixture — don’t read fine treble detail as settled. How we measure →
On this measurement: The Orpheus is an electrostatic driven by its own HEV90 energizer, and the Archive’s low-frequency reading here is less certain than usual — treat the bass shelf as approximate. It is shown because it is a rare, real measurement; a cleaner re-measure is on the wishlist.
Common questions
Straight answers — the same ones our measurements support.
What amp does the Sennheiser Orpheus HE-90 need?
Its own HEV90 tube energizer — electrostatics cannot run from a normal headphone amp. The headphone and energizer are a matched pair.
Is the HE-90 the best headphone ever made?
It is on every shortlist for a reason — effortless, refined, airy. “Best” is a preference, but few have heard it and forgotten it.
If you like the Orpheus HE-90
Close on the graph, or a deliberate step in one direction.