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Meze Audio 105 Silva Review

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Verdict

Yes, a sizeable helping of this performance is available from Meze Audio headphones costing less than this. But as a combination of comfort, build quality, finish and, above all, sound quality, the 105 SILVA are very difficult indeed to argue with


  • Spacious, well-defined and dynamic sound

  • Comfortable (if they fit your head)

  • Beautifully built and finished


  • Cable transmits noise too readily

  • Not comfortable (if they don’t fit your head)

  • More affordable Meze Audio model offers much of what’s available here

Key Features

Introduction

In some ways, you know where you are with Meze Audio – the Romanian company’s track record is there for all to see.

But with the new 105 SILVA, something rather unMeze-like is happening – why does the company feel the need to compete with its own products? Let’s find out…

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Design

  • Steel and walnut elements
  • Self-adjusting ‘comfort’ strap
  • Will not suit small-headed listeners

The Meze Audio design vocabulary where its more affordable hard-wired, open-backed, over-ear headphones are concerned was established a while back – and the 105 SILVA adhere to it pretty closely.

So the frame consists of a large, circular band of bifurcated steel with a self-adjusting, judiciously padded ‘comfort’ strap as the contact point. The earpads are rather more generously padded, and covered in a soft, synthetic material that’s much more efficient at keeping your ears cool than the more common pleather alternative.

Meze Audio 105 Silva headband
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Those blessed with a smaller-than-average head will find the 105 SILVA rather too large, I think – and those with a head of suitable dimensions will find these headphones make it look larger than it is.

The outside of the earcups features a beautifully applied quantity of walnut around the edge of, and dividing the lower portion of, a plastic covering that features a pleasant ‘radial’ design. I tend to associate Meze Audio design with a ‘more is more’ ethos, and the relative understatement of the 105 SILVA makes them, to my eyes at least, more sophisticated and coherent than is the case with the brand’s other headphones.

Meze Audio 105 Silva travel caseMeze Audio 105 Silva travel case
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The standard of build and finish is very good, and the comfort quotient is high too (provided the headphones fit you in the first place). The 105 SILVA weigh 354g without their cable, but the design ensures they don’t feel like it. And as with other Meze Audio designs, every component of the 105 SILVA can be removed, renewed and/or replaced – but is good news where sustainability and longevity are concerned.

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Specification

  • 50mm dynamic drivers
  • 5Hz – 30kHz frequency response
  • Cable with 3.5mm / 6.3mm termination

The 105 SILVA are fitted with what seems very much like the same driver arrangement as their more affordable 105 AER siblings. Specifically, a pair of 50mm dynamic drivers with a cellulose composite dome, titanium-covered surround, titanium-coated semicrystalline polymer torus and copper/zinc stabiliser.

It’s an arrangement, says Meze Audio, that means the driver offers outstanding rigidity and strength – which in turn leads to vivid transient response, super-low distortion and an overall frequency response of 5Hz – 30kHz.

Meze Audio 105 Silva cablesMeze Audio 105 Silva cables
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The company wants to combine the genre-agnostic character of the 105 AER with the attention to detail of the pricier 109 PRO, while giving the 105 SILVA a slightly more midrange-centric character that can quite often come along with the judicious use of wood in the construction.  

Each earcup must be wired, and Meze Audio supplies the appropriate cable in the nice zip-fastening case the 105 SILVA travel in – there’s a 6.3mm adapter in there too. Hands up who thinks spending this sort of money should guarantee the supply of a balanced cable too? Yes, me too – but it’s a cost option.

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Meze Audio 105 Silva in carry caseMeze Audio 105 Silva in carry case
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Sound Quality

  • Spacious, organised presentation
  • Sound is detailed and dynamic in fairly equal measure
  • Lovely tonal balance

Your expensive headphones deserve to be attached to an expensive source of music playing some expensive content, right? So I spend the majority of my time with the 105 SILVA listening to hi-res digital audio files via a FiiO M15S digital audio player. And it turns out to be no kind of hardship whatsoever.

Or, at least, it’s not as long as I sit reasonably still. The cable Meze Audio supplies to connect the headphones to a source of music is quite willing to transmit noise – if it bumps against you, or you tap against it, you can be sure this noise will travel to the headphones. A nice, restful posture and no fidgeting would seem to be in order.

Meze Audio 105 Silva with FiiO DACMeze Audio 105 Silva with FiiO DAC
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

After this, there’s really nothing of any note to complain about. Whether playing a DSD64 file of Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall or a 24-bit/48kHz FLAC file of Cate Le Bon’s Mug Museum, the 105 SILVA prove insightful, entertaining company that can turn their hand, sonically speaking, to pretty much anything.

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Their tonal balance is quite carefully neutral, so it’s the flavour of the recording, rather than of the headphones, that comes through. Their frequency response, from the top of the range to the bottom, is even and consistent. And the soundstage they can create is wide-open, rigorously controlled and defined, and absolutely convincing.

They can open up a recording without making it sound remote or dislocated, and they pay as much attention to the absences and spaces on the stage as they do the occurrences – and they unify those occurrences into a convincing whole. The sense of togetherness and singularity the 105 SILVA can create is straightforwardly impressive.

Meze Audio 105 Silva detail close upMeze Audio 105 Silva detail close up
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

At every stage, they retain and reveal a great deal of detail, whether it’s the most minor, fleeting events in the mix or the dynamic fluctuations of harmonics in a voice or an instrument. The broader quiet/LOUD dynamics of volume and intensity are fully represented too – and the Meze Audio can do this without sounding in any way pressured or stressed.

The bottom of the frequency range is deep and textured, with plenty of substance and such straight-edged attack at the onset of bass sounds that rhythmic expression is direct and confident.

The opposite end attacks with similar determination – and the fact that treble sounds are similarly substantial prevents their significant shine and bite from tipping over into hardness or brightness. And in between, the 105 SILVA communicate the midrange with such positivity that the nuance of attitude and emotional state in a voice come across just as readily as the details of tone and technique.

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Should you buy it?

An insightful performance

You enjoy open, entertaining and insightful sound (and are prepared to sit reasonably still to get it)

Small heads need not apply

Anyone with a head even slightly smaller than average is likely to find the 105 SILVA altogether too much of a good thing

Final Thoughts

Given that its flagship hard-wired, open-backed, over-ear headphones (the Elite Tungsten) cost £3749, I’m not sure I understand why Meze Audio needs to slot a new pair of hard-wired, open-backed, over-ear headphones into a range that features a pair of hard-wired, open-backed, over-ear headphones that cost just £100 less than the 105 SILVA.

That’s not the same as saying I wish it hadn’t bothered, of course…

How We Test

I plugged the 105 SILVA into the 3.5mm socket of my FiiO M15S digital audio player in order to access some genuinely high-resolution content, and I also connected them to my Apple MacBook Pro (directly, using the headphone socket, and indirectly, using an iFi iDSD Diablo headphone amp/DAC).
 
I listened to plenty of music of lots of different genres, and of lots of different file types and sizes – and I did so, on and off, for the whole of a working week.

  • Tested for a week
  • Tested with real world use

FAQs

Is there a choice of finishes?

Not currently, no – black-and-walnut is your only choice just now

Can I have a balanced cable?

Of course – but you’ll need to put another £49 Meze Audio’s way…

Full Specs

  Meze Audio 105 Silva Review
UK RRP £469
USA RRP $499
EU RRP €499
CA RRP CA$699
AUD RRP AU$999
Manufacturer Meze Audio
IP rating No
Weight 354 G
ASIN B0FMS5K39L
Release Date 2025
Driver (s) 50mm dynamic
Connectivity 3.5mm
Frequency Range 5 30000 – Hz
Headphone Type Over-ear
Sensitivity 112 dB



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