By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
World of SoftwareWorld of SoftwareWorld of Software
  • News
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gaming
  • Videos
  • More
    • Gadget
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
Search
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
Reading: Meze Audio Strada
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
World of SoftwareWorld of Software
Font ResizerAa
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gadget
  • Gaming
  • Videos
Search
  • News
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gaming
  • Videos
  • More
    • Gadget
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
World of Software > Gadget > Meze Audio Strada
Gadget

Meze Audio Strada

News Room
Last updated: 2026/03/31 at 9:46 AM
News Room Published 31 March 2026
Share
Meze Audio Strada
SHARE

Verdict

As long as a refined and slightly self-consciously grown up rendition of your tunes is what you’re after, and provided they actually fit you in the first place, the Meze Audio Strada are a brilliantly open, revealing and sophisticated listen

  • Controlled, informative and engaging sound

  • Open and spacious presentation by closed-back standards

  • Very comfortable (if they fit)

  • Can fractionally overplay the sonic refinement card

  • Cable is slightly noisy

  • Another Meze Audio product that mocks the smaller-headed

Key Features

Introduction

How do you take a proven and successful closed-back over-ear headphone design like the Meze Audio Liric and reduce the asking price more than 50 percent?

With its new Strada closed-back over-ear design, Meze Audio thinks it has the answer…

Advertisement

Design

  • Magnesium frame
  • Macassar hardwood earcups
  • magnetically attached earpads

If you’re familiar with the look of Meze Audio’s Liric II over-ear headphones, there’s really only the colour of the magnesium frame that’s going to set the design of the Strada apart. If you’re not, though, well – it’s like this…

These are relatively wide, fairly light (330g without cable) headphones, and they feature magnetically attached earpads that are a) made from memory foam with a PU leather cover, and b) so generously padded that they contribute to that width more than somewhat.

Meze Audio Strada linkage
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The frame is made from magnesium, and the elaborately shaped yoke arrangement is quite strongly at odds with not-even-remotely elaborate adjustment rod mechanism that modifies the position of the headband.

The headband itself is fairly wide and thin. It’s covered with more PU leather on the outside, while on the inside it’s covered in fabric and much more judiciously padded than the earpads – the four-stage contact points are designed to help airflow and thus prevent your head heating up too readily.

Advertisement

Meze Audio Strada accessoriesMeze Audio Strada accessories
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The outside of each earcup is made from a quantity of good-looking and tactile Macassar ebony hardwood. And the frame surrounding each of these quantities of Macassar features a 3.5mm cable connection – Meze Audio supplies two 1.8m lengths of braided Kevlar OFC cable in the fairly large EVA case the STRADA travel in. One is terminated with an unbalanced 3.5mm jack, the other with a balanced 4.4mm alternative.  

The frame of the STRADA is hand-painted, and available in just one finish: a deep, mildly metallic tone that anyone with an interest in motor racing from back in the day is going to recognise immediately as a very close relative of British Racing Green.

Meze Audio Strada carry caseMeze Audio Strada carry case
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Specification

  • 50mm dynamic drivers
  • 5Hz – 30kHz frequency response
  • 111dB sensitivity

Fundamentally, all of the stuff I’ve talked about in the design section constitutes the way Meze Audio has decided to suspend a driver over each of the listener’s ears. And it’s the driver technology deployed in the Strada that explains just how they can be so much more affordable than their very similar-looking Liric II siblings.

Advertisement

Unlike the super-elaborate planar magnetic driver technology fitted to the Liric II, the Strada use the much more common dynamic driver technology. Although this is not the same as saying there’s nothing interesting, or complex, about what’s going on here.

Meze Audio Strada earpadMeze Audio Strada earpad
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Each STRADA earcup features a 50mm dynamic driver that’s based closely on the driver found in the company’s (very similarly priced) 109 PRO open-back over-ear model. For its use in a closed-back design, though, Meze Audio has naturally given it quite a going-over…

The W-shaped dome is made of cellulose composite reinforced with carbon-fibre – which means it’s both durable and lightweight, and should be able to reduce many of the resonances that can lead to distortion.

The torus that surrounds the dome is of beryllium-coated semicrystalline polymer – the beryllium coating increases both the durability and the stiffness of the driver without weighing it down and compromising transient response. Carefully positioned grooves on the torus also contribute to the intended effect.

Meze Audio Strada drive unitsMeze Audio Strada drive units
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Finally, a copper-zinc alloy stabiliser is positioned around the membrane to absorb vibration and further reduce distortion.

This arrangement, says Meze Audio, delivers a frequency response of 5Hz – 30kHz, which is deeply impressive if anything like accurate. Impedance of 4ohms is nothing to worry about, but a sensitivity rating of 111dB (SPL/mW @ 1kHz) means a fairly pokey DAC or digital audio player is probably in order if you’re going to hear the STRADA at their optimum.

Advertisement

Sound Quality

  • Presentation is commendably open fopr a closed-back design
  • Articulate, detailed and engaging sound
  • Prioritise refinement at all costs

The first thing it’s important to note about the Meze Audio Strada, even before you have begun listening to them, is that it’s fairly important to sit still. Bumping or knocking the connecting cable will cause noise to be transmitted – that’s the case, to a lesser or greater extent, with most headphones, but it’s more pronounced here than is the norm.

But once you’re sitting comfortably and not fidgeting, there’s an awful lot to enjoy about the way these headphones sound. No matter if you’re listening to a big-standard Spotify stream of Highwayman by The New Eves or a full-fat 24-bit/48kHz FLAC file of Ora Cogan’s Cowgirl, these are eloquent and informative headphones, and are more than capable of revealing and contextualising even the finest details in order to let you know you’re getting the complete sonic picture.

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

Where soundstaging is concerned, they’re considerably more open, more spacious and more expansive than is the closed-back norm. They can do intimate and direct well, of course – but when it comes to opening up a recording and putting meaningful space between every element of it, the Strada are more reminiscent of open-backed alternatives.

This ability to give elbow-room to each participant doesn’t come at the expense of togetherness or singularity, either – recordings are presented as a unified whole.

When it comes to frequency response and  tonality, the Meze Audio are quite carefully neutral; and not about to stick their oar in too obviously. Detail levels are high at every stage, and though they can dig a long way down and hit respectably hard while they’re at it, the Strada give bass sounds plenty of texture and variation – and they control the attack of low-end information so well that rhythmic expression is never less than naturalistic.

Advertisement

Meze Audio Strada headbandMeze Audio Strada headband
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The opposite end of the frequency range is similarly detailed, and there’s sufficient substance to balance out the polite amount of bite and shine the headphones summon when describing treble sounds. In between, the midrange communicates in the most positive way, and voices are as expressive of attitude as they are of tone or timbre. The frequency range is described even-handedly, with no suggestion of understatement or over-emphasis at any stage.

There’s a fair amount of dynamic headroom available for when a recording shifts through the gears, and the distance the Strada can put between hushed and heartfelt and furiously angry is quite considerable. In combination with the attention they pay to the dynamic of harmonic variation and to transient response, it makes for a vivid and convincing sound.

Meze Audio Strada portable music playerMeze Audio Strada portable music player
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

It’s really only when they’re asked to deal with content that’s in some way rough around the edges, or that prioritises posture and attack over good taste, that the Meze Audio are found even slightly wanting.

Fundamentally, they’re a grown-up and quite refined listen – and this position works well almost all of the time. But when asked to play music that ignores refinement and instead prefers snottiness, the Meze Audio’s desire to bring order to bear where none is supposed to exist results in something of a stand-off.            

Advertisement

Should you buy it?

You want more than a hint of the typically spacious open-backed sound from a closed-back design

Small heads need not apply

You’re blessed with a head that’s smaller than average

Final Thoughts

I’ve been very well-disposed to pretty much every Meze Audio product I’ve come into contact with – and I’ve listened to plenty.
 
But despite all of the very many things that I find admirable about the Strada, I cannot help but wonder why the company seems to think that people with smaller heads don’t have the money or the inclination to get into ownership of high-achieving headphones.
 
On a good day I’m six feet tall, and the size of my head is reasonably proportionate – but these headphones must be adjusted to their smallest fitting if they’re going to work for me. It’s a strange state of affairs…

How We Test

I connected the STRADA directly to an iBasso DX340 digital audio player using their 4.4mm-terminated cable. I used the same cable to connect to an iFi iDSD Diablo 2 headphone amp/DAC which was, in turn, connected to an Apple MacBook Pro.
 
I also connected them to an Eversolo DAC-Z10 pre-amp/DAC using a 6.3mm adapter on the 3.5mm cable – this gave access to a system including a Rega Apollo CD player, an Arcam ST25 network streamer and a Technics SL-1300G turntable.

  • Tested for several days
  • Tested with real world use

FAQs

Is there a choice of finishes?

No, the wood-and-dark-green you see in the pictures is the only finish available

Can I upgrade the cables?

Yes – it uses a standard 3.5mm connection at each earcup. An upgrade on the cable Meze Audio supplies won’t come cheap, though…

Full Specs

  Meze Audio Strada Review
UK RRP £799
USA RRP $799
EU RRP €799
CA RRP CA$1199
AUD RRP AU$1499
Manufacturer Meze Audio
IP rating No
Weight 330 G
Release Date 2026
Driver (s) 50mm dynamic
Connectivity 3.5mm single-ended, 4.4mm Pentacon
Colours Green
Frequency Range 5 30000 – Hz
Headphone Type Over-ear

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article T-Mobile is giving away the Apple iPhone 17 for free — last chance to claim yours T-Mobile is giving away the Apple iPhone 17 for free — last chance to claim yours
Next Article Intel Panther Lake & Linux AI/LLM Debates Dominated Q1 For Linux Users Intel Panther Lake & Linux AI/LLM Debates Dominated Q1 For Linux Users
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

248.1k Like
69.1k Follow
134k Pin
54.3k Follow

Latest News

How to Improve Your Debounce and Get It to Stop Lying to You | HackerNoon
How to Improve Your Debounce and Get It to Stop Lying to You | HackerNoon
Computing
T-Mobile closes popular  fee loophole when purchasing through Apple
T-Mobile closes popular $35 fee loophole when purchasing through Apple
News
Silver Fox Expands Asia Cyber Campaign with AtlasCross RAT and Fake Domains
Silver Fox Expands Asia Cyber Campaign with AtlasCross RAT and Fake Domains
Computing
Bluesky announces AI app, Attie, for custom feeds
Bluesky announces AI app, Attie, for custom feeds
Software

You Might also Like

I Tested Garmin Watches for a Decade While Hiking, Biking, and Climbing. Here’s What You Should Buy
Gadget

I Tested Garmin Watches for a Decade While Hiking, Biking, and Climbing. Here’s What You Should Buy

3 Min Read
Instagram Plus will make your stories last longer for a monthly fee
Gadget

Instagram Plus will make your stories last longer for a monthly fee

3 Min Read
Bitcoin Price Hits Extreme Fear as Index Drops to 11 While Pepeto Presale Fills
Gadget

Bitcoin Price Hits Extreme Fear as Index Drops to 11 While Pepeto Presale Fills

7 Min Read
Xbox’s next big games showcase kicks off the summer
Gadget

Xbox’s next big games showcase kicks off the summer

2 Min Read
//

World of Software is your one-stop website for the latest tech news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Quick Link

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Topics

  • Computing
  • Software
  • Press Release
  • Trending

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

World of SoftwareWorld of Software
Follow US
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?