Sony Ericsson W595 review: Music on the slide

Music on the slide

GSMArena team, 26 February 2009.

Walkman rocks

The Sony Ericsson W595 features the Walkman 3.0 player with all possible extras included. Accessed from the very smart Media menu, the player supports a vast collection of file formats and has several equalizer presets.

In addition, you also get Album art and the proprietary Sony Ericsson Shake control, which makes use of the phone's built-in accelerometer. The accelerometer is also put to use for automatic rotation of the display.

Naturally the music player also offers step-by-step filtering of the tracks you want to hear. The D-pad is in charge of music controls and also brings up a list of all the tracks in the current playlist or album.

The "Now playing" screen is simple but offers all the necessary controls and information. The D-pad offers playback control with their functions shown at the bottom of the screen. Above them is information on the current track such as album art, song duration, track name, performer and album.

Instead of album art, you can opt for visualizations but since they occupy the same small space as the album art, don't expect a great light show.

The animations on the home screen during playback make up for that though. They depend on the currently selected Flash Lite theme.

When you minimize the music player, the currently playing track, album and artist get displayed on the home screen with some nice graphics that perfectly blend with the screen if a Flash Lite theme is used.

Sony Ericsson W595 Sony Ericsson W595
Now playing screen • homescreen dances to the music

The equalizer offers only 5 presets (including "Normal") but you can customize them. Luckily, the Mega Bass preset is also onboard.

Sony Ericsson W595 Sony Ericsson W595 Sony Ericsson W595 Sony Ericsson W595
Mega Bass is among the equalizer presets

Another highly promoted Walkman feature is Shake control. It allows you to change the currently running track and even shuffle your entire playlist with a simple flick of the hand.

All you need to do to use Shake control is press the Walkman key and shake the phone forward (for going one track forward) or backward (for going a track back). Both moves in quick succession does the shuffle trick.

You can also turn the volume up and down by gently tilting the handset while you hold the Walkman key pressed.

The other music-related Walkman goodie, SensMe, offers a different approach to populating a playlist. Instead of choosing genre or performer, you are presented with a coordinate system. The vertical axis is the tempo - fast to slow, and the horizontal axis is the mood - sad to happy. Songs are shown as dots placed accordingly and you use a circle to select the one fitting your mood best. You can of course modify the radius of the circle and repeat this several times for a single playlist.

Sony Ericsson W595 Sony Ericsson W595
The SensMe interface

As cool as that sounds it does have one inconvenience - the songs must be tagged by the Sony Ericsson Media Manager software. To do this you use the manager to transfer the songs with the SensMe analysis option enabled. Tagging songs by hand is not possible so you need to choose between analyzing the songs with the Media Manager, which takes a while, or do without SensMe until you have more time to transfer the songs properly.

Audio quality

The audio quality of Sony Ericsson W595 is a mixed bag. Much like with the W902 our hopes that the distinct music focus of the handset and Sony's great experience in the area will deliver great results weren't exactly justified.

The main issue is the frequency response of the Sony Ericsson W595 which deviates from the perfect severely. It has extremely boosted bass and treble and reduced mid frequency sounds. The graph looks as if an equalizer has been applied only that it wasn't. We can hardly imagine how far off the frequency response will be if you actually apply one.

On the positive side all of the other reading are pretty good with the distortion levels simply great. The stereo crosstalk is also one of the best we have come upon recently. You can see for yourselves from the following results that save for the frequency response the Sony Ericsson W595 is quite a gifted musician.

TestFrequency responseNoise levelDynamic rangeTHDIMD + NoiseStereo crosstalk
Sony Ericsson W595+7.30, -2.18-86.485.00.00490.020-85.3
Sony Ericsson W902+7.31, -2.18-81.784.10.0039 0.020-85.4
Sony Ericsson W910+0.25, -1.25-81.582.70.00710.028-81.9
Sony Ericsson W980+0.31, -1.25-86.089.40.037 0.828-86.3
Apple iPod Touch 2G+0.04, -0.05-91.491.50.0027 0.012-90.0
Samsung M7500 Emporio Armani+0.86, -6.28-80.180.10.017 0.134-73.9
Nokia N81+0.39, -1.13-86.685.80.0410.040-69.9

Sony Ericsson W595 frequency response graph
Sony Ericsson W595 frequency response graph

You can find more info about the testing procedure and more results here.

Reader comments

The W760 is STILL cheaper than the W595 in 2018! On eBay (the UK version), the cheapest W760 (unlocked) is £14.99 whilst the cheapest W595 (unlocked) is £24.99! (As of March 10, 2018)

  • jack saravanaa
  • 24 Sep 2012
  • T6r

lokking very nice

  • n - dhay
  • 25 Feb 2012
  • 3JD

hi.im just asking bout for w595 co'z the camera not to open.