The problem with analog reproduction is, it is a chain of components which have to be linked together with one goal: No loss of detail.
It is mechanical and there is no standard made for it, every manufacturer can and will do whatever he wants. Just a simple example, you listen with Phonostage A and a setting of 200Ω, later you switch to another one with the same 200Ω and you will get a total different result.
In the early years when the records were made, they did it in a way, were they tried their best (it stopped fast when they discovered Dynagroove or stopped the dynamic range to protect the cutter heads..), but the vinyl still has so many reserves that it can amaze us even 60 years later with the amount of stored information. Analog was always underrated and the world was waiting for a superior product. CD.
Digital started with merits, which it never had. The absence of tics and pops linked with a remote was enough for the listener to rate it as superior. In a way it is, it is simple.
The Laser reads the information and the output voltage is strong enough for even the worst designs (amplification for a 0.25mV without sounding dead, lifeless and flat is still a task today and most fail). Since I met Digital in the 90s, it was always a sonic revolution from one DAC Generation to the next. Nothing changed, when I read the latest news from EMM (for example) about their latest unit I think, digital reproduction in general is minimum 1458x better than live now (digital reproduction in general now).
The Vinyl pressing in the older days were more or less filled with a lot of information which will show us even today new details, digital mastering is more or less a product of cost reduction, sound quality was always a problem, it always reduced the output (reclocking of the laser burners and so on) of discs in the factory. It is entertainment for the masses.
Based on this chain and these endless problems with degrading the signal it is no problem to listen to analog combinations which arent anything special, expensive or not, brain counts and this was and is always a problem (the what-is-responsible-for-what). There are a lot of overpriced units out there because analog can be done cheap and the profit can be done in a way to feed all who are in that business. Digital is a bit different, you need the latest processors and they always had and have their price. But the software cant go on with it. We have 0 & 1, thats it.
It is like a discussion between a blind and a deaf man about the right direction.
The discussion will never end.