Vinyl sounds better (shots fired)


I was bored today on a support job so I made a meme. This isn’t a hard or serious conviction of mine, but I am interested in getting reactions 😁

 

https://photos.app.goo.gl/SEHyirjJEaNXydfu9

medium_grade

I guess I'm lucky. When I'm listening to vinyl I can't imagine switching back to digital. And when I'm streaming favorite track after favorite track, I never switch back to vinyl. Whatever I'm engaged with at the moment is the superior format. 
 

@billpete 

I agree. I find that, even when it was recorded poorly, it also had fewer microphones and all the things they do in the engineering that reduces the "aliveness" of  music nowadays, that it sounds more like there are real people playing real instruments.

'There was an old album reviewed by The Absolute Sound. It was done in the 1920s and 30s and it's all a one microphone setup and these are people who play music. Some played 'fiddles,' some banjo, some guitar. What's striking is how real the music sounds. It doesn't fool me into believing it's 'live' but it sounds FAR less processed than your average CD.

These type of threads don’t appear on the "digital" sub-forum, but frequent the "analog" sub-forum.

[Analysis: Vinyl plastic dudes are a rather insecure bunch. They know deep down that their "cost no object" vinyl chain could easily sound like a lousy crap-pit if their playlists aren’t restricted to those 3 audiophile records on repeat...must hurt when that happens...mmhmm ]

Vinyl sounds better (shots fired)

Trolling posts like this personalising the issue by provocatively pitting one format against another are the epitome of insecurity. The mention of cost is telling.

The truth of it is that mastering is key and we need both formats to cover all the bases. Nevertheless, it’s perfectly ok to prefer the sound of one over the other.

Must hurt when a talented artist discovered through ’streaming’ only has a botched low quality pressing...( put the artist on ignore and sent the dude back to his 3 audiophile pressings on repeat)....

There is a solution though for the medium agnostic, an amalgamation of the essence of digital & analog (credit to mark Levinson). One could make the digital studio master sound like master tape.....but, ohhh, the ritual of cleaning, washing & warp removal...the sheer joy of the ritual and the medium loyalty oath that stood in the way...mmhm