Listening to digital and analog


Assuming there is a difference in the nature of analog sound compared to digital sound (as I do,) there are different ways of listening to each.  To me, analog is more textured and real sounding, (some, or many  may not agree)  but does that mean it’s not possible to enjoy digital sound?  On the contrary, I must adapt a different way of listening that doesn’t actively compare the two.  If one keeps the analog ideal always in mind, it makes it difficult to appreciate digital music. Therefore I have to block that ideal from my mind and listen to digital on its own terms. It must generate its own reality.  Only then, can I sit back and enjoy.
128x128rvpiano
People don't want to hear this, but good digital takes an entirely different skill set. Not unlike analog, you cannot just spend your way to good sound.  There are things you need to understand to do it well, but the logic is different from analog, and may even seem counter-intuitive to an analog lover.

I suspect that many people that post the superiority of analog, really have not been able to set up a digital system that is "analogous to analog" if you get my meaning.  

I'm not saying digital is superior either. It's certainly more convenient.  Both are good.  I get outstanding sound from various digital gear.  
Just digital for the garage ? Guess I will put the Nakamichi and B and O on the auction block….


I think it was John Atkinson who had a master tape (analog) transferred to a digital master, and also mastered onto a vinyl record! In his comparison of the three he said, the master tape and the digital copy sounded exactly the same, while the record made his knees go weak! I think many equate records with analog (which it is), but records add a special something as though the music is recreated a second time at the stylus tip with an intimacy, an “engagement “ with the original musical event that digital subjectivity is lacking!
A few years ago, I spent 3 days in rapt attention listening to a mid 6 figure computer sourced (using Master Class soft wear) helping with a room at THE Show in Las Vegas (Daniel Hertz).
It was about the most amazing SQ I have ever experienced.
However, it was an intellectual not a visceral one.
With my analog system, I “get weak in the knees”.
Listening to vinyl grabs my emotions and puts me into a meditative space. Sure, great digital can be a great experience. But I take analog every time.
Sounds to me that you have to work awful hard to get digital to sound more analog, when all you have to do is throw on a record...

right -- like good analog isn’t a lot work to get right and keep right ... 🙄

like anything, something unfamiliar takes time to understand and master... for those willing to do so...(instead of just spewing negativity on forums, which is sooo easy...)

ask someone younger what it takes to get a new analog front end spec’d and dialed into a good system ...  now, that can be truly daunting for the uninitiated...