The character of analog and digital


Having just obtained some high quality analogue components, I want make some comments on the character of both analog and digital.
First of all it’s very difficult to speak of analog in general. Records vary widely (indeed wildly) in sonic character and quality. Digital recordings are much more uniform. When you play a digital file you more or less know what your getting. Of course some sound better than others, but there is a consistency of character. With records, it’s the Wild West. Variation in SQ and character are rampant.


Therefore it becomes very difficult to make generalizations on which categorically sounds better.

128x128rvpiano

digital imposes more of its character on the music.  

Amen to that. Well said.

I’m American and have never heard Australians described as "Americans in training." Americans generally have a very good opinion of Aussies and see them as different from us and certainly not trying to be like us.

@tomcy6  Aussies beat up on Kiwis and Canadians with underhanded insults as often as they get the opportunity, just in a generally playful manner.

 

We are saddened to see the Australian government getting a little power hungry and recently treating our Australian friends badly, though.

Aussies still get health care like Canadians, Kiwis and the PoHMs.

 

The “Americans in training” is basically like calling someone unaustralian.

Which in the “Delhi School of Linguistics” “How to talk Austrians epsiode 2 Grub” youtube video, is summed up at 00:26 in.

 

I've said it on these pages before that it is a beautiful thing that nobody (exception noted below) who is not Australian can ever come close to naturally speaking the homogenous Aussie accent with its many nuances.

Meryl Streep came very close in the movie Evil Angels.  

 

 

 

“However, to my ears and in spite of the excellence that both are capable of, digital imposes more of its character on the music. “

@frogman

Are these are the same ears that were possibly duped by MoFi in believing no digital mastering used in their vinyl pressings? Experts and hard core Vinyl fans  with golden ears, who claimed to always be able to hear the difference between a digital source and original tape were proven wrong. 

No. I was not one of those “golden ears”….whatever that may mean other than the sarcasm you imbue into the term. I was not there so can’t speak to any of it. I am, however, someone whose ears spend several hours each and every day listening to and as part of the sound of live acoustic instruments; and have for literally decades. I can tell you that to MY EARS digitally processed recordings, on balance, swing the overall sound of acoustic music further from the purity of the sound of live than do analog recordings.  The additive character is more obvious, if of a different type.  Take that for whatever it may be worth to you; if anything at all.