Does anyone suffer from Digitalitis when the music is recorded digitally ie, Digital to Analogue ?
Is Vinylitis a thing too? Some sensitive to clicks and pops.?
I guess I have to go to the audio lost and found store. What pops and clicks? We literally don't have them, unless it is a very very old record. The guy running our local record shop and playing his $1200 TT while we shop doesn’t have them either. Lots of us don’t have them. Try Analogmagic for your setup. It’s all in the set up and having clean no static vinyl.
If digital was the cat‘s meow then why does everyone try to make their digital sound more analogue?
The human ear is analogue. It’s simply the way people hear. Even the human voice is an example of analogue signal.
The difference between analogue and digital waves is that analog waves are smooth and continuous and digital waves are stepping, square and. When something intervenes with the original reverberations of a collection of notes as the brain seems to with digital, a part of the music is lost. Digital waves put a separation between the live performer and the listener, as if losing a ‘connection’ to the underlying and true ‘feel’ of the performance. Analog on the other hand represents a physical impression of the original live performance, which offers a direct link between the performer ‘at that very moment’ and the recording. https://www.blueaura.co.uk/human-ear-prefer-analog-digital-sound/
People naturally tire of hearing Digitalitis math (1s & 0s).
There’s just something unnatural with digital sound. It’s come a long way - and ours sounds excellent - but it’s simply not vinyl. Digital and vinyl are simply two different sounds, two different approaches to listening to music. They can both be excellent. For us one is king (digital), and the other (vinyl) is the King of kings.
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