"...crossing the Rubicon" re digital.
I guess since I'm guilty of a bit of hyperbole, I need to justify myself a bit.
For me, digital has had certain attributes from the start that are superior to analog, like ability to extend deeper in the bass etc etc. Ie all those things that even vinyl diehards can't deny are clearly winners in digital.
Yet the analog fans like me have always confidently maintained factors like midband density, timbral accuracy, and lower mids/upper bass texture are slam dunk wins for vinyl.
And for me, this has always held, so that despite getting on w digital more and more, esp w my current choice of cdp, and really taking to Blue58's SGM, I still felt this tactile reality of mids magic in vinyl still handily eluded even the best digital.
So for me in the last 6 months of listening to digital, after a no holds barred effort in reducing mains noise and hash w isolated pwr feed to audio room, balanced power, dedicated lines etc, my digital for the first time, and not in subtle ways, and in ways I've never heard digital even get close in, is dramatically "in the room" re this textural and tonal magic in the mids and upper bass, that my mind drifts into a real sense of ease I've only ever gotten while listening to vinyl.
Suddenly digital is doing the analog "cognitive ease" thing so much more realistically.
This is NOT a case of more detail, or other things that you get from a simply upgraded digital player, but a tonal realism and textural heft that I've ONLY ever heard from analog, and esp the best analog.
"...crossing the Rubicon" I'd say sums up my feelings about right.
However, "crossing" is the operative phrase, not "crossed".
With vinyl still comfortably ahead on palpability and jump factor, I think mainly due to music on vinyl mastered v differently than in digital especially re lack of cliff edge mastering and better timbral accuracy (confirmed by my continued diet of live unamplified), I'm pretty confident digital will always lack this last area of true realism, and vinyl will just always transcend the live illusion at home more authentically.
But in everything else, digital has shot up exponentially in my room as I've got to grips w noise and hash.
I guess since I'm guilty of a bit of hyperbole, I need to justify myself a bit.
For me, digital has had certain attributes from the start that are superior to analog, like ability to extend deeper in the bass etc etc. Ie all those things that even vinyl diehards can't deny are clearly winners in digital.
Yet the analog fans like me have always confidently maintained factors like midband density, timbral accuracy, and lower mids/upper bass texture are slam dunk wins for vinyl.
And for me, this has always held, so that despite getting on w digital more and more, esp w my current choice of cdp, and really taking to Blue58's SGM, I still felt this tactile reality of mids magic in vinyl still handily eluded even the best digital.
So for me in the last 6 months of listening to digital, after a no holds barred effort in reducing mains noise and hash w isolated pwr feed to audio room, balanced power, dedicated lines etc, my digital for the first time, and not in subtle ways, and in ways I've never heard digital even get close in, is dramatically "in the room" re this textural and tonal magic in the mids and upper bass, that my mind drifts into a real sense of ease I've only ever gotten while listening to vinyl.
Suddenly digital is doing the analog "cognitive ease" thing so much more realistically.
This is NOT a case of more detail, or other things that you get from a simply upgraded digital player, but a tonal realism and textural heft that I've ONLY ever heard from analog, and esp the best analog.
"...crossing the Rubicon" I'd say sums up my feelings about right.
However, "crossing" is the operative phrase, not "crossed".
With vinyl still comfortably ahead on palpability and jump factor, I think mainly due to music on vinyl mastered v differently than in digital especially re lack of cliff edge mastering and better timbral accuracy (confirmed by my continued diet of live unamplified), I'm pretty confident digital will always lack this last area of true realism, and vinyl will just always transcend the live illusion at home more authentically.
But in everything else, digital has shot up exponentially in my room as I've got to grips w noise and hash.
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