Hi Micro, hi Mike,
See this is interesting to me.
Because it seems pertinent to ask a second question. If indeed the observed phenomena is that "high power combined with ultimate digital and large scale music... has... something special and more analogue like", is it also an observed phenomena that "high power combined with ultimate digital and small scale music... has... something special and more analogue like"?
That is, does high power combined with ultimate digital do micro as well as macro? If not, is it then possible that smaller scale music, or indeed smaller, more ephemeral, more gossamer sounds occurring within the individual strands of the musical fabric (rather than the fabric itself) are actually more special and analogue like when conveyed by lower power, and/or analogue?
My experience is that the hi-fi system is not fractal, and therefore, not scaleable. What may confer an advantage in the macro, may not necessarily hold true apropos the micro, and vice versa. What may hold true for a Berlyllium driver of 1" may not necessarily hold true of that driver once scaled up to 15". What might hold true of a 1000W amplifier may not necessarily hold true when outputting 0.5W.
For me, it comes back to the complexity of the system: Subjugating a dynamic, high-order, interdependent complex system to a dynamic, high-order and interdependent complex signal will cause asymmetries, and those asymmetries will manifest themselves in behaviour that is not linear, and therefore, not scalable in both directions.
Perhaps again this is why both the ML3 and 458 can coexist in a single system, and bring results that confound and challenge either/or thinking.
Best,
853guy