I've never understood the arguing about this topic, people like what they like! Why get upset over someones choice in format.
I own and use both formats, and I love them both!!!
This is my first "real" post here after the
Introduce Yourself thread.
I would just like to say that I agree 100% with Mark's post above. It's the same argument as tube vs solid state, single ended vs push-pull, Class A vs Class AB vs Class D, balanced vs unbalanced, single wire vs bi-wire, single amp vs bi-amp. The majority of those are pure opinion or matter of taste, though balanced vs unbalanced is really more of requirement for distant signal cable runs or an extremely RFI/EMI rich environment.
On that note, I have both analog and digital, and love both. As far as I'm concerned, they both have their place and I will always have both in my system(s). I have multiple copies of some albums in CD, digital download, and on vinyl. Depending on the mastering done for each format, one may sound better than the other. There are some albums that sound great and lively on digital but dead on vinyl. Others sound wide and dynamic on vinyl yet very flat and bland on digital.
There are times when I go through phases and just don't feel like screwing around with vinyl, having to brush the record and stylus, having to get up and flip the record, having to move at all really. And there's other times I just listen to the digital for pure convenience. I very rarely skip tracks through an album, digital or not. I just never have, unless it's a new-to-me album and a track or two absolutely sucks, then I'll skip it. Usually though, if a track comes on that I don't particularly care for, I pay a lot less attention to it and do more reading/writing during that track.
For me, a few of the things that keep vinyl and turntables in my life are the memories from my childhood, sitting there on the weekends or late at night during the week with my father or one of my brothers listening to records. Those to me are good memories. Not only that, even though this is an old technology, it still somewhat amazes me the amount of sound, detail and stereo separation that comes from such a tiny little line carved in plastic and a near microscopic point on a rock, all transferred up a single tiny hallow tube.
Anywho, just my two pennies.
