- Thread Author
- #21
this past Tuesday evening i had 10 music loving visitors (2 wives included). they were there from before 6pm to midnight. it was a fun session.
we listened to digital, vinyl and tape.
each format had it's advantages. we used my digital to access music from my files, Tidal and Qobuz, mostly we played vinyl, and did a couple of tapes, one 1/4" 15ips and one 1/2" 15ips.
but there was no doubt where the consistent magic was found, the place the emotional connection ran the highest, and that was vinyl. it could grab you and you would hear way into it. i played some very large scale music at warp 9 and it all held 100% together.
and my digital does not suck. to be fair, no one mentioned that something was missing with my digital, even streaming. and we accessed some pretty off the rails digital tracks. i can't say what they were thinking.
music was the big deal that night. and we all enjoyed it. IMHO the session would have been less memorable without vinyl.
Mike, like you, having all three sources gives us a different perspective, each having wonderful qualities. For me, Vinyl has such presence. When I’m listening to vinyl (originally recorded to tape and not the recorded to digital files and then cut to vinyl), the “presence” vinyl has allows me to be part of the performance. Close your eyes and you suspend belief. You are part of the performance. You’re there. When I listen to a modest digital setup (which is all I have at home), I feel there is no doubt I’m listening to a recording of a performance. It lacks that magical presence. I suspect that’s part of what your guests heard as well.
But I also love digital for the convenience, finding new music, and the trouble free sound.
Frankly, I would encourage everyone to have both. There’s no right or wrong. Both are really terrific in their own right.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk