Isn't it odd though that while we MEs preach about not recording hot, keeping peaks below 0 dBFS, and not clipping, we make CDs that are hot, peak as close to 0dBFS as possible, and clip converters for certain types of music?
I think it's because we (try to) put "raw quality" over "insane volume" in most cases.
No doubt though - I've been there - Wanting a "hot" recording (I was a touring musician for some time). But it didn't take long to figure out how most preamps changed personalities above nominal levels. And it was also apparent how much better they sounded considerably *below* those levels. I've never had a (decent) preamp complain about NOT being pushed too hard.
In any case, the recordings that come out the loudest are the cleanest. The recordings that come out the cleanest are the ones with the least distortion. The ones with the least distortion were almost undoubtedly tracked with reasonably conservative levels (not unlike the levels used to hit tape, but without the additional noise of the tape). The loudest records I've ever made probably didn't have any one individual track ever hit above -12dBFS at any time. And that's hardly conservative...
It doesn't take a rocket surgeon to just record a signal through a preamp that's "hot but not clipping" and analyze it... With simple sine waves, the distortion is readily audible *and* VISIBLE in a spectrum analyzer the hotter the signal gets. Some preamps (obviously) distort much less than others. Some distort well BEFORE reaching line level. And that's just a simple sine wave... Something much more complex (like a guitar or a human voice) is another story.
But to the (Tom's) point -- I think that maybe because we deal with gear with "obscene" amounts of available headroom that we just appreciate it more. And working from different recordings made with different amounts of headroom, it's very easy for us to figure out which ones had or didn't have any headroom in the first place. And we see the results of it readily -- We take recordings that were made with generous amounts of headroom at every stage and whack the hell out of them
because those are the recordings that can handle that abuse. Where we struggle for hours trying to squeeze an extra dB or two out of recordings that were "pushed" from step one.
A lot of sounds (tracks, mixes, masters, etc.) can be "robbed" of headroom without much damage -- ONE TIME. And if that one time is the last time anything is ever done to it, there you go.
If I had a nickel for every time I got one of those "My recordings don't sound like 'pro' recordings" things... "Well, I track as hot as I can without clipping..." (that's almost always there). I just tell them to record another tune but pretend that -10dBFS is as loud as anything can possibly get at the tracking stage. Do everything else the same. Almost every single time, I get some sort of "OH MY GOD!!!" letter a week later. The only thing they changed were the recording levels and now their mixes sound "open" and focused, airy and "crankable" -- and easily brought up to "commercially acceptable" levels.
Not that "commercially acceptable levels" should be the goal... But in some cases, it's an acceptable side-effect.