I just have a shit job.
Been there about 15-20 years ago...but I've had a pretty good job the last 15 years, and without it I could never have as much studio gear as I've acquired in the last 10 years.
Yeah...part of it is hobby, just having the gear and trying to build up the studio to the highest level I can afford...and the other part is the passion/interest in writing/recording music.
I doubt many could hear a quantitative difference (absent tape hiss) between a contemporary digital recording and a decent analog one.
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I'm curious as to the metric you use to quantify "better". If it's a subjective metric, then positioning your statement as some kind of fact, is utter folly.
Agreed...if you put up some recording, it's not necessarily easy to say if it was done in analog or digital...but for me, I can hear something "different" between the two when I am actually recording/mixing stuff.
I've done stuff via tape and direct to DAW. It's not necessarily a question of anything really bad coming from the digital (if there was I wouldn't use my DAW for edits)....but when I'm working the final mix and I bring the tracks individually out of the DAW and through my console and then mix to tape....I dunno, there is this added depth and imaging that happens, and a certain upper-end smoothness with a somewhat fatter low-end, whereas when I am just monitoring the ITB mix, it does sound very clean, but also somewhat clinical and flat/2-dimensional.
I’m sure the upper-end smoothness can be the tape just rolling off the highs…but you know…IT WORKS! Just like there is this fatness that happens in the low end.
Is that all subjective opinion...?...absolutely...but then, I really don't see how anyone can scientifically/analytically measure music quality.
Yeah..OK...you can to the THD and the jitter and all that...but I mean, in the end it either sounds pleasing or not, and for some reason the analog/tape path just sounds a little more pleasing even if the digital version is more scientifically "pure".
Go figure..... *shurg*
That said...I'm going to still use digital becuase the editing/comping/fixing capabilites are unmatched by tape...and I think if you run a hybrid mix...it's the best of both worlds.