60's recording had mostly to do with no (or very little) over dubs and the band all playing together in a room at the same time and "leakage" in the mics. In my humble opinion, digital or analog has little to do with it. It's more to do with that approach than gear.
Ditto this! This is my preferred method of recording for this very reason.
In the '60's the music was recorded as a single performance.
No overdubbing - get the whole band into the studio and record everything at once.
This is one reason why '60's music is still loved so much, it was a recording of a performance with everyone putting their whole heart and soul into it.
Modern multi-tracking and over-dubbing tends to destroy this and can suck the life out of the music if you are not very careful.
You need a "Wall of Sound".
Mike
No offence folks, but I find that a rather romantic and myopic view that is only
partly true. It does not represent "the whole 60s", only some of it. If anything, the 1960s was the decade where the groundwork was laid for techniques and practices, the fruition of which is what we see
now . Part of the 60s story where music is concerned is how the music and the recording of it developed and splintered in a thousand different directions........almost at once.
Don't get me wrong, I love music from '63~'69 and many of the artists have been a great influence and inspiration, but many if not most of the engineers, producers and artists of the time would've killed for the way things are now. Sadly. If you read about how studio craft developed, you may just find that that analog "60s sound" was far more to do with the limitations of the times and technology and that those in at the deep end constantly looked for progression, cleaner recordings, less hiss, more tracks, longer to record, more opportunity for sound manipulation. It may interest people to know that quite a few Beatle records
prior to 1965 were splices of two or more performances and from '65 onwards, so many songs that we lionize as being pure and authentic were edited to the max with all manner of studio trickery ~ many an artist felt guilty because in point of fact, their stuff wasn't any more authentic than now. It's just that now, nobody quibbles at multiple overdubs and records coming out that bear little relation to what was actually recorded.