Hi EVM,
Just finished the lawns.
The tag, engineers vs artists is not one I would normally use about myself as I feel I'm equally both. I could never make up my mind which one was more "dominant" in my personality.
I remember playing guitar, bass and singing harmonies for a recording session in one of our town's top studios in the 80's. (studio B actually, we couldnt afford A) But though my role there was only as a muso, the engineer in me couldnt help be in awe of the gear in the studio and wanting to learn more about it. And I did learn more.
I have always had the view that the technology should be the servant of the art, not the other way around. In my now 20 years as a maintenance technician for analog recording gear in my town, I think that is my reputation, even though some tech heads interpret that as meaning I am "weak" on the technical side.
With artistic clients I dont use technical language if at all I can avoid it.. But it often makes me seem hesitant in speaking with them as I am often struggling to put technical concepts into everyday language, when they ask me a question. In that context, people can think I'm slow! But I'm being "slow" for them!
This can be a source of misunderstanding. Just because I am good at appreciating and playing music, must I therefore be a weaker engineer? Being good at the equipment side must mean I must be a muso with tin ears and no artistic "feel"? Who made that assumption and why?
I seem to have developed two distinct sets of friends, one the artist types, who often are weak on the engineering side, but that's fine. When together, we talk art as well as eveything else people normally talk about.
The other the engineering types, who interestingly often seem poor artistically. If they learned to play a musical instrument in their childhood, they often did not keep it up. Of one such man, his wife once said to me one day, "yeah, he used to hit all the right notes, but it sounded like he was doing a purely technical exercise. There was no heart or soul in it."
Interestingly too, he was one of many who when CD's came in, got rid of every analog tape and vinyl he had. A connection there perhaps? But I know another who did the exact opposite. Sold all his CD collection, convinced it was irredeemably distorted. He refused to listen to it. Went 100% back to analog recordings. I can only think both were not artistically that interested or gifted. Perhaps both had the same basic issue. For them , the medium WAS the message.
As you've cited Tom Scholz, I can understand this in the context of say an analog machine whose Dolby recording card critical timing caps are out of whack, but just happily so are the Dolby playback card caps out in exactly the same way. The result, the machine plays back its own recordings faithfully, with proper tracking even though they wont replay well on a properly calibrated machine with the correct cap values. (there will be some compromise of s/n but it may not be huge and may go unnoticed)
But I think that's a rare case. More a serendipity. To your point, once that machine was recapped it would be no different re its faithfulness. It would no longer play faithfully or enjoyably the tapes it once recorded, but now, it will still make faithful recordings and as a bonus, they can be played back on other calibrated machines anywhere in the world.
For me, a recorder that faithfully replays the electrical signal coming into it, is the artists' friend and servant. The artist and engineer can use all manner of other devices to manipulate and modify what they want to record and the recorder wont give a fig. It just goes on doing its job.
I cant remember a single case of a muso bringing a recorder to me where he was unhappy with the fact it was properly calibrated. His unhappiness could always be traced to the fact it was not performing to its design specs. And that to me just seemed natural.
OK, you and other people hear the difference between analog and digital recordings. Ultimately I cannot make a comment on that without also listening to what you are listening to, but for me, the technology is the servant of the music and like A Reel Person I have no problem with the sound quality of my digital setup, and it meshes beautifully with my analog gear. I could not be happier with it.
Does that mean I have low standards? You are free to draw that conclusion if you like.
Cheers, Tim.