Double blind testing is not the answer for everything. We are talking about music, an art form. When did "scientific" testing replace good taste and artistic decision-making?
However, scientifically speaking: if you were to take a song and mix it analog and then take the same song and mix is ITB, the resulting mixes would *not* cancel themselves out if you lined them up. Not even close. So there will be substantial differences on an audio data level.
There are times to be scientific and times not to be scientific, in my opinion. This is part of the current disease in my opinion: it's gotten too scientific, or at least too scientific in wrong areas.
What happened to "feel" and "heart"? My ears and my heart tell me that for the music I do, mixing analog is the way to go. I've done both, and I felt a constant dissatisfaction with the results when I was doing all digital mixes. The music just didn't feel right, it didn't impact me the same way, if felt wrong.
Also, the *process* of mixing is much more to my liking using analog mixers and hardware outboard. It just feels better to me to do it this way. It's not necessarily easier, because I need to do extra work notating the mixes on recall sheets and take better notes, etc. But the process feels more natural to me and the "flow" of making music is a lot better. That's for me. For someone else, it might be different.
So I personally don't need double blind tests to tell me what's better. There is *so much more* involved than just comparing a couple of audio files. That's a useful technique for determining some things, but it's not a panacea. For me, both the work flow and the final results are better using my DAW as a multitrack and editor and mixing analog.
It's fun debating you, chessrock!
