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Yeah, yeah yeah... it's all just silly blah. Waste of time. Yada yada...
maybe..
not for me , so
I like humor, I like a lil of word-fight and all that, but in my case, actually the 'issue' digital vs analog as main recording method has become very serious and practical matter.
I also think that the
issue is VERY relevent to specificly 'home recording', to highlight here, that home-based studio recording in most cases (?) is to record your own music, i.e. the producer also is a composer, songwriter, player, singer - all at the same time.
Regardless of how much brains, tallent, creative energy and simply ability to work productively Xhours/per day one person can be - there's a limit there. So do you like it or not, you as musician/producer have to find your focus,
Here's what I am aiming here at.
To try to sum it up as shortly as I can. Being a pretty long time digital-recording based self-producer I have noticed something for myself. While chasing the overall quality of the final product (master mix) and working with various digital recording tools (standalone HD recorders plus computer-based mutitrack recording plus all the variety of production software) - I always (every step of the way) have to 'look over the shoulder' ... because in digital domain, what you really deal with is not 'real thing' - but rather
information about 'real thing' - you deal with
data.
You may say, well, so what? at the end it does not matter.
Maybe so. You can sure get the result that pleases you, - If you are lucky. Or if you really do dig deep into every step on the way - meaning you really do know what's happening to the 'data' while you
click this and click that.
You can completely ignore all this and just use your ear as judge. That's cool, but then you are playing game with your recording material - and you don't know where and when you cheat yourself (during complex playing-recording-producing process it is very easy to miss many details, but they will all sum-up at the end into one "mysterious" ugly '
snow ball', and if you do pay attention, then you will notice it and will ask yourself: what the hell is wrong with this picture????). And as we all know, the 'software developer' is not going to tell you what's going on. You get a nice set of buttons, knobs and sliders and even needle-VU-metters on your screen - just to make you feel right and comfy'

, you are not going to find in 'DAW user manual' that the 'VU metters on your screen is actully a special 'visual' and pretty sophisticated program which is designed to look as you as 'customer' wish it to look like and act like.... arhhhhhhhhhh
Or you can really study digital recording and processing technology and dig deep into every step on the way ... which is right thing to do, but isn't easy (btw, the more you actually know about it - less you like it... that's just my experience

). But again, I repete again - the digital 'tools' are not completely open to you - you can't really know 100% what's going on.
OK. So, say, you do feel fine technical-knowledge-wise in digital domain and feel (or 'know for sure') that you do everything right. That's pretty good, but you still have to deal with all the 'little and big pimps' all the way through.
And then the time comes to actually playing your nasty guitar or drums or trumpet or sing or you name it - ...here Ya go.
So how does it go? What comes in - comes out? Right? - Nop. Not so. Or maybe too much so... depends on how you look at it. Either way you start doing this and theat, treating this, treating that etc etc... working it out, another words, trying to get again something which could be achieved
easier, better way.
If you know well digital recording technology - then you know as well, that it DOES NOT work as "click and play". It is only being sold to you that way

.
Now, you see, I know I am going to strike some nerve here, but I am going to say this: with analog recording it is as simple as "push play/rec" and play.
And as result what you get? - you get the 'analog recording' which you 'would wish' and burn your brains out trying to get with 'other way of recording'
I am not going to go through analog recording 'issues'. I just say: "all analog recording issues are in your hands", cos they are damn
analog.
No, I will not give up my computer and HD recorders. I'm not mad, you know

... but it will serve me as supplement, not the core.
So, well, to me it is a big deal. Analog recording frees allots of mind and energy for me, so I can spend more of it on actually playing/performing.
So at the end - it IS pretty serious discussion
/respects,
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p.s.
I was just going through some older magazines... interesting reads all over the place, stuff that came out during 'rising star of DAW and MDM'... heh heh
Here a quote from article, titled: "Recording Drums The MDM Way". This is from RECORDING magazine april 1998.
The article actually ok overall, but the 'pre-attitude' of the time is there as well:
HAH HAH HAH!

Ohhhhhhhhh. That's so poetic, dude....
There's also a top-page highlight for the article there, that reads:
Oooooo-KEY....
How about start the reels and just drum, damn it!?
that's what I do
/respects