I think most people on this BBS and elsewhere regard analog tape as an effect, part of the effects rack.
I, in part, agree with your statement because there are many formats to be had in a tape machine (kinda like a multitude of diff paints, paint brushes, canvases, for an artist / painter) and it gives one a tone or color which differs from one to another.
There's cassette, open reel, narrow track, wide track, dbx, dolby, no noise reduction, slow / mid / fast speed, tubes, solid state, different types of heads / electronics and don't forget the different types of tapes, which add even more "color" to it all. When you add really interesting sounding mics (far from transparent), then you really have something interesting.
I've heard some wonderful stuff made on tape but also some nasty, sterile and cold sounding records. The same holds true to digital. I think it ultimately comes down to (in no particular order) talent, recording technique, microphones, their placement, rooms and minimum of editing to preserve a "live" human feel.
I think that the biggest problem in today's music is overindulgence in digital editing / processing, plugins, autotune, "comping" and the use of "transparent" outboard gear, incl mics, rendering music sterile.
What I love about analogue is consistent, reliable, fun and easy way to record, a future proof medium, that stood the test of time. Its simplicity and inherent limitation (vs digital editing / processing) is gold for artists' creativity.
I wonder how many digital software / hardware will be serviceable, relatively easy to fix and sounding "up to date" in 5, 10, 20, 30, 40 or 50 years. My guess is little to none. A good analogue tape machine will always be.
The way I see it is that when you have such good serviceability and ease of use, on those machines, including a virtually infinite "sampling rate" (to borrow from digital talk) and such a large pallet of color to choose from, then you have a winner, IMHO.
