M
Muckelroy
Member
Before you guys all stone me by the city gates, DON'T READ THIS POST if you absolutely hate digital recording, and think that it is the Antichrist.
So ANYWAY,
As much as I'm a lover of analog, I'm beginning to delve into the theory behind digital recording, and It's actually rather fascinating how it all works. The concept of digital recording has been thought out ever since the 20's, but only in the early 80's was the hardware available to accomplish it.
Magentic recording as we know it is roughly 60 years old.
Digital recording as we know it is roughly 25 years old.
It took about 25-30 years for magnetic recording to finally reach reach its audiphilie potential.
It wasn't until the early to mid 90's that digital ever came CLOSE to sounding as good as analog (in terms of sonic accuracy.) Thus the cause of the whole digital revolution which we either love or hate, or both.
I forsee a HUGE improvement on this stuff in the next few years. HOWEVER, I'm glad that I continually see the designers of the digital world referencing their sound to that of analog, even today. Most designers of digital gear that's worth its salt will tell you that they use analog as a REFERENCE for quality. They must ask themselves if the sound that equipment is dealing with is sounding as good, if not "better" (I use that term loosely) than analog?
Keep your eyes peeled for the next recording technology! But DON'T get rid of your analog stuff. Treasure it, and USE it, and if, 10-15 years from now, that awesome-gizmaton 4 billion digital recorder becomes affordable, and you use it, do an A-B comparison
-callie-
So ANYWAY,
As much as I'm a lover of analog, I'm beginning to delve into the theory behind digital recording, and It's actually rather fascinating how it all works. The concept of digital recording has been thought out ever since the 20's, but only in the early 80's was the hardware available to accomplish it.
Magentic recording as we know it is roughly 60 years old.
Digital recording as we know it is roughly 25 years old.
It took about 25-30 years for magnetic recording to finally reach reach its audiphilie potential.
It wasn't until the early to mid 90's that digital ever came CLOSE to sounding as good as analog (in terms of sonic accuracy.) Thus the cause of the whole digital revolution which we either love or hate, or both.
I forsee a HUGE improvement on this stuff in the next few years. HOWEVER, I'm glad that I continually see the designers of the digital world referencing their sound to that of analog, even today. Most designers of digital gear that's worth its salt will tell you that they use analog as a REFERENCE for quality. They must ask themselves if the sound that equipment is dealing with is sounding as good, if not "better" (I use that term loosely) than analog?
Keep your eyes peeled for the next recording technology! But DON'T get rid of your analog stuff. Treasure it, and USE it, and if, 10-15 years from now, that awesome-gizmaton 4 billion digital recorder becomes affordable, and you use it, do an A-B comparison

-callie-