I'm just wondering: is it
that disturbing to people that there is inherent tape hiss, even with various forms of noise reduction? Is that why everyone made a mass exodus to digital in the mid 90's? I find it funny, actually.
To go to a symphony and listen to a piece in a live environment, there is still going to be some sort of background noise, other than the occasional ticket holder coughing or clearing their throat. Road noise, air handlers, boilers/chillers, pumps, supply and return diffusers, aircraft, etc. are going to play a role in the "background" noise that you will hear. It may not be noticeable, but it is there. The building can't be perfectly isolated from all of those sounds, especially since some of the sources are from within. When Beck was recording those instruments and artists in that environment, it may have never been picked up by the mic, therefore, nobody really ever noticed it.
I can't see how it is such a passionate issue unless you are listening lengthy segments of quiet passages. I'm thinking with the transients you would have the volume at some sensible level and wouldn't really notice the hiss anyway. You would have to be actively listening for it.
If digital was the undisputed medium of choice, then
nobody would be bothering with old portastudios or multi-channel reel to reel decks. They would simply end up in a landfill. From what I've seen, analog is doing pretty well for a dead medium.
I think it comes down to a choice, convenience or quality. I'm not saying that digital isn't quality, but it has definitely watered things down in terms of quantity of material out there since
anyone can own a digital recorder and cut an album. It is extremely convenient, to a fault.
I'm not professional recording engineer, nor am I experienced. I can, however, see and hear the effects digital has on music. How much time is spent, in a professional studio and mastering environment, putting a single album together, in digital vs. analog? I ask that because I come from a different background that has been affected by digital: photography.
I was a professional photographer for about 20 years. I shot 35mm, medium format, and on rare occasions, large format film cameras. I loved the whole process. It was a field where you had to be good or else you were going to go bankrupt buying, shooting, and processing tons of film to get a handful of good shots. Basically, every shot at a wedding cost a $1 for each frame you took, depending on the choice and size of film. In the mid 90's digital cameras starting creeping up. The quality was mediocre at best. As the years went by, digital cameras made leaps and bounds in pixel count and quality. I hung up my camera when my photo partner decided to go digital. I knew computers, AutoCAD, and basic image editing. I had seen what AutoCAD had done to drafting, and I had a bad feeling about photography. A few years later, I was proven right. My buddy began to complain about spending more time on the "back end", touching up photos and adding effects in Photoshop than time spent at the event itself. Storage concerns popped as well. CD-R/CD+R/DVD-RAM/et. al. It was a world of incompatible and competing formats. The shelf life of said variations of medium were a grave concern as well. Oh wait, hard drive space was a top concern as well. Photographers could shoot all day long and it was just costing them the price of the flash cards, or so they thought. Quantity became the Achilles Heel of photography. It wasn't money that it was costing photographers, it was the time. Photoshop was/is king. Talent no longer mattered. Anything could be fixed with Photoshop. Everyone was a professional. No need to try and get it right "in the camera" anymore. The art of photography is dead. There is now a void in genuine creativity (for the most part) in photography. Am I saying that there is a total lack of quality photography? No. I'm saying it has been made "easy" and even the pros are fidgeting with plug-ins so much that they forget that most of the problems could be solved in the first place by having the firm basics of photography and utilizing that.
Digital recording has suffered the exact same thing. Everything is fixed "in the mix" now. With tape, you were either good or you did a number of punch in/punch out sessions. There was no auto-tune, plug-ins, et. al. Maybe I'm just nostalgic. Maybe I'm just stubborn. Could be, but the effects are still visible and audible. I have no doubt that a good studio and a good band could turn out a great album in digital, but who nowadays is really going to notice? All of us audio snobs? Possibly. With the way terrestrial radio is currently, I wouldn't listen to it anyway. Take a compressed digital signal and compress it again (poorly) for transmission? I'll pass.
For all of the merits of digital, the side effects are usually more painful than the intended design, regardless of the profession. I could be wrong about that, but I've witnessed some of it firsthand.
In the end, analog and digital are a choice. No one has to one exclusively over the other. That's the beauty of it.

Getting into wasteful arguments of specs, that's whole other story. Can I get the last 30 or so minutes of my life back now?
