
lonewhitefly
Active member
well, fellows, i think that maybe we're coming from a different place with this stuff, and that is totally cool. for the record, i have a crummy listening system, a sony boombox with a cheap record player with built in preamp. i am anything but an elitist or audiophile. i'm really coming from a more philosophical/spiritual place. i put most of my money into the recording side of things, my playback system is, as you mentioned, just to listen to music and connect with it. i think analog really just gets me to that connection faster. the ritual is cool, but i'm sure i could point out what was tape, record, or CD in a blind-fold test. or maybe i couldn't BUT ... over the minutes, hours, days, months, i think i would become more interested in music if it was presented to me in analog. true, i like the artifacts, but i am talking about something else here.
i'm not one of these guys that is coming to analog because it's cool, or vintage, or has a ritual ... growing up as a poor kid in the '90s, i could not afford a CD player and listened to garage sale records on hand-me-down stereo systems. i bought cassettes new. i noticed when i finally got a CD player, i started slowly losing interest and didn't make the connection for a long time.
in terms of recording, i have never done digital recording. i was born in '79, started on boombox cassettes, hooked into each other via rca cable to overdub (or just speaker to microphone!) in the '80s, finally went to 4-track cassette in the late '90s when i became an adult, moved on to 4-track teac 3340 reel around '05, quickly moved to 8-track 1/2" that year as well (teac 80-8). i'm still honing my chops on the teac, my recordings sound better and better each year, i'm learning the process ... i really want to get the most out of the stuff i have before upgrading. i considered digital briefly around '05 but i thought about all my favorite recordings and how they were made, as well as the workflow, and decided against it. anytime i try to do anything music related on computers, i just get super frustrated, and not in the exciting, creative analog way.
i recently started splicing a 1/4" mix to do some editing on a track that was a mess. man, was that challenging, frustrating and time consuming. but it was also exhilarating, and the end results have a certain human, imperfect touch that i am so proud to have been a part of.
i'm not one of these guys that is coming to analog because it's cool, or vintage, or has a ritual ... growing up as a poor kid in the '90s, i could not afford a CD player and listened to garage sale records on hand-me-down stereo systems. i bought cassettes new. i noticed when i finally got a CD player, i started slowly losing interest and didn't make the connection for a long time.
in terms of recording, i have never done digital recording. i was born in '79, started on boombox cassettes, hooked into each other via rca cable to overdub (or just speaker to microphone!) in the '80s, finally went to 4-track cassette in the late '90s when i became an adult, moved on to 4-track teac 3340 reel around '05, quickly moved to 8-track 1/2" that year as well (teac 80-8). i'm still honing my chops on the teac, my recordings sound better and better each year, i'm learning the process ... i really want to get the most out of the stuff i have before upgrading. i considered digital briefly around '05 but i thought about all my favorite recordings and how they were made, as well as the workflow, and decided against it. anytime i try to do anything music related on computers, i just get super frustrated, and not in the exciting, creative analog way.
i recently started splicing a 1/4" mix to do some editing on a track that was a mess. man, was that challenging, frustrating and time consuming. but it was also exhilarating, and the end results have a certain human, imperfect touch that i am so proud to have been a part of.