You guys dont have to try to "Rain On Our Parade". Like Analog Recording, Rain is "Natural, Soothing and Real"!
VP
As much as I love working with tape and view digital as a necessary evil, I have to say that, in my opinion, this statement is pretty silly.
How can tape recording be any more "real" than digital recording? They're just two different ways in which sound waves are represented on a storage medium.
Was recording straight to vinyl more "real" than using magnetic tape?
Was recording to wax cylinders or wire more "real" than recording to vinyl?
Remember, there were also purists that rebelled against the idea of multi-track recording when that was invented because that's not a "real" recording.
If the sound is being
reproduced at all and not happening from the source only, then it's all "memorex," and none of it's "real" if you want to get technical about it.
Who's to say that ... actually ... I'm almost positive that there will be another method of recording audio or video eventually that goes beyond what digital does now. And it will make digital seem more "real" by comparison. And people will say, "Remember when you could actually
hold a hard disk in your hand with the music files on it? Those were the days! There wasn't any of this nano-quantum recording BS we have nowadays. Back then, if you wanted to make an edit, you actually
grabbed the mouse and
moved the pointer on your own! Imagine that"
And then there will be another method after that, and so on, and so on.
The point is that recording technology is always progressing. Analog tape just happens to be one of many stops on the way. It's one that I prefer out of the available options today. I certainly wouldn't prefer, nor could I afford, to record straight onto vinyl. Those lathe-cutting machines were huge, incredibly expensive, messy, and not portable at all. I mean, sure it'd be neat to try it once for the novelty of it, but I think you get my point. Our concept of "home recording" did not exist in those vinyl-only days.
Tape made things more portable, more affordable, more versatile (you could make edits), and changed the sound quality (I won't say "improved" because that's subjective I suppose). Coincidentally, those are all things that digital came and did to tape.
However, tape is affordable enough to me (though it does stretch my budget at times), and it's my preference.
But the idea of one medium being more "real" than another .... come on.