
haunt
Maker of Noise
IDK. Maybe they were trend chasers trying to keep up with the joneses?Why did so many producers go digital in the 80s?
Why do so many producers (to this point in the 21st century) insist on autotune-heavy vocals?
Miroslav touched on it, I suspect the migration to digital was largely due to the editing potential; of what the word processor did for writers, with "movable text" and non-destructive editing...and those with strong aversion to analog cost, space requirements & maintenance. Technology trends have emphasized convenience over fidelity and integrity.
Digital recording, in all its glorified linearity, creates its own distortion. Tracking to digital may eliminate Wow & Flutter of heads & reels but replaces them with Jitter (which is annoyingly cumulative in multi-tracking takes and can wreck havoc on attempts at summing mixes). Then there's linear prediction within the algorithm used by the ADC...which sets arbitrary end points to signal sources that fall below a certain threshold. That isn't how sound behaves in acoustic spaces. Because low amplitude signals are otherwise audibly lost in the noise floor (via the principle of exponential decay) they still remain influential to harmonic content (distortion) of any other ambient noise that can be heard. One might be able to hear the signal source clearly in digital playback but it is not an accurate reproduction of what was heard in the acoustic space, tracked live.
My MPC60 and S950 both make drum loops (and most 1 shots from analog or digital sources) sound interesting, often better through coloration, that largely results from their nonlinear response and filtering, even distortion that occurs during AD conversion.
There is no medium free of distortion...and I've never heard musicians pining for such technology anyway. Someone so obsessed with the purest reproduction of sound should stick to listening through ultra-linear hifi gear as audiophiles, and leave creation to those less concerned with spec sheets and gear superiority complexes. Otherwise every step of the production process is going to be a maddening exercise in futility. It's a misnomer to think of digital recording technology as patently "better" just like it's equally misguided to think tape is "better". And that less distortion is "better". Not necessarily.
Imagine the evolution of modern music, if musicians had rigidly adhered to the manual's advice, from the earliest tweed Fender amps; only using them in a way to "minimize distortion" and achieve "the most linear response"
Imagine a world without tube distortion, transformer distortion, speaker distortion, mic distortion, tape distortion. Electric guitar would have likely gone the route of accordion...or harp. Even electric violin. No thanks.