In your dogmatic rant you conflate 2 different concepts of timing, the timing of bits flows, and the acoustical timing events linked to the definition of "musical timbre"...
And i never ever said that analog is superior to digital, you confuse me with some others audiophiles you seems to despise...
I am an audiophile myself but i dont think that analog/vinyl is superior at all...
I think that analog method for recording studio or for rendition in our room are different with their own advantages compared to digital... They are on par with different results...
Timbre is first an acoustical phenomena between room/instrument/ and ears, NOT at all an information process phenomena, being it analog or digital....
And some aspects of the complex acoustical timing events that are linked to the formation of timbre are well served on some aspect by digital recording method and differently by analog recording method, and also in the acoustic of the listening room, by a dac or a turntable and also by a tube or by a S.S. amplifier... It is not a question of subjective prefered colors taste, it is a question about the way the acoustical timing of the recording room making the timbre of the instrument will be listen more or less rightly so in the acoustical conditions of the listening room...
The timbre of an instrument is always evaluated by human ears in a specific acoustical room, never can be measured .... Then i dont speak about "COLORS" i speak about "TIMBRE" and timbre is not a set of complex phenomena reducible to frequencies ONLY.... This is why we speak about complex timing and the points number 3 and 5 in the wiki definition of timbre...
Try to be logical and less dogmatic....
OUF !
And i never ever said that analog is superior to digital, you confuse me with some others audiophiles you seems to despise...
I am an audiophile myself but i dont think that analog/vinyl is superior at all...
I think that analog method for recording studio or for rendition in our room are different with their own advantages compared to digital... They are on par with different results...
Timbre is first an acoustical phenomena between room/instrument/ and ears, NOT at all an information process phenomena, being it analog or digital....
And some aspects of the complex acoustical timing events that are linked to the formation of timbre are well served on some aspect by digital recording method and differently by analog recording method, and also in the acoustic of the listening room, by a dac or a turntable and also by a tube or by a S.S. amplifier... It is not a question of subjective prefered colors taste, it is a question about the way the acoustical timing of the recording room making the timbre of the instrument will be listen more or less rightly so in the acoustical conditions of the listening room...
The timbre of an instrument is always evaluated by human ears in a specific acoustical room, never can be measured .... Then i dont speak about "COLORS" i speak about "TIMBRE" and timbre is not a set of complex phenomena reducible to frequencies ONLY.... This is why we speak about complex timing and the points number 3 and 5 in the wiki definition of timbre...
Try to be logical and less dogmatic....
OUF !