Don't do it Danny!
I'm not in Atlanta but next time you're in NYC (everyone comes here at some point right?) swing by.
Ironically, the arguments in favor of why vinyl sounds better has less to do with vinyl per se and more to do with learning how to identify and recognize what's "wrong" with digital.
Once your ears can hear what's "wrong" with digital it will be the only thing that you hear and you will have 1,676 things that suddenly piss you off... Yes I'm serious.
I spent ~35 years in software engineering and can hear the "code" in digital music reproduction and was always of the opinion that code was obsolete as soon as it shipped and should always be improved on.
Once your brain is wired that way, there's no going back.
Sure I love listening to my digital library (CD's, ALAC, WAV or whatever) but you can't get past the fact that there's software between the source and your ears - unavoidable. Unfortunately, there are great software developers and crappy ones just as there are great studio mastering engineers and complete hacks.
I'm not in Atlanta but next time you're in NYC (everyone comes here at some point right?) swing by.
Ironically, the arguments in favor of why vinyl sounds better has less to do with vinyl per se and more to do with learning how to identify and recognize what's "wrong" with digital.
Once your ears can hear what's "wrong" with digital it will be the only thing that you hear and you will have 1,676 things that suddenly piss you off... Yes I'm serious.
I spent ~35 years in software engineering and can hear the "code" in digital music reproduction and was always of the opinion that code was obsolete as soon as it shipped and should always be improved on.
Once your brain is wired that way, there's no going back.
Sure I love listening to my digital library (CD's, ALAC, WAV or whatever) but you can't get past the fact that there's software between the source and your ears - unavoidable. Unfortunately, there are great software developers and crappy ones just as there are great studio mastering engineers and complete hacks.