guitarsam, of course you can tell the difference. The analog (vinyl) has noise and the digital does not. Your 33 Hz signal is just noise replicating the rumble that you have on records. It is a personal theory of mine that the background noise does something to bias or dither our brains. In reality there is always background noise. The is no noiseless venue. I think we are uncomfortable in the absence of noise. Many women are hypersensitive to noise at night. One little click and my wife is bolt upright, "what is that!" Waking me up in the process. Many of my female patients do the same thing. I put a fan in the room which provides a constant drone in the room masking other noises. Now, she rarely wakes me up.
Records recorded digitally then played back on vinyl sound just as analog as any analog recording because you have now added the noise back.
Make your listening room dead silent and play a CD or file. There is something wrong about the silence between the notes. It is artificial like Formica painted with wood grain to make it look like a veneer.
We are analog creatures and there is no way of getting away from it.
Records recorded digitally then played back on vinyl sound just as analog as any analog recording because you have now added the noise back.
Make your listening room dead silent and play a CD or file. There is something wrong about the silence between the notes. It is artificial like Formica painted with wood grain to make it look like a veneer.
We are analog creatures and there is no way of getting away from it.