Hi Everyone,
Interesting conversation. I was also an analog guy until I actually set up digital properly. First, I want to say that I do import and distribute certain digital products and I'm not touting those products in this conversation but rather explaining that digital needs an incredible amount of work and time to get the harmonics that a great analog set up produces.
In my opinion moving from Roon to Stylus music player with my Pink Faun server/streamer and adding my Aries Cerat DAC was the first step to understanding the true potential of a great digital set up. In order to set up for Stylus we had to convert all my .w64 files to WAVE lossless format. But there are a lot of small details, just like owning a great analog set up, that you need to perform before you can reach the full potential of digital. In term of streaming, Tidal is also MUCH better when played thru the Stylus player on the Pink Faun. Anyone that has not professionally set up a digital front end properly cannot understand how analog sounding digital can really sound. It's like the person that tells you hypothetically how a 911 Porsche drives without ever driving one. You need to drive the car to fully understand the true potential of that car. My suggestion is to test as many digital products as possible and A/B test products against each other when possible.
We have tested over 100 different digital front ends on 6 very different systems and the end results were exactly the same in every system. The final thing I can say is that digital takes a lot of effort and time to get it to sound analog but once you do get it correct then you have access to a lot more music. This then allows you to explore different artist that you would never have heard before and for me just hearing some of the performances by these different artists has changed my perception and enjoyment of music.
This is just my opinion so please analog guys until you have tried to set up digital at this level, let's not poo, poo what I am saying.
Best regards,