A lot of opinions and theorizing when the answer is found in the OP’s original post itself. No mention of the obvious:
**** First of all it’s very difficult to speak of analog in general. Records vary widely (indeed wildly) in sonic character and quality. Digital recordings are much more uniform. When you play a digital file you more or less know what your getting. Of course some sound better than others, but there is a consistency of character. With records, it’s the Wild West. Variation in SQ and character are rampant. ****
Bingo! Records vary wildly in sonic character because recordings vary wildly in sonic character. This is a good thing, not a negative. The fact that “there is a consistency of character” with digital recordings is a negative, not a positive.
Both technologies have an intrinsic character. Why wouldn’t they? However, to my ears and in spite of the excellence that both are capable of, digital imposes more of its character on the music.