With all due respect, Charles1dad from your reply my feeling is that you've just never heard digital or solid-state done right.
But here is a possible explanation. With solid-state gear those who don't like it normally feel this way because of its sins of commission... This means that since ss amps and preamps are generally lower-noise and more linear through the audible range that you can hear more of what is going wrong in the treble if you don't use proper cabling, chassis diffusion, or AC conditioning/regeneration products.
With tubes, the sins are mainly of omission meaning that they generally roll treble, round fast transients, and muddle things a bit in even the best designs. This makes the sound more "musical" at the expense of removing musical information, nuance and detail.
And honestly, I've done these experiments enough times to be confident in my position. The outcome is always the same.
I absolutely love both my digital and my tube systems. They are both glorious. But I know the digital system is more nuanced and revealing while at the same time seeming more like a live musical experience.
By contrast, the tube system sounds extremely smooth and euphonic. It has a huge holographic sound stage and the music is so sweet and soothing it can literally lull me to sleep. But ultimately I don't think it's as musically correct.
As I said, both systems sound great in their own right. I just think the digital format has more potential to take me closer to a "Live" performance. But everything has to be right and optimized for this to happen and I've taken pains to do this right.
With tube gear it's easy because as I said the sins are of omission rather than commission and you gain more by the tubes removing high-frequency nasties and rounding transients than you lose in bass control, proper transient reproduction and lower noise.
Obviously many tube fanatics won't agree with me but it's mostly because they haven't had the same success getting their solid-state or digital gear to sound right... because it's more difficult to achieve and you need to really understand the things that work and the things that don't.
But here is a possible explanation. With solid-state gear those who don't like it normally feel this way because of its sins of commission... This means that since ss amps and preamps are generally lower-noise and more linear through the audible range that you can hear more of what is going wrong in the treble if you don't use proper cabling, chassis diffusion, or AC conditioning/regeneration products.
With tubes, the sins are mainly of omission meaning that they generally roll treble, round fast transients, and muddle things a bit in even the best designs. This makes the sound more "musical" at the expense of removing musical information, nuance and detail.
And honestly, I've done these experiments enough times to be confident in my position. The outcome is always the same.
I absolutely love both my digital and my tube systems. They are both glorious. But I know the digital system is more nuanced and revealing while at the same time seeming more like a live musical experience.
By contrast, the tube system sounds extremely smooth and euphonic. It has a huge holographic sound stage and the music is so sweet and soothing it can literally lull me to sleep. But ultimately I don't think it's as musically correct.
As I said, both systems sound great in their own right. I just think the digital format has more potential to take me closer to a "Live" performance. But everything has to be right and optimized for this to happen and I've taken pains to do this right.
With tube gear it's easy because as I said the sins are of omission rather than commission and you gain more by the tubes removing high-frequency nasties and rounding transients than you lose in bass control, proper transient reproduction and lower noise.
Obviously many tube fanatics won't agree with me but it's mostly because they haven't had the same success getting their solid-state or digital gear to sound right... because it's more difficult to achieve and you need to really understand the things that work and the things that don't.