Tom, as a practicing neuroscientist, I am at least tangentially aware of the blinded listening test literature although I have not really followed it (I am not an AES member). I think that quick comparisons probably help to differentiate differences but may not be the best way of determining long term listening satisfaction or enjoyment?
I have been working from home for the last 2 years and basically my stereo system is on from morning to night except for zoom meetings and when I was needed onsite. So I have spent a lot of time listening to my system. I happily stream music all day long and enjoy having access to 70 million+ tracks. I still enjoy it. On the surface, my digital system sounds great, full range, tonally accurate, full of detail, low distortion, very dynamic etc. Switching between analog and digital reveals that they present differently, in most ways the digital sound would be considered better? But my intention was never to equate my impression with some type of blinded listening test. In short, listening to one format for an extended time and switching might provide insight that is not gained by quick snapshot comparisons. Its simple, try listening to analog for a week, then switch back to digital and see what you think? If you don't do analog, then don't worry about it. But if you are one of those people who thinks digital is about as enjoyable as analog (and I was one of those people), it might be an eye opening experience.
PS: If I had to choose between only digitally streaming 70 million tracks or only listening to my ~1000 jazz LPs for the rest of my life, I would pick streaming because I love the variety. But I would miss how analog sources make me feel when I listen to them.
PPS:
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tomp wrote:
TubeDriver wrote:
Pelliott321 wrote:
I get equal enjoyment from either source and proudly show off both and will not get into a discussion of which is better because they are so different.
Well, you did just did. My point is that switching between sources daily masks some of the differences., ie quick comparisons hide differences. I did not intend this to become a component pissing match, suffice to say that both my analog and digital paths are high end if not SOTA. I also greatly enjoy both analog and digital sources but there is no harm in declaring that one sounds better or provides more enjoyment, I really don't understand why this gets you bent out of shape?
I differ on one point. It has been proven on many visual, hearing, and taste comparisons that long times between samples reduces the brain's ability to distinguish differences. It has also been shown that with long times of sampling that the brain adapts to what is being presented and tends to make that the new normal.