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| quote: | Originally posted by Robotrance
all sound is analog to the ear anyway. its just that we move the chain towards the ear that becomes more and more exact the further the digital convention is. remember that we all listen to 44,1kHz 16bit anyway. whats the point in analog before that? more convertion and noise only. the best would be if everything was digital all they up to the speaker and only there would the only convertion to shitty analog randomness happen. next step would be to plug the digital bits into ones brain directly bypassing any DAC, speakers and ears. think about it. endless of dynamics not limited by laws. |
exactly....we listen in analog...our ears are analog devices..........how do you separate analog from digital....what isn't analog/part of the real world is digital.....it doesnt exist except as 0s and 1s, information........so what is an analog signal before it becomes analog...it's informatoin....on the subatomic level, a continuous current is the exact same as a discrete current...with finite numbers....the numbers are so infintely small that there is no fucking way that the human analog ear can tell a real difference...only difference is an illusion.....lthat added random noise from a continuous current...there is no iun between only on off in a digital series....thats why its called digital it's digits// or only whole numbers integers.
these ar the links i found o put on gearsluts that are papers from prinsceton and etc that explain mathemeically why analog and digital signal processing is equivalent.... aand the signal processing theory...
http://arxiv.org/pdf/0902.4291.pdf
http://www.informatics.buzdo.com/p030-signal-theory.htm
Plus, digital instruments are actually way more vintage than analog ones....because the math that creates them was around way longer before any physical synthesizer was invented....take that.
| quote: | | and chances are you just like analog noise/distortion, you could just as well record a VST using a tape recorder. |
exactly....analog gear does add noise intot he mix...which can add grit or bite...in certain situation this might be good...or just having that random amount of tiny noise......because analog flow is conintinuous and has non-whole information in the signal.......it's not as clean...as digital......digital creates the purest clean sounds....but might be subject to random glitches or stepping...etc....so each of them has problems....but digital is way better and more reliable....and all the people record there analog gear into digital devices at some point and squish it to 16 bit any way...
but.....i think the real reason there is so much love for the vintage analog synths...is they are sexy..and they are powerful...and amazing feats of engineering.....to be able to have that much sonic complexity and power within a single box, is sexy.........
Last edited by soulstar606 on Oct-28-2014 at 07:26
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