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I remember reading somewhere decades ago, from some prominent audio writer, something to the effect of:
The better Analog playback gets, the more it sounds like digital.
Meaning to me, that analog is flawed to some degree, and only has a "Sound" based on its flaws.
When you remove the distortions, overload, noise, mistracking, and on and on, You have Digital.
Yes, to a degree, that would be the obvious conclusion. And I find it true to a point.
I was living with "pretty good" vinyl sound and then upgraded my turntable/arm/cartridge. With my original set up there was often noticeable background hiss, and complex tracks could get a teeny bit fuzzy and confused sounding. Just the stuff that clean digital signals do well that vinyl can fall down on. But when I got my newer set up, all that got better: much less background noise, often inaudible (except for ticks/pops), and the sound became super clean and clear, and stayed that way even as tracks got more complex. So it did indeed approach what I got with my digital source. However, it still has a generally different sonic character, it still sounds "like vinyl" but just, super clean vinyl. Which to me meant I got the best of both worlds, and it's why I'm so addicted to vinyl playback in my set up.