You don´t need to tell me. I grew up in an audiophile household and the whole world back then just sounded better.ghettosynth wrote: Sun Jul 06, 2025 7:28 pmOf course, and get rich quick sells like hotcakes here as well, but, you have to see the other side. Dave Grohl and others of the same mind are convinced that the hardware, taken as a whole, is better. He made a movie about it even.HAL76 wrote: Sun Jul 06, 2025 7:21 pmFrom a sales perrspctive: because we need arguments and USPs to convince customers. A sales manager knows that he just needs to convince the people. The potential customers. Not the scientific audience or the pope. Just people who are willing to pay for the advantages of the product over others.ghettosynth wrote: Sun Jul 06, 2025 6:57 pmYep. I recall a thread on some forum, maybe a mailing list. Someone was asking about how to the general vibe of a Boards of Canada sound and the response was "a room full of analog hardware." Yes it was a bit flippant, but, we shouldn't dismiss it so quickly in the same way that we don't dismiss the sound of analog consoles and outboard vintage gear. In isolation emulations are very convincing. However, if that were all there is to it, then why do we need plugins to simulate subtle channel differences?HAL76 wrote: Sun Jul 06, 2025 5:50 pm The differences sum up btw. You often don´t hear that much of a difference if you play just a single sound. So if you ask yourself once again when something is wrong with your mix which plugin does the trick better think twice and don´t go on feeding the VST cheaters.
I don´t know if you see the same you tube advertisements where you live but here in germany we frequently hear "read this book and get rich", "I can show you how to loose kilos without changing your eating habits" or "this tablet will clean your toilet and you don´t have to do anything".
The VST companys usually don´t promise too much, they just say "modelled after" and their peergroups exaggerate it for them ("Sounds just like the hardware!"). But the behaviour seems just as suspicious to me as the behaviour of the people behind the mentioned advertisements.
But I definitely shouldn´t generalize too much. There are good plugins and even if it´s just because they are so easy to use in comparison, take no room and don´t eat cables![]()
But the "use cases" have diversified over the time, different "flavours" have come up and as we all know even the hardcore audiophiles back then bought a CD player somewhen. That´s were the fall starts.
First track I´ve heard from CD. Probably lots of analog gear behind it.
But lots stop this sentimentalism and occupy a more pragmatic point of view: you can´t even make these punchy percussions, warm leads and pads with software. It always sounds thin, cold and sterile. I suppose it had a massive impact on what people call music today.
