Long story short. Everything is different. Nothing is better. They are all tools that can be be used for whatever you're trying to achieve.
Digital vs analog? They are both better and worse at different things. These days, there is no reason why digital would be detrimental to the quality of your tone unless it's a lower quality device because of cost or sonic reasons. Often times people seek vintage digital things for the imperfections.
Speaking of imperfections, did you know that's why people like scatter wound/hand wound pickups? They are scatter wound because people are not perfect enough to hand wind a perfect pickup. All that scatter winding results in a lower capacitance and a brighter tone. Other ways of achieving a brighter clearer tone, amp selection, EQ, pedals, etc. A lot of people don't believe that lowering the value of their instrument while spending extra cash to change out pickups is worth it when they can often achieve a similar effect through other means. Especially because it's much harder to audition the sound of a pickup change vs reaching for tone knobs on whatever other devices you have. I personally love pickup swaps, and have a bunch laying around my space from boutique brands, seymour duncan, even stock pickups. But they are definitely not the best option for most people.
Imperfections lead to interesting sounds sometimes. But we wouldn't want our bridges imperfect. Like the imperfect intonation on telecaster bridges people love so much. But jazzy bridges are just a flavor of imperfect that doesn't appeal to you..
I'm pretty sure my ears don't have a digital input.D.o.S. wrote:I am almost positive you cannot ID a circuit as analog or digital by ear alone.





