Yes, facts are facts, don't forget not all specs in digital are without compromise and error too. But we don't listen to facts per se. We listen to audio signals as music and the point is the listening for ALL OF US is subjective.
But, from a production side, it is all about the specs and the facts. With a goal of accurately reproducing the original score as close as it can be to 'live'. From there, what people do with it may be entirely up to them, and certainly as we listen to music it is all subjective. Just because vinyl may not be as accurate, it is not true to say it sounds worse. Likewise, it is not true to say it sounds better... But, it can often be true to say vinyl is less accurate. With that in mind, someone new to music, who wants to accurately recreate the audio, likely won't lean towards vinyl, but may instead go towards studio quality lossless formats.
As to the ticks and pops, surely you have a limited sense of reason on this regard.Most ticks and pops on any QUALITY LP are only heard if at all in quiet passages and mostly we subjectively ignore them or between tracks. During the music as long as the disc is not filthy or damaged you can't hear them. I have many LP's that are as quiet in a general light as their CD counterparts.
Yes, or it is part of the character... part of what makes vinyl wonderful. Even the imperfections add to the perfection right?
Next lets talk a about disc damage. Scratch and LP and typically it will click over the scratch and can be a bother. Scratch a CD and worse a BD (note: this is incorrect) as they are more susceptible to scratches and .... Not fun either so lets rule out these such anomalies ok?
The first CD I ever purchased plays back just as perfectly now as the day I bought it. Let's be clear... even with mediocre care of pulling a CD from its case, then putting it back in after playback, a CD is not prone to anywhere near the level of damage that vinyl is, just from the physical contact of the needle on the surface. Not that CDs don't get damaged and destroyed, they most certainly do. But, it is often because of misuse and lack of proper care that they get damaged. Still, most owners of CDs have just left them sitting out on surfaces, have gotten some scratches in them, and they continue to play back just fine. It really isn't a comparison between the damage of CDs versus vinyl is it?
It comes back to sound and what sounds good. More and more people are gravitating to vinyl as a physical media choice because they note that they most often like the sound.
More and more people? As a percentage, vinyl is outpacing digital in terms of annual growth, but as a actual market, it certainly is not.
Yes, I know.
I do not propose vinyl will ever regain its hey day status but it's not a fluke nor a fad as over the last 7,8,9 years sales have been moving up that vinyl is growing in popularity and at a faster rate given it's size than any other format. Even your BD is not growing that fast. CD sales are falling. Downloads are popular but for ONLY CONVENIENCE!
How about sales figures? Do you KNOW how much BD has grown since it came to market about 8 years ago. Do you know how much BD sales are annually? It's an interesting statement to make, but in terms of growth, vinyl doesn't need to show much actual dollar growth to inject a huge percentage growth.
http://76.74.24.142/FA8A2072-6BF8-D44D-B9C8-CE5F55BBC050.pdf
It's not that digital downloads growth is a huge percentage compared to vinyl. It is that digital downloads saw over ten times the sales growth of vinyl in actual dollars. Similarly, the drop in CD sales was about twice the total vinyl sales for 2011... Vinyl sales numbers need to be kept within a very small window for them to appear to be impressive. Much like the first years of Blu-ray, and sales growth which was measured at 100%+ every year for the first few years. It hardly mattered when BD sales were 1% of the market. Similarly, vinyl sales just don't matter that much to the industry, but any dollar made is worth making!
But, one thing for sure you cannot EVER counter is this. The catalogue of global music on vinyl is probably 20 times larger than CD and the CD has been around for 30 years. It's probably I guess 200 times larger than SACD/DVD-A and even BD.
I'm not about to argue this. Vinyl was used for years as the only way to get music into people's homes, and did so when it was the only form of home entertainment which people could buy and control. Not just for five or ten years, but for ages. But, would be nice to get some numbers.
It's probably 500 times larger than downloads. These digital format each will never offer up such a large catalogue EVER! before each of these is replaced by another and become OBSOLETE! Vinyl is not and never has been obsolete.
DD is a completely different story. You actively preach against downloads... But, downloads are the future along with streaming. Digital delivery is locked in as the growth sector, and it is hard to say what may replace it, if anything. But, it certainly will offer far more variety, and already does right now, for actively available content. It may offer more now, at one time, than vinyl ever has. Vinyl has had years to accumulate what it offers (when you can find it), but digital delivers every moment a complete embodyment of possibilities without the limitations of physical delivery. Hate it or not, quality or not, digital is the music archive for the forseeable future.
Next, lets go onto the way one listens. ...
About half of your discussion on the way one listens was spent discussing things other than listening. I would expect that you are correct though since a very high number of people who listen to CDs and DD, are on the go. They don't tote their record players along in the car, on their arm, in their pocket, or anywhere else. So, the typical vinyl enthusiast is probably not grabbing their LP off the charger as they run out the door. But, the number of people who sit down and listen to a good CD, or DD in a serious manner is for sure far higher than those that do so for vinyl. Not as a percentage of the whole, but as a raw number. It is the nature of the beast with CD and DD, compared to vinyl.
Vinyl even as specs are all low enough to not be a worry or an issue as long as the gear is in proper working order. So once below an audible threshold we can't hear the anomalies and they then do not matter.
I agree, as long as any distortions introduced by the analog gear are of low enough impact to not be audible, then it doesn't matter. Not sure how much it may run to get analog gear that good... I think most people can find digital gear that good for under $100 pretty easily.
Yes, vinyl requires more effort to play, more care to set up properly (but often not as much as anit-vinylites cry) but I say once doing so more often than not more reward and pleasure.
Yes, you have been saying that a lot in this thread. I agree, that setting up a vinyl album and listening to it properly probably yields rewards of good music. Strangely, a person who likes good music likely finds the rewards of a good CD or a quality DD just as rewarding.
Look if one doesn't care about vinyl, THAT'S FINE! But to cry against it as many of the anti-vinyl guys do is just being petty and small.
I don't know many people who complain about vinyl or who are anti-vinyl. They have just moved on and don't care. Most don't care. By far the majority dont' care one little bit.
Obviously many typically sound and reasonable people prefer vinyl in all its ways including sonically and like it or not that's the way it is. It's a niche, a growing one and nobody in their right mind will suggest it will return to hey day status but it is not obsolete, it does not sound bad or annoying and it's not going away. Probably 1+billion LP titles out there globally, many of them selling for low prices to even mere pennies. CD is not that large as a catalogue and no other digital format it either.
No, vinyl isn't going away. I hope it never does. It is a fun thing to collect for a very small group of people. Yet, that's all it is. A niche group collecting a niche product. Some of whom who get their panties in a bunch anytime someone suggests that vinyl doesn't actual deliver the same quality as a good CD does, let alone what a BD does. (ignoring DD altogether)
Vinyl sounds good, it has a unique sound. But, that's it. More accurate? No, but that doesn't matter, and I'm not saying it should. I will say though that there is a far greater group who enjoy their CDs and DD on a daily basis than those who enjoy vinyl. At a casual, and a serious level, those people far outweigh the few who do still listen to, and collect vinyl. And most? Most just don't care at all.