I basically went through all this already in several forum topics. Bottom line for me is always go with the 24Bit/96kHz or better file formats and forgo the vinyl because there's no way to know what you're buying. The majority of records are pressed from digital and a tiny handful are analog. Neil Young's Harvest on 180gm should have been an audiophile's dream but it had excessive amounts of crackling and pops that no washing or hours in the ultrasonic cleaner could get rid of so why even bother with records anymore. Granted, some are incredible but I've compared them to the HD digital files and I still prefer the digital by a fair margin on most and small margin on the rest.
I shared a video from
Acoustic Sounds a while back about their analog vinyl pressing process and it seems legit but the ultra HQ records they release happen to also have SACD versions so there has to be some kind of digital involved.
Who's to say the definition of an analog record isn't based on a some technological loophole.
The funny thing about vinyl purists is, they think vinyl is the ultimate sound quality when in fact, it's not able to reproduce the frequency or dynamic range of the most basic HD audio format let alone sound anything close to the DS128 source file. Reel to Reel master tapes are the ultimate and those are what analog purists should be obsessed with.
Listening to vinyl today is a huge scam and for people like me that are just getting into for the physicality of it need to seriously rethink that choice since most of the enjoyment will come from opening the records packaging and seeing what's inside more so than the listening experience. At close to $35 a pop or worse it's simply not a valid format for what you get from it. A 24Bit/96kHz album is in some cases $20 cheaper and offers a superior listening experience with the proper DAC.