TJQKA
Boomer Anarchist
Lt. Michael Byrd, did a good job.
Fuck you
Lt. Michael Byrd, did a good job.
Which ones are you talking about exactly? The actual sandwiches? Because I can't imagine you'd mean the McChicken.McDonald's Chicken Sandwich is as good as Chick-Fil-A's Chicken Sandwich.
Nah, if I was 12 years old soyack I would simp for NCR.Yeah if you're 12 and think Rome is neat.
Which ones are you talking about exactly? The actual sandwiches? Because I can't imagine you'd mean the McChicken.
Analog > digital.Vinyl is overrated. You can reproduce the same effect with algorithms without loss or distortion to the music.
I 100% agree with you on that. Black Metal tends to sound beautiful on a really low quality cassette tape. Windir and Sortsind are perfect examples of it done right. For real though, Vinyl is/was perfect for ending the loudness wars and trying to get music back down to a non tinnitus inducing volume. And to bring an end to audial clipping, bring back instrument clarity, less compression usage, and as you said "experience as one package as intended'. Plus- If a nuclear war ever happened. Most analog tech wouldn't be effected. Vinyl would survive, though I doubt the record players would survive. Even cds wouldnt be effected because it's considered digital analog and the waveform is burnt into the cd and read with a laser. Strangely Cassette tapes and reel to reel tapes wont survive because theyre magnetic and an EMP would fry all the data off the tape. I have a pretty big vinyl collection myself.Analog > digital.
Yes, I can a VST to simulate tape saturation, warble, noise, all the good stuff when recording digitally, but I can also get that directly from recording on tape, which has the added benefit that nobody will ever hear it, which makes it trve kvlt underground and not some poser shit that people actually know.
Jokes aside, vinyl and tape have some nice effects on listening habits. You can't easily skip songs, so the album has to be experienced as one packaged as intended.