The modern world went digital-mad in the 1980s. It was the era of digital watches, pocket calculators, compact discs, and videogames everywhere: in the arcades, on your home computer, and on the LCD slab in your back pocket. And in music production, ‘digital’ was the ultimate buzzword, selling synths, effects, samplers, and recording systems in their millions. Producers were falling over themselves to replace noisy, unreliable analogue gear with pristine digital kit. Tales abound of classic vintage tape machines, mixing consoles, valve compressors and EQs simply being tossed in the trash to make space for this next-gen equipment. Digital just had to be better than analogue, right? On paper, it was…
Over time, however, music producers and fans alike felt that something was up: digital could actually be too perfect,…