mrmarioanonym: You know, analogue sounds best on analogue and digital sounds best on digital. The mastering is often much better too.
hedwards: Not really, it comes down to mastering, a well mastered CD will always have better sound quality than a well mastered record. The record just can't compete in terms of audio quality. The limitations on dynamic range and channel separation prevent that. Not to mention the issues of record degradation. And you'll never get a record that's able to do surround sound like you can do with 5.1 audio coming off a DVD.
It's interestingly anachronistic, but anybody that's listening to it for better quality is just fooling themselves. IIRC the folks over at hydrogenaudio already settled that argument.
I wonder how much is subconscious? Kind of thinking of the difference between listening to an album from The Doors on vinyl versus CD. Maybe the clicking, popping, and other 'artifacts' from vinyl puts one in a frame of mind of listening to, say, "LA Woman" when it first came out, and that it then brings back the feelings of the era, especially for those around when those songs first hit the airwaves. Maybe those imperfections bring back memories from one's youth, and all of the reminiscences that come with it.
Of course, that assumes one is a near-term old fart like myself.
But it does make me think further: those clicks and pops obviously were not present in the studio during the recording session so they are absolutely artifacts of the recording, pressing, and playback processes. So does a 'clean' remastered version better capture the music, or does that editing take away the imperfections that represent the era in which the recordings were made? And how does that subconsciously affect one's opinion of the quality of the recording?
I suppose I could try some sort of informal test of my own ears - not a double-blind or anything like that, but simply knowingly playing both versions of a particular album and registering what it 'feels like' to hear each recording method. I'm thinking in particular of a good example that I can grab in both partial digital and full analog: my brother has the ELP triple-live album on vinyl and I have it on CD. Given the care that the band put into its recordings, this might not be a bad place to start. But then, it would still be the opinion of just one set of ears...