What is behind a "warm" or "vinyl"sound?


I found an interesting article in The Saturday Toronto Star's entertainment section on the resurgence of vinyl.

What I found most interesting in this article was a description of why people describe vinyl as "warm". Peter J Moore, the famous producer/mastering engineer of the legendary one microphone recording of the Cowboy Junkies' Trinity Sessions recording says it all comes down to the fact that humans do not like square waves - ie. when you go from super quiet to super loud at no time at all. He gives the example that if someone was to slap two pieces of wood together right beside your ear would be about the only time one would feel a square wave - and that would make you jump right out of your skin! He says digital, particularly MP3s reproduce square waves like crazy, which triggers fear which also produces fatigue. He says if those same two pieces of wood were slapped together across the room, the square wave would be rounded off by the time the sound reached our ears. Turntables cannot reproduce square waves due to through time it takes for sound to get though the length of wire and the magnet that the wire is wrapped around in the cartridge. By the time the signal gets through that the sharpness, he ugliness, has been rounded and that, he says, is what people are talking about when they describe vinyl as "warm" sounding. Interesting!

I find there are a bunch of digital manufacturers, like Lumin, that are striving for a vinyl sound. I wonder if they are somehow rounding off the square waves in the digital signal to do so? If this is the case, "perfect" reproduction may NOT actually be beneficial to the sound...at least for someone who really wants a vinyl sound experience. Better may not actually be better when it comes to digital sound reproduction!
camb

Showing 3 responses by charles1dad

Interesting perspective but there's one problem. There are digital sources that sound pleasingly naturally round and conversely there are some analog sources that can sound edgy, hard and sharpe (cartridge choice? ). There's definitely overlap involved with both approaches.
Charles,
Steve,
I agree with your list of the four requirements for excellent digital sound. Get these parameters right and you'll have very natural sound, if these aren't addressed properly the sound suffers. I/V conversion and power supply execution aren't fully appreciated for their major influence. Also less filtering is the right pathway toward a more natural presentation.
Hi Al,
How ironic given the article author's premise, that in fact digital can round the square wave more than a cartridge in some cases. This is opposite of his explanation. Thanks for your input.
Charles,