Not exactly. I know the difference, but it’s hard to explain. Ok imagine that you have a glass of water. The more water you put in, the more water there is in the glass. It could be around 200ml, or 250ml, or 233.456ml or anything in between. You drink a sip and hey! there’s less water left in the glass. And if you were to chemically analyse the water, you’d actually find some salt or other minerals in it. Often harmful ones. But it still tastes great. Now imagine a computer tries to recreate the same glass of water. It drops exactly 160ml of Hydrogen and 80ml of Oxygen in a sterilized glass, making it preceicely 240ml of pure water. You can tweak that, always adding 2 parts of hydrogen per 1 part of oxygen, and end up with 241.6 or even 241.612ml of water if you want. And it will taste perfect and have no salt or anything else in it. But some people may notice the difference (or so they say). Digital audio has come a long way since the “hollow” mp3s of the 90s. There is such a wide range of frequencies in modern digital recordings that no human ear can honestly say it can hear the difference. I have been a musician all my life and I can’t. But some of us still want to be “traditional” and keep that “good old days” feeling. Yes, there is magic in analogue too.