Just because the Studer tape machine is analog does not have to mean it has a great sound. I have often recorded on 70's and 80's tape machines which sounded very close to digital (very clean). I would also prefer analog over digital recording but if you are working with the wrong engineer, you will still have problems. You can get a more analog sound with the right engineer, recording digital, than with the wrong engineer recording analog. If you want a specific sound and not that mainstream hi-fi modern sound you have to be very clear about your references and be sure that the engineer is on the same page. Personally I have experienced that working with 24 track tape machines is closer to digital than working with a 4 or 8 track machine from the 60's or early 70's. Of course it completely depends on the sound you want..