That's your experience. Others have had different experiences. There's one thing you should never do:
Play a reference tone track from a test LP. Then play the same tone from a test CD or generated by a program. I assure you that the difference is not subtle. Then realise that the wow, flutter, noise, scrape modulation etc that you hear on the LP version is present in every piece of music you play on that turntable. If it can't get a simple single tone correct, how can it possibly do better on complex signals like music? But as I said, don't do it. It's like learning to recognise the effects of MP3 encoding. Once the illusion is shattered, you'll never be content with it again.
I should point out that I'm not anti-vinyl. I enjoyed state-of-the-art LP equipment when I was young and could afford to spend all my spare income on gear. I still have a few hundred LPs that I'll never part with because they were never re-released on CD. I'm aware of vinyl shortcomings, but I can still enjoy the music.