Same. As a data scientist, I have seen multiple 'analytics workbench' solutions come, go and occasionally stay - Clementine (what is now IBM SPSS), Stata, SAS and its many variants, Statistica and in the recent years, tools built off and designed to make working with data using Python/R.
But, the common workhorse tool that has stayed strong through all these has been the common SQL. Elegant, simple, powerful and thoroughly reliable, it is my primary go-to tool. In an otherwise changing ecosystem, its simplicity and reliability is a boon. Yes, it is primarily because of the nostalgic familiarity but I also believe it continues to be extremely powerful, one that will serve you very well.
But, the common workhorse tool that has stayed strong through all these has been the common SQL. Elegant, simple, powerful and thoroughly reliable, it is my primary go-to tool. In an otherwise changing ecosystem, its simplicity and reliability is a boon. Yes, it is primarily because of the nostalgic familiarity but I also believe it continues to be extremely powerful, one that will serve you very well.