from a sonic perspective "smooth" doesn't present itself as something I am attempting to ascertain, or looking for in a amp? I have listened to many amps, I never recall saying "that amp is so smooth". I'm not trying to sound disrespectful. I think its a useless adjective when evaluating sonics of a component. Do you think a sound engineer says "we have to do it again, not smooth enough" IMO, Its a pointless term.@jakesnak Its not. In fact, if the amp isn't sounding nice and smooth, to me its an indication of higher ordered harmonics and I will be looking for a reason to work on the circuit 'till I have it right. It sounds to me like you've not experienced an amp that is actually smooth. My recommendation is to listen to the difference between a solid state amp and a tube amp (one in good condition of good design; not something hauled from a 1960s console...). If you've only heard solid state, you might have heard hundreds of them and not heard anything to justify the term. There are smooth sounding solid state amps but they IMO/IME are quite rare.
One qualifier: When/if you are interested enough to do this as an audition, make sure both amps are happy with the loudspeaker used. If that is the case, you won't have any problem hearing this difference- its literally why tube amps are still around after tubes were declared 'obsolete' back in the 1960s. Normally when the prior art is succeeded, it goes away. But tubes are still in production; they have been 'obsolete' now for longer than they were the only game in town! That's happening for a reason and that reason is literally 'smoothness'.