Do you even listen to music?:) I have about 8,000 LPs and not one is Nina Simone, so yes...
Many tube amps do not have a decently flat frequency response under real loads (just look at the Stereophile graphs - they are often horrible). Often their response is tweeked to appeal to the subjective audiophile who thinks his hearing can beat any audio analyzer from the likes of Audio Precision or DScope.This statement is not accurate. Most tube amps are intended to act as voltage sources and so do quite well on such tests. But many tube amps are not intended to be voltage sources out of intention- and of course part of that is they are not intended to be used with speakers that expect that amp to be a voltage source. The 'tweaked' statement in the post is entirely false. This is a topic worthy of its own thread.
The difference does pose the question what the aim is of good audio equipement: the (impossible) recreation of a live event, given the physical limitations, or something else.The best model I've come up with to describe how a two channel system works is to imagine that the room and its stereo is a sort of time travel machine ala Dr. Who, that will allow your room to be 'grafted' in the performance space of the original event. For this reason you cannot hear what is around you, but you can hear what is in front of you just as if your room was hovering in space in front of the musical event.