..."is it true that in order to have tubes in the system, there are forms of hum, buzz, snap, crackle and pop during quiet passages? "
No. That is complete BS. And there is no need at all to use selected low noise tubes in a well designed circuit, except possibly there may be some transient benefits in a tube phono stage. But you don't want or need a phono stage. It is amazing to me how these superstitions about tubes persist among audiophiles. If a tube goes bad, yes, you can have some of those symptoms (mostly "pops"; hum and buzz are usually due to grounding or power supply problems, not gain devices). If you have "pops" or other symptoms of tube aging, you buy a new tube and fix the problem yourself. If a transistor goes bad, most typically you have no sound at all and are at the mercy of someone else to fix it who may or may not know what he/she is doing.
No. That is complete BS. And there is no need at all to use selected low noise tubes in a well designed circuit, except possibly there may be some transient benefits in a tube phono stage. But you don't want or need a phono stage. It is amazing to me how these superstitions about tubes persist among audiophiles. If a tube goes bad, yes, you can have some of those symptoms (mostly "pops"; hum and buzz are usually due to grounding or power supply problems, not gain devices). If you have "pops" or other symptoms of tube aging, you buy a new tube and fix the problem yourself. If a transistor goes bad, most typically you have no sound at all and are at the mercy of someone else to fix it who may or may not know what he/she is doing.