Hmmm. Too many disagree. First, many high end designers use tricks like pulling the opamp's class B output stage down so it runs class A. Not every opamp can do this! In a sense, the designer is "hacking" the opamp to get a better sonic result.
I read a wonderful article authored by a tube amp designer where he discussed the feedback problem (s). His primary point was that designers with a huge amount of open loop gain are likely to be very lazy in circuit design because the feedback will fix it. Indeed the whole concept of the opamp is that they behave almost at the theoretical "ideal" opamp model that practical limitations (like the author cited an opamp headphone amp driving 60 ohm phones) get ignored. If we know one thing about audio, there is a difference between theory and the real thing.
Do all opamps sound alike? I can't comment. Do I think a 2 triode line stage preamp sounds better than an opamp preamp? Yes. Why is is better? Which is the simple design? Which would you think best fits "less is more"?
Did any of you ever own the Dynaco PAT5? I had a PAT4 (all discrete) in college, but switched to a PAT 5 (one opamp in line stage) when I scored a big used system. The PAT 5 was brighter, and I didn't like it. Since I had sold the PAT 4, I moved on to the APT Holman preamp. Now I had more opamps in the signal path, but the sound made me happy for many years. More is more could be the lesson here, or the opamps may have been better, OR, the designer used care in designing the whole amp and didn't fall into lazy traps. I doubt we could measure or analyze these 3 preamps enough to learn what we might about opamps vis a vis audio, but I bet a bunch of you know and experienced exactly what I am describing.