Umm ... no, I was talking about making the cathode resistor variable instead of a fixed 1100 ohms. Sorry for the lack of clarity!
With a C4S plate load, the cathode bias resistor drops a fixed voltage - it no longer functions as a DC feedback. Since the bias is fixed, and the current is fixed, the plate voltage is set by the tube parameters, which can vary +/-20% or more between tubes and will vary as the tube ages. The most effective place to adjust the plate voltage is to vary the bias voltage. In the "soft-start" board we have finally made allowance for a variable resistance in the 431 shunt regulator circuit, so that it can be used as an adjustable Zener-equivalent. The advantage of this is that the shunt-reg chip has a very low impedance and need not be bypassed.
You can substitute a variable resistor for the adjustable Zener-equivalent, but to maintain low plate resistance you have to bypass it with a capacitor. Thinking further about this today, I calculated that if the 1100 ohms is not bypassed, the effective plate resistance feeding the 2A3 grid is a bit over 30K ohms. The 2A3 Miller capacitance at the grid is about 70pF, which gives -3dB at 75kHz. That's well beyond audibility, so I would leave off the bypass cap - it will probably sound better that way.