... would like to get confirmation from someone who really knows.
Go over to the Asylum and you'll find many who really know. They won't of course know the same thing, but they will be certain. :^)
Try it yourself, and you can be one of them. You can even be better than most of them.
Seriously, try it with a TX2352 in series, again with a TX2352 in shunt, and again with TX2352's in both positions. Repeat this at several volume settings, since it may depend on which resistor is larger. Then you can make a conclusion about the TX2352 in combination with whatever cheaper resistor you used.
If you want to be a guru, you can then apply this conclusion to all other resistor combinations, for example by dividing resistor into "good" and "bad" types. But if you want real answers rather than unfounded certainty, you'll have to repeat the experiment with other combinations of resistors. And of course if you want it to be applicable to other people's ears and brains, you'll have to include an adequate sample of those other people.
Incidentally, there is plenty of scientific evidence that you must do the listening tests without knowing which combination is which, lest your unconscious mind lead you to conclusions based on your expectations rather than the actual perception.
Nobody does the complete experiment because it's way too expensive and time-consuming.
OK, so I'm being a little silly here. But the point I'm trying to make is, nobody really knows, certainly not those who profess most loudly to know. Also I want to make the point that you can't rely on theory, even plausible theories (such as those mentioned my myself and others in that other thread), to make conclusions about something you have not heard yourself. Not until the theories are substantiated. All components including resistors have imperfections, but there is precious little scientific evidence as to which of them (if any) are correlated with subjective impressions. I don't doubt others' experiences, or that some components sound better than others in particular situations - I've heard those things too many times, and too clearly, to have any doubt about it. But I am deeply skeptical about the various theories purporting to explain those effects.