Thanks for the replies. These help me ask additional questions. There is the mention of local negative feedback when the cathode is un-bypassed. Is there a layman description of what this would do in this position in the circuit? ie, feel, sound, ect.
I highlighted these passages from the Aiken site. If someone wants to expound, I would be interested in learning.
"Rk is the cathode resistor, which is used to develop the cathode bias voltage. The flow of cathode current through this resistor creates a voltage drop across it, resulting in a positive voltage at the cathode of the tube. Since the grid resistor references the control grid to ground potential, this positive cathode voltage creates an effective negative grid voltage with respect to the cathode, providing the bias operating point for the tube. This resistor controls the headroom of the stage (output before clipping) and linearity, or distortion level, of the stage. As the bias point is shifted, the amplifier will clip more on the top or bottom portion of the waveform. If the cathode resistor is unbypassed, this resistor also controls the stage gain to a certain extent."
"Capacitor Ck is used to bypass the cathode resistance to ground for AC signals, which results in a higher gain. Without Ck, there is negative feedback, or degeneration, which reduces the gain of the stage and increases the output impedance. If Ck is not large in comparison to Rk, it will affect the frequency response of the stage, by introducing a "shelving" response, where the stage gain is boosted at higher frequencies compared to lower frequencies. The "breakpoint" of the frequency response is controlled by the value of Ck, in conjunction with the cathode impedance."