This won't have much effect on gain. Really all you're doing is moving the operating point up and down the load line. Yes, as you increase current, B+ will drop a little, but not enough to have much effect. To decrease gain, you want to steepen the load line (make it more vertical). You can do this by lowering B+ and lowering the value of the plate resistor. The load line is plotted by selecting your B+. That is the right most point of the load line (red). The second coordinate is B+/Ra (where Ra is the plate resistor.... roughly). That's the left most point of the load line. The 2 blue horizontal lines show the approximate range you're describing. Neg bias/current=cathode resistor. The blue vertical lines show Vout=55V for 1V of swing Vin. It doesn't matter where you are on the load line, gain will be the same. What does change is maximum output. I didn't show this but at -1, you can get roughly -75V to +100V out. For -1.5V you get approximately - 100V to +75V. It might add some nice quality, but it's gonna be very slight.
If I were gonna fill an extra hole, I'd use a switch and select between several different cathode bypass caps, .68, 2.2, 5, 15, 22 uFs. That will make for a nice bass contour control.
-Richard