These (and a few other similar schemes) were widely used in the early days of tube-built computers. I recall seeing a few of those in my wanderings on Radio Row, when I was a kid, in NYC, where the WTC was built. If you think about it, one tube plus those components is in essence a primitive integrated circuit. One could easily envision a complete flip-flop built with a 12A*7 or any number of twin triodes. I think 12AT7/6201 were widely used. I'm not aware of audio stuff built using those plug-in things, but it's certainly possible. There are stories from those days of people with shopping carts of tubes and probably those kinds of plug ins, walking around the ENIACs and on standby, replacing tubes all the time.
There are some positives and negatives. Obviously, the main chassis wiring can be super clean...but all of your plates are pretty close to all of your grids...and, if one or more preamp stages was TOO noisy and you COULD NOT get rid of the noise except via building in the more conventional way...keep leads close to chassis, separate grids from plates....than that stage, you would have to build with the parts in the chassis....so what's the point of having 3 stages built with the plug ins and one stage built in the chassis? Net-net-net, I think building that way would increase, not decrease noise. I believe the main idea behind that form factor is to provide quick replaceability, just like troubleshooting, today (and for the past 20+ years) is generally a matter of isolating an issue to one board and swapping it out, then fixing it back in the shop or sending back to the mfr.