I like a nice round bottom on the amp.
It's the low mids than seem to be bothering me. Muddies up the sound. not unlike the proximity effect you get with microphones.
I would still support tubenit's suggestion of lowering this post PI caps. Guaranteed less mud at the output.
Also, his suggestion of lowering the bypass cap values on the preamp gain stages would apply.
I was monkeying with the tone stack calculator and it looks like if I up the value of the mid cap (.047) I can move the scoop a little lower and deeper .For fun I'll try a .02 across the .047 cab to bump it up to .057
That's exactly where I was looking. You could experiment all the way up to .1 on the mid cap to shift the low mid scoop downward. (obviously, you meant .0
67, when you add on the .02 to the existing .047)
I'd be interested to know the value of the mid control pot and how it was wired.
Out of curiousity (and I think I've asked this before) on my UL super there's a .01 cap in parallel/bypassing the 820 ohm feedback resistor. This seems like a tone shaping cap. What exactly is it doing? Is it allowing highs through? thus damping the top end some? or the opposite?...need more coffee! 
Like any bypass cap it will allow some highs to get around the 820 ohm resistance, so those highs will remain in the feedback loop, and result in less highs at the output than if it wasn't there.
Conversely, if you were to put the cap across the 100 ohm resistor to ground it would result in less highs in the feedback loop, which would result in more highs at the output.