... I have read that carbon comps have special voodoo and that the voodoo is measurable on special ghost busters equipment. ...
It's a real thing, but only adds a small amount of distortion to
some carbon comp resistors, in
some circuit positions.
It's called "voltage coefficient of resistance" and is shown on some carbon comp data sheets (when they're being complete). Basically, when there's a lot of voltage across the resistor, it changes its resistance. So AC voltage that swings through zero has little-resistance-change near 0v but larger-resistance-change during a 100-200v peak. And even this "larger" change might not be enough ohms to make an audible difference.
This is why some will say they want carbon comp resistors for plate-loads (where voltage swing is larger) or late in the amplifier (like phase inverter load resistors, or grid bias/reference resistors of output tubes). However, having larger voltage drop across a resistor will make it noisier in some cases (some older noise-tests applied 100-150v DC across a part, then detected/amplified any AC noise present).
Myself, I mostly just use metal film resistors unless I'm repairing a vintage amp. The metal films would probably be just fine, but the vintage amp thing is trying to replace like-for-like.
Capacitors in vintage amps are a different thing; wildly different outcomes depending on the specific parts being discussed (and the tech they used in their construction).