I don't claim to know enough about electronic circuit design to speak to the characteristics of a given op amp. For that matter, I don't know enough about circuit design to speak to many of the issues involved in using or
not using op amps in the first place, except to say that you need
something - and if it's not op amps, it's going to be discrete circuits that are going to add some (potentially appreciable) cost. It does seem worth pointing out the
drastic scarcity of processors, receivers, or source components that don't use op amps. As already mentioned, the stock DVD-3930CI (with a list price of $1500) uses them. The Anthem AVM family of surround processors (AVM20 through AVM50) and Anthem Statement processors (D1 and D2) use them. The Lexicon MC-12 uses them. (For what it's worth and in light of some of the earlier discussion here, I also thought it was interesting to note that both Anthem and Lexicon are using Burr Brown op amps - specifically either the OPA 2132 or 2134.)
A bit of googling did turn up at least one home theater component that was designed to use discrete circuits instead of op amps: Lexicon's RT-10 universal disc player. Of course, the RT-10 also had a list price of $3500 and
faired poorly in Secrets\' video benchmarks . It's successor the RT-20, with a list price of $5000, retained this audio design but improved on the video performance. I have no doubt that other op amp-free designs are out there, but if the price tags resemble the RT-10 and RT-20 I'm not going to lose much sleep over them.