Yes, I am a drummer and I do exactly that - when I play live (as opposed to dead) I get the best possibly sound I can possibly get! I use 50's Istanbul K. Zildjians, calf heads that I have to tweak, vintage drums (50's & 60's Gretsch, Ludwig and Slingerland) and every moment I try to get the best sound I can get. Really, I do, and that's part of why I don't understand the whole road recording went down where a person hones his craft on stage night after night for years and when he goes into the studio on go the headphones and duct tape.
In a way, it's always comes off as incredibly disrespectful - what, you'd record a bassoonist and say "no, use this reed, it sounds better, and can you hold that thing further out?". That would be rude.
When you play "live", you play in a room. When you record, you play in a room. I've never seen the difference.