4558 is a pretty generic bipolar opamp.
A good safe substitute that has much better output drive current (important in EQ circuits), good phase margin (ditto),
lower offset, better bandwidth, yet not really suseptible to oscillating in bad PC layouts is the Analog Devices OP-275.
It's noise characteristics are not enough worse to worry about, except perhaps as the summing amp, in which case use the 5532 or if you feel rich use a Linear Technology LT1468. Or whatever their dual version is.
The 5532 is also a reasonable substitute. Not classy in today's "what IC is hot" debates, but a good TI '32 is cheap, fast, quiet and reliable.
Remember, the 4558 is a $.15 opamp
designed to be a cheap and dirty plug and play audio device, the 5532 is $.45 and was designed for serious audio. Even in the '70's they knew what was important at Philips where it was designed. In a Mackie, or Kelsey, or other commodity mixer, that couple of pennies mattered, but it doesn't to the modifier.