MadKing, I think a lot of us who have been brewing for a while are seeking the same. I have been brewing for 16 years with a slant towards German styles. I know you do not want to discuss LODO, but it really is kind of the final frontier in a way. You probably have been to Germany or Belgium and realized the beers just taste different in country. What you are searching for is the best beer in the world type of flavor. It does not come easy. Not every German or Belgium brewery is Low oxygen but they do have 1000s of years of process in the learning. In my opinion, low oxygen is a big part of it.
I have just started experimenting with the techniques. I will give you an easy way to experiment if you keg. Just do these two things on your next brew and see if you have any improvements:
Boil your mash and sparge water for 5 minutes and cool down right before use. Underlet your mash by adding the water slowly to the grain instead of adding grain to the water.
Naturally carbonate your kegs with fermenting wort. Easy, just transfer to your keg with 1 plato left in fermentation. Having a spunding valve helps monitor this but many do it without. The fermenting wort will finish in the keg at fermentation temps, scavenge any oxygen and create the carbonation all in one easy step. Then move the keg to your fridge for lagering/serving.
As Schematix stated, I do not see the emotion around this stuff. You are just trying to preserve the malt/grain flavors all the way through the process. It is not as easy as relax and have a homebrew (which is fine) but if you have every been around Germans or German breweries, the easy road is not part of the list of options
I did this test on a hefeweizen and it is the best beer of the style I have ever made. It had 'that something' that I taste over there that I never taste here. Sort of a missing fullness in the malt profile. You know you are on the right track if you taste your cooled wort from the boil kettle and you taste honey notes.
Best of luck in whatever you try.