I am going to go out on a limb and be the first and say "no, never".
But I think it's semantics.
Have you ever been in a situation where you released a song, and went back to listen to it some time later only to cringe? I'm not just talking thinking "meh, it could be better", but honest dislike.
"...released a song..." is the key part of this as in something was FINISHED.
There are things you "like" because you're happy you made something.
Those are the earliest creations where you are just happy to be making music and LOVE EVERYTHING YOU DO.
You know, where you say to yourself "I can't believe I made that!"
Upon release, I can only see a small number of possibilities.
1) I love it and think it will help define me.
2) I don't like it, but everyone else does
3) I don't like it, but it's the kind of stuff that other people ***should like*** [the true source of empty, formulaic and usually weak music]
4) I don't like it but business dictates I submit my work.
5) I am unsure and don't know what will happen.
Letting music sit and marinate and age is the answer to most of these concerns.
When I started doing music, there wasn't a choice. I couldn't make a song on Friday and be calling it my new single on Saturday.
People (mostly rappers to be specific) like their most recent material most and mistake that feeling for meaning best.
As a future producer, you should already be able to tell WHAT draws you to a piece of music. And whatever it was, it shouldn't change over time.
That should still work on you years later.
It's when you like a track because of something about its creation that a song could easily fall off with repeat listens.
"Yo, I love this track. I finally nailed that drum roll style!"
"That's the first track I made using...."
"Yep that's my first track using 808s....hear that? I love that track"
When using 808s is no longer the novelty, what do you really have?
You get the idea.
As far as growing and evolving is concerned, there are things I did then that I wouldn't do now- sounds I wouldn't use, even things I wouldn't say, but the reflection is mostly a changing sensibility, not wack or dislike from looking back. When that occurs, it's usually one of those 5 reasons.
That's my opinion on this.