Your build looks pretty carefully done. It's hard to instruct you as to how to proceed because we don't know your skill level and we don't want to encourage newbs to poke around inside amps bearing high voltages that can be lethal. We don't know if you know what a cathode is. Not to be insulting.
Most "complete failure" episodes are something very simple; something so simple that there could be 100 different "very simple" suggestions we could make.
If you google "amp troubleshooting" you'll find numerous websites that have most of this kind of procedural stuff laid out.
http://www.geofex.com/ampdbug/ampdebug.htm <<---here's one.
Nevertheless, here are a few thoughts:
Tube heaters lit up? (duh)
Measure your power supply nodes. Please be careful and keep one hand in your pocket as you measure. If there is no lower-lower-lower succession of voltages, something isn't conducting and thus isn't working.
The cathode of every preamp tube in a Fender sits atop a paired R-C which has this function called "bypass". Without explaining what that is, both halves of the first tube in your circuit should have a small voltage on pins 3 & 8. 1.2 volts, 1.8 volts. Something like that. If those cathodes are at ZERO, that particular tube is NOT WORKING, not conducting, signal will not pass it. If those cathodes have those small voltages, they ARE working--which does
not mean the signal is reaching the tube, however. In your amp, V1 cathodes should be at those low voltages and not zero. V2 cathodes, tied together, are at about 90 volts. +/- 5 volts here is nothing to worry about)
Likewise, every plate resistor comes from a power supply "node". (R4, R11, R20, R21) VERY CAREFULLY, you can measure across any of those plate resistors and find 50-80-100 volts difference. They are all 100K except one is 82K. Any place where you find "no" or "almost no" difference across those plate R's, the tube under it is not conducting and thus is not working.
Can you get speaker buzz/noise touching the grid(s) of V2 with your meter probe? (pins 2 and 7)
I would suggest going to Doug's schematic library and getting a schemo of a Deluxe AA or AB763. Compare that side by side to your schemo and try to see how they are similar. That schemo will have a few voltage readings on it and you should be able to get a few more voltage-level clues.
http://el34world.com/charts/Schematics/files/fender/Fender_Deluxe-AA763-schematic.pdf