Sorry I should have explained better. I noticed the wire /solder joint originally, because of the looks and orientation. You could tell it was done with the board mounted in the chassis, as in the wire wasn't coming through on the under side of the board and there was a large gob of solder on the top. I checked it, it didn't come off at first. Flipping the board must have flexed the last couple strands in the wire that were holding on and it broke. When I removed the old solder, the wire pieces were just sitting in the solder on the top of the board. Obviously with plated through holes on the pcb this can work fine. But it looked like in the process of stripping that wire (just a guess) the exposed threads of wire got flexed enough to break some, leaving the others weak.
Honestly I don't think this was the original issue, just a poor job done waiting to break.
I checked all the cathode components, DC coupling caps, and some filtering components in the preamp. So in checking, any cracked solder was addressed. I also checked all the solder joints on the bottom of the board for visual issues (I know you can't always see the issue) and resoldered some that didn't look ideal.
I also found a 2n6426 whose base pin was cracked, but until I flexed it slight to see the numbers on it, it looked fine. This transistor controlled a relay that switches a .047 cap in parallel with the .022 for DC coupling off of V1b's plate.
Other then that, I didn't find anything that was the obvious problem contributing to the hum and oscillation.
I was hoping to find the culprit outright, but no such luck.