Hey, you're getting there. The amp likely had multiple issues when you got it. Every old Gibson I have bought - same thing. So don't kick yourself.
LBL - I've never used one, relying on a variac, and carefully going over the circuit before powering. I'm not suggesting you do the same, just that I don't have that particular experience.
Variac - this is what I do, assuming the amp has fresh or known good filter caps. I plug in the speaker and a guitar. With no tubes in I check to see that I have the right heater voltages. Then I put all the tubes in and plug the amp into the variac. I start at about 40V and if nothing scares me, I bring up the power in stages; 10-20v at a time; at about 80volts I turn up the volume a bit and make sure I'm getting sound. If my most common mistake shows itself now the amp sounds like a dive bomb - missed/cold solder joint. All ok I continue up to about 110 and play the amp for a bit, testing the controls. All ok, I go up to 115v as that is my typical house current here. Then its off the variac and plug er in.
So that's what I do. Some others I know bring an amp up much more slowly on the variac. The idea, I think, is that it is good for the filter caps, even if they are new. But, I am kind of an impatient bloke, probably only taking about 5-10 minutes total for the variac procedure. If I am trying to reuse old filters (I often find old Mallory cap cans to be OK) I take my time with the variac.