Ok, the most important thing with the scope is not to use a 1X probe on a high voltage tube amp node.

As HBP is suggesting, stay on low voltage signal points unless you have a high voltage probe. Having said this, I have to invoke Hoffman's rule. If it was wired right and all components were good it would be working. Something is wired wrong, has an incorrect value or is bad. Before scoping, I'd check out the schematic and layout to your build for errors.
V4A is the tube section which controls the tremolo. So concentrate on that tube section and everything connected to it.
On pin 1 of V4 you've got the 0.022uf cap, the 1 meg resistor and the 220K resistor. the 0.022uf cap is connected to the speed control and the 0.01uf capacitor while the 220k resistor is the plate resistor for that tube section. Check the values of these components and their connections to the other components of their terminals
On pin 2 of V4 you've got the 1 meg resistor and the 0.01uf capacitor. Check their values and their connections to ground and the other points of their terminal connections
On pin 3 you've got the 3k3 reisistor the 25uf/25V capacitor and the 1 meg resistor to the jack (and via the underboard wire to the 0.01 uf capacitor). check all of those connections with your ohm meter with power off and the amp discharged. I would especially check the continuity of the underboard wire from the 1 meg resistor to the 0.01uf capacitor.
Bottom line, if the end of a component is supposed to go to ground, check the continuity to ground from that point. If one component is supposed to be connected to another, check continuity from one point to the other point. Check all values with an ohm meter for resistors and a capacitance meter for capacitors if you have one.
This is a simple circuit that oscillates the bias voltage to ground varying the power level of the power tubes. It's hanging off of the bias circuit and sucking electrons to ground at varying levels due to the oscillation set up by the charging and discharging of the three trem capacitors.