I can tell you right now that the tube on the left is dead. It has gone gassy and caused the getter to go white. The getter is usually a Barium based powered material that is flashed ( induction heated really quickly ) and it flashes up and onto the glass envelope as a silvery, mirror-like finish. This Barium reacts with oxygen/atmosphere when it comes into contact with it and turns white, indicating that the tube has lost its vacuum. When a tube loses its vacuum, it will burn up just like a lightbulb that loses its vacuum does; a very quick light show.
Now why it lost its vacuum is up for debate, but looking at the other tube, they have lived a hard life. I believe they were biased too hot ( as is common with EL84 amp these days ) and this caused a premature loss of life for that tube. You will need to buy another set of tubes and I suggest biasing them a little cooler.
I don't understand the hate for JJ, they are one of the better options these days and they literally supply 33.33% of the tubes in the world, if not more.
Tubes that are biased too hot will have a short life and one way to tell how hot they are biased is to look at the printing on the glass. If it was once red and has turned white or brown over time, it is literally because it is burning. If it is so hot that it is burning, it is biased too hot. That simple.
These days vendors ABUSE the living heck out of EL84's and I'm not sure why? They tend to put 350+ volts on them ( they are designed to run at 250 volts with a maximum of 300 volts on the plate ) and then proceed to bias them way too hot. They sound great for a little while until they are cooked and then they die a horrible death.
I think it is because of copy-and-paste designs. While the circuit is different, they use the same practices that were being done 50+ years ago and disregard the modern voltages and intention of making an amp. They design an amp that is destined to burn up more or less.