I would check for brake fluid leaking from the cylinders. IIRC, brake fluid can act like cutting oil. If the drums aren't 'perfectly' round, the shoes touching part of the drum should cause annoying shaking.
Aside, of course, after having an improperly balanced pintle-hitch trailer whip the rear end of the truck side-to-side (like 8' total) on the curvy WV turnpike, the excessive rear end hop caused by the brakes (at a later date) was nothing. The former caused a little sphincter pucker; the later latter was just, "Oh, I should look into that." First time (and hopefully last time) I ever saw cars and semis 1/8 mile behind me stand on their brakes that hard and quick. Fortunately, WVDOT up the road had a few sacks of quickcrete that had gotten wet; they were great ballast. Seven of those in the front of the trailer settled it down right proper; 70 MPH up and down hill it stayed nice and stable. (I was hauling Dad's 55' crank-up ham tower to my brother in MI, and didn't have enough weight forward of the trailer axle. This is why 60% of the weight must be forward of the axle.) Yes, my road trips (and even commutes) have often been adventures, even going back to '81 or so.
A hug and kiss wouldn't be inappropriate unless you're terrified of COVID-19. I'm not; I adhere to Mom's adage, "Expose me early, expose me often." I prolly had it back in November and may've had it a couple times more since. (Been going to the local watering hole 3-4 evenings a week all along; I play being the junior bar-back/stock-boy/maintenance-man.) Get it while it's weak. And keep getting it before it changes too much for my immune system to recognise it. Besides, my niece's husband is wont to hug and kiss us lads on her side, so I'm used to such, mmm, endearing behaviour. But it's OK; he's known for eating 5 lbs. of plain steak in a sitting washed down with a fine single malt. Come to think of it, he doesn't drink much of anything else, not even water.