Bill Cabage: The Four-Band Man Who's Been Keeping Blount County Music Alive for 50 Years
Lee sits down with Bill Cabbage and special cohost Shelby Shankland (who's running for Blount County Clerk, by the way), and if you're wondering how one man can be in four different bands without losing his mind, Bill's got it figured out. From Pistol Creek Catch of the Day to his Western swing combo with the Cats Away, this man's been the backbone of East Tennessee music since the Nixon administration.
Bill's the guy who learned guitar from Marvin Russell (like every other guitarist his age in Maryville), cut his teeth on Beatles songbooks, and somehow turned a bass drum gig in the Everett High School marching band into a five-decade musical career. He's played everything from timpani to car horns (yes, actual car horns for a bluegrass album), and he's still making about the same money he made in 1975. But hey, where else you gonna spend your retirement funds – golf?
We get two live performances showcasing Bill's fingerpicking skills that would make Chet Atkins proud, plus stories about Roger Miller at the old Hillbilly Homecoming, jamming at Jay Clark's New Year's Eve parties, and how he ended up president of the Sam Houston Schoolhouse board just by sticking around long enough.
Bill's also teaching songwriting workshops with Music for Seniors, proving that if you don't have money for sheet music, just write your own songs – worked for Roger Miller, working for him. Plus, he spills the secret to managing multiple bands: keep 'em separate, stay eclectic, and remember that lowering expectations is always a good strategy.
From teaching seniors to jam sessions with Griffin Vann, Bill Cabbage represents everything authentic about Blount County's music scene. He's the guy who shows up, plugs in, and makes it happen – whether it's at the library, Behind the Barn, or TriHop.
Real talk from a real Blount county music veteran who's seen it all and is still having a ball.