Local jug band takes third in Minnesota competition

A 15-hour road trip and six songs later, three University of Virginia’s College at Wise students playing a jug, washboard bass and kazoo brought home third place in the Minneapolis Battle of The Jug Bands.

First-timers at the festival, the Crowe Hollerers, comprised of UVA Wise students—brothers Luke and Blane Sage of Atkins and Ashlyn Mullins of Wise—took on 14 other jug bands Sunday, Feb. 20, in the annual contest, which has been going on for about 40 years. The band was the youngest group at the event held at The Cabooze.


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Courtesy UVA Wise


A trio of UVA Wise students drove nearly 1,000 miles for an epic jug band showdown at The Cabooze.

“It was an amazing experience,” Mullins said. “The atmosphere didn’t feel competitive and everyone was interacting with each other and complementing each other’s instruments and performances.”

The band routinely performs in North Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia and Virginia.

“It was an out-of-world experience. I couldn’t believe we were playing in a major city in front of hundreds of people,” Luke Sage said. “It was super fun.”


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Courtesy UVA Wise
Art major Blane Sage, a freshman from Atkins, revs up the 1,000 plus crowd in Minneapolis Sunday night.

The trip to Minnesota was the farthest any of them had ever traveled, he said.

“We applied for the contest, not realizing it was in Minneapolis, but when we got chosen as one of 15 bands to compete, we knew we had to find a way to make it up there,” Mullins said. “The groups came from all different backgrounds. They were all also located no more than about an hour away from the competition, so they were impressed that we came from so far away.”

Bands had to perform with a jug and at least one home-made instrument. The Crowe Hollerers selected a washtub bass.


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Courtesy UVA Wise
Theater major Luke Sage of Atkins sings and jams out on his guitar.  
 

“It was a great experience overall,” Blane Sage said. “There were a lot of cool people up there, and it was fun to resurrect and revamp the sounds of the jug bands from years gone by.”

Each band had a 20-minute slot to set up, take down and play.

“We played a couple of traditional jug band songs and jugged up a Johnny Cash song,” Luke Sage said.

The band blistered through a six-song set, including “New River Blues,” a re-worked Memphis Jug Band song, “Gonna Raise a Ruckus,” which was made famous by Gus Cannon’s Jug Stompers, “K.C. Blues” by Charlie Burse and Will Shade, “Jackson” by Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash, and a pair of originals, “Mother’s Other Son,” off the Crowe Hollerers’ first album, and “Wytheville Blues,” which will be on their upcoming sophomore album.


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Courtesy UVA Wise
Junior Ashlyn Mullins of Wise plays upright bass.

During the jug band contest, Mullins, a junior theater and music performance double major, played upright bass and sang vocals. Freshman Blane Sage played guitar and sang vocals. Luke Sage, a junior theater major, who Mullins says can play “basically any instrument you can think of and can’t think of” sang vocals and played kazoo, guitar, jug, washboard, harmonica and drums.

The group is well-known for their “Crowe Hollerers’ Medicine Show,” which is fashioned after old-time medicine shows where snake-oil salesmen pitched patent medicine with a healthy side dose of singing, dancing and performing.

All three members are also part of the UVA Wise Papa Joe Smiddy Bluegrass Band, founded by UVA Wise Band Director Richard Galyean and directed by UVA Wise guitar ensemble director and instructor Chris Rose.

“The competition on Sunday was so much fun. The venue was for 1,000-plus people and it was pretty packed. It felt like a giant gig,” Mullins said. “We all loved every second of it, and if we had to drive 30 hours to do it again, we would.”