The Cashville Trash Pandas
The one-stop shop for the busy music business person who needs to know who the hell these Cashville Trash Panda characters are now, before some other band hounds them for attention.
We aim to please!
Clif Doyal
Clif Doyal Agency
CDA Publicity & Marketing
615-319-1863
Who We Think We Are
The Cashville Trash Pandas are here for it. All of it. Well, maybe not all of it. Some of it.
OK, they have a short list of demands.
“I mean, at the end of the day, I’m an oddity. I’ve had the benefit of some education and culture, sure, but I come from very salt of the earth stock, really. So, basically, it’s a whole stranger in a strange land sort of thing. Oh, wait, what was the question? Oh, cheeses…right… hmmm…”. That’s singer and guitarist Jubal Lee Young.
Quite the character, you’d like him!
Jubal is also the son of the legendary Steve Young. Not that one. The composer of “Seven Bridges Road” and “Lonesome, On’ry, & Mean”. That one.
“A lot of people see our songs as negative, but I look at them as positive in the sense that it’s something even Pope Leo would quote, cuz how else can you affect change other than to write a good punk rock song?" says, Chuck Sigler, Drummer, Esquire.
Max Williams, the newly added guitarist, just grins and shrugs. He’s feeling a little Ringo.
“Cool!” bassist, Mike Carty, declares.
And cool, it is!
Sigler and Young met and played in a band while they attended the same high school in Nashville, Tennessee in the mid 1980s. That young band only dissolved when Chuck moved to Mississippi for college, which we will come back to shortly.
Many years, later – through another high school classmate who owned a seasonal haunted attraction in town – Jubal met bassist Mike Carty, who may or may not have been responsible for literally scaring the shit out of some haunted house visitors, at some point. We may never know. Forensics were inconclusive.
“I guess you could say, without that high school, which I hated, we wouldn’t be here. Though, I don’t hate it for that, I rather appreciate that, but there were other things… yeah... fuck that place.” says, Young.
Chuck Sigler and Max Williams also have a musical history, as they are both also members of the legendary Kudzu Kings out of Oxford, Mississippi. Sigler joined the Kudzu Kings while in college in the early ‘90s. I told you we’d get back to this! See?
A lot of life, and music, and things, and stuff later, and now these four young... ish... lads –Young, Sigler, Carty, and Williams – have formed a veritable neo cowpunk outlaw country rock supergroup. I said what I said! I don’t know what to call it either, but it’s good. It’s raw. It’s real. It’s twangy, but it rocks. It’s perfect. It’s now. It’s needed.
“Kids, find a band that makes you feel like bands made us feel when we were young. Maybe we can even be one? The late 1960s through 1980s stuff we came up on was real, and accessible.” says Jubal Lee Young. “By that, I mean, you could make some version of it with cheap ass instruments, a couple of friends, and a garage. It had something to say. It was rebellious. It was good for you! So, go annoy the neighbors, get the cops called, get out there and make some noise! Tell some old people how lame they are! Rock and roll, kids! We need it now more than ever!”
Turns out the only real demand they have is for you to rock!
The Cashville Trash Pandas are currently putting the final touches on their debut album.
Coming in 2026!
We create a particular brand of twangy rock and roll with a social conscience and an undying punk attitude. But not 100% of the time. We also like to sing about dumber stuff than that. Solidly Gen X. We were 30 at 10, and were still 30 at 50. Tap in with us. The world needs it.
The Album
Private SoundCloud for Previewing.
The Album Cover