SKOWHEGAN — Musician Scott Cole said he dedicated a song at a local venue the other night to his Uncle Gene.

The song, a traditional Christian spiritual called “I Surrender All,” was the first song he learned as a boy and he played it for his uncle when he was a kid.

“It was the first song that I learned and a couple days after I learned it Uncle Gene came over and I played it for him and he said I had perfect rhythm and he was always saying that whenever we talked about music so I thought I’d play that one.”

Scott’s Uncle Gene was Somerset County Sheriff’s Office Cpl. Eugene Cole, who was shot and killed sometime early Wednesday in Norridgewock. John Williams, 29, of Madison, was arrested Saturday on suspicion of murder. He is expected to appear in court this week to face the charge.

A court date has not be announced.

Behind the badge, Gene Cole was a family man and a music man, his brother Tom Cole said Sunday from the family kitchen in Skowhegan. Tom, 59, and Gene, 61, played music together in a local band called Borderline Express — his nickname was Geno. The brothers also did acoustic guitar acts as The Cole Brothers.

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Tom Cole, a one time prize fighter with a record of eight wins — seven by knock out — and five losses in the 154-pound class, also is an Elvis Presley impersonator whose shows have sold out the Skowhegan Opera House.

Scott Cole, 23, is the guitarist and lead vocalist for the pop-punk band, Uncle Spudd, based in Skowhegan. Their initial record release last year made the top 15 local albums of the year sold at Bull Moose Records.

“Music with Gene and I, it was huge,” Tom Cole said Sunday. “We’re brothers. We did everything together growing up. I remember sitting around and dad would play guitar and we’d all sing. Then Gene started playing guitar and we’d all sing.”

Their brothers Fred and Billy also played guitar.

“Now I’ve lost all three,” he said.

Tom said his older brother Gene started playing music at 7 years old. He said their father, Philip Cole, played guitar and “just taught us all. It was a family tradition.”

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The family played mostly classic country music.

“My grandpa gave me a guitar when I was 10 and my dad taught me my first few chords and Uncle Gene was always teaching me little things along the way,” Scott Cole said. “He talked me up so I felt like I could do it.”

As a lead guitarist, Gene played with his brother Tom in Borderline Express beginning in 1987 for more than 20 years, and after his retirement from the group in 1994, he continued to fill in for them occasionally.

“When I first joined the band, 30 years ago, it was mostly country and oldies,” Tom said. “Then as music progressed, we progressed — we played everything, playing mostly bottle clubs — Smitty’s, Melody Ranch, Fox Den and the Solon Hotel.”

Tom said the band still plays gigs around Maine.

“They played down in Chelsea last night down at Crystal Falls and they did a moment of silence and performed a song in memory of Gene,” Tom said. “I heard that you could hear a pin drop.”

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Most recently, Gene and his brother Tom, known as The Cole Brothers, played at T&B’s in Skowhegan every month.

Scott Cole’s band Uncle Spudd experienced another tragedy in recent months. The band’s bass player, Mike Spaulding’s father was murdered on July 5, 2017, on Russell Road in Madison when Carroll Tuttle Jr., 51, shot his partner, their son and Michael Spaulding, 57, before being shot to death by sheriff’s deputies.

“When everybody was around, he was the strength, I think, for everybody else,” Scott said of Mike Spaulding after his father’s death. “We’ve had some talks about it and he definitely suffered. Today is the first time I saw him and we had a good hug and we’ll probably talk a little more later.”

As for his brother’s shocking death this past week, Tom Cole would say only that the arrest of John Williams has brought a measure of healing, but not enough to fill the loss of his brother.

“Relief and the beginning of closure,” he said of the arrest and pending charges against Williams. “He was more than a brother. He was more than a friend. He was like a father figure as well.”

Doug Harlow — 612-2367

dharlow@centralmaine.com

Twitter:@Doug_Harlow

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