Les Butler marks 50 years in Southern Gospel music with a Nashville celebration

AMY TURNER

Perhaps he wasn’t expecting a crowd. But then again, Les Butler has never quite understood the depth of his own reach.

When REAL Southern Gospel Radio threw open the doors of its Nashville-area studios to honour the man who has spent half a century shaping the sound, the stories, and the soul of Southern Gospel music, people came from everywhere. Florida. Michigan. Places in between that don’t always make it onto the itinerary unless something genuinely matters. And for the community that calls this genre home, Les Butler genuinely matters.

The Open House was billed as a celebration, and it delivered on that promise. There was food, laughter, and a commemorative cake decorated with a caricature of Butler himself, the kind of small, affectionate detail that tells you everything about how people feel about someone. Industry leaders, recording artists, radio staff, and loyal listeners filed through the studio, each one carrying a version of the same story: that Les Butler changed something for them, opened a door, championed a career, or simply kept the music playing when it needed someone to keep the music playing.

Among those who showed up were Tom and Rebecca Peck, Eddie Crook, Nick Bruno, and Lem Kinslow, names that carry weight in Southern Gospel circles. Their presence underscored what the occasion already made plain: this wasn’t a courtesy appearance kind of crowd. These were people who meant it.

“Fifty years of service is an extraordinary accomplishment,” said attendees throughout the day, a phrase that sounds simple until you start thinking about what fifty years actually looks like. It looks like thousands of broadcasts. It looks like artists who needed someone in their corner finding one. It looks like an audience that might never have discovered this music being handed a reason to love it.

Butler’s career spans broadcasting, publishing, artist development, and ministry, a range that speaks less to ambition than to a particular kind of restlessness that comes from caring deeply about something. Southern Gospel has always occupied a specific, sometimes underestimated corner of American music, rooted in faith and community and a vocal tradition that goes back generations. Butler understood that corner, respected it, and spent five decades refusing to let the world overlook it.

In the week leading up to the celebration, he received a wave of messages and videos from across the industry, congratulating him on the milestone. The volume of it said something that no single tribute could.

Some people become indispensable to a world not by dominating it but by serving it consistently, quietly, and with genuine conviction. Southern Gospel has that in Les Butler. And on a warm afternoon in Nashville, with the cake cut and the stories still going, fifty years felt like both a long time and, somehow, just the beginning.

Les Butler to be inducted into Tri-State Gospel Music Hall of Fame

TEXAS GOSPEL STAFF

Les Butler, owner of REAL Southern Gospel Radio, will be inducted into the Tri-State Gospel Music Hall of Fame on Aug. 1, 2026. The announcement came during a phone call on March 25 from chairman and CEO Will Dickerson.

The organization honours individuals who have made strong contributions to gospel music across Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee. Butler’s induction follows a long career in broadcasting and music promotion that has spanned five decades.

Butler said the milestone caused him to reflect on his years in radio. He noted that he began working in Southern Gospel Radio 50 years ago and has spent 48 consecutive years in that field. During that time, he interviewed nearly every member of the Southern Gospel Music Association Hall of Fame. His interviews also extended beyond music, including figures such as former U.S. president George W. Bush, former attorney general John Ashcroft, Harlem Globetrotters player Meadowlark Lemon, New York Yankees pitcher Andy Pettitte, and the cast of The Waltons.

He also recalled personal moments with well-known figures in gospel music, including time spent with Bill Gaither and Vestal Goodman. Butler said these experiences were meaningful, but he placed greater value on hearing from listeners who said his work made a difference in their lives.

Throughout his career, Butler has held several roles in the industry. He spent 20 years with Singing News Magazine, including serving as publisher. He also worked for 20 years as general manager and daily host on the Solid Gospel Radio Network. In addition, he served on boards connected to the Southern Gospel Music Association, Southern Gospel Music Guild, and the National Quartet Convention.

His work has included hosting the Southern Gospel Channel on Delta Airlines’ radio network and receiving a March of Dimes AIR Award as a disc jockey. Butler founded Butler Music Group and owns Family Music Group. Through FMG Radio Promotions, he helped promote dozens of songs that reached No. 1 in Singing News charts.

As a producer, Butler worked on multiple No. 1 songs, including a run of 10 consecutive chart-topping releases on the Singing News Bluegrass Chart with Heaven’s Mountain Band. He has also performed as a musician on several Top 10 songs, including those that reached No. 1.

Butler is also the founder of the Old Time Preachers Quartet and the REAL Southern Gospel Radio Network. His work has earned multiple Diamond Awards, as well as awards from AGM and SGN, along with several nominations for the Singing News Fan Awards.

In recent days, Butler said he learned that he and his station were named among the Top 10 in the Singing News Fan Awards. He described both that recognition and the upcoming Hall of Fame induction as unexpected developments in a career he said still feels active and ongoing.

Good News! Les Butler is back home after COVID-19 hospital stay

William Desjardins

We are very happy to share with you that Les Butler of the Old Time Preacher’s Quartet is back at his home after spending weeks at Stonecrest Medical Center in Smyrna, TN with COVID-19 and pneumonia. Les is a co-founder, baritone, pianist and manager of the quartet. He has been back at his house since Dec. 9.  Sorry about just now letting you know, we just found out ourselves.

Less spent some time on Facebook Live to share some time with Southern Gospel fans.

Less spent 44 days in the hospital. Throughout his stay he made occasional posts to social media to let family and fans know what was going on. 

We hope you have time to listen to Les’ entire Facebook live. He has some good things to say about the importance of prayer.