Graduate student Kole Butler鈥檚 vocal performances go viral on TikTok
by Neil Harvey
October 13, 2023
Back in February, Kole Butler was more than satisfied that his TikTok account 鈥 @kolfege 鈥 had gained upwards of 2,000 followers since he started posting clips in earnest last year.
Butler is a graduate student in Radford鈥檚 music department, studying core conducting and music education; he鈥檚 also a teaching assistant and longtime choral conductor. Many of his TikTok videos have been recorded in his classroom in the Douglas and Beatrice Covington Center for Visual and Performing Arts and they show him warming up with his students by performing vocal exercises or offering snatches of music or encouragement.
Over the winter, through his early four-figure audience, his clips started to draw feedback in real life, too. While attending a choir directors鈥 conference in Cincinnati, Ohio, Butler was approached by strangers who recognized him and wanted to grab selfies with him.
鈥淚 was just sitting there alone, waiting on some friends, and some people came over to me, and they鈥檙e like, 鈥極h, my gosh, are you Kole from TikTok?鈥欌 he recently recalled. 鈥淎nd that was just from having 2,000 followers.鈥
So it鈥檚 not hard to imagine Butler鈥檚 growing surprise and elation as his follower count rose dramatically across the spring and summer, quickly climbing to six figures over the past several months.
As of mid-October, his audience totaled about 234,700 fans. Or, basically, 2,000 multiplied by 117.35.
At that rate, Butler is well on track to crack a cool quarter of a million followers before the end of the year.
Many of his clips have been watched thousands upon thousands of times, and some have risen staggeringly higher: A snippet of Butler and his students sampling The Chordettes鈥 golden-oldie earworm 鈥淟ollipop鈥 has reached 4.2 million views, and his 鈥淔lower Canon鈥 marks his current 鈥渉igh score鈥 with 10.5 million.
鈥淭his has kind of taken me by storm and sometimes I feel a little overwhelmed by it,鈥 he recently said. 鈥淚 am not a social media influencer and that is not a goal for me. I just kind of wanted to share how amazing the students I get to work with are.鈥
Butler, a native of Parkersburg, West Virginia, said there was no 鈥渂ig bang鈥 that caused his clips to take off, no seismic boost from a larger social media account, just a unified love of music.
鈥淭ikTok is very interesting; it's all algorithm-related,鈥 he explained. 鈥淚 think my videos started blowing up more because it was a choir video, and people who like choir started watching, and I think that spun it down a rabbit hole.
鈥淚 also think most people interact with them just because they want to, like, be a part of a music-making process again,鈥 Butler added. 鈥淎t least, that鈥檚 what the majority of people say in the comments. I think most of the people that watch the videos want to sing again and maybe haven鈥檛 in a while, so I鈥檓 glad we鈥檙e able to help foster that kind of experience.鈥
That鈥檚 an enthusiasm he鈥檚 witnessed as a teaching assistant, as he makes his videos with members of the core ensembles and his core music education classes: 鈥淭he students that I get to work with, especially, it鈥檚 been really great to see their confidence blossom and to be part of that process. Because, I mean, if it weren't for them, I would just be this random person moving his arms around.鈥
As a means of paying his success forward, he also threw out a plug for 澳门老奇人论坛 Choir鈥檚 TikTok account, @RUchoirs.
鈥淚 have loved my time at Radford,鈥 Butler concluded. 鈥淐oming from a really big school like West Virginia University, it鈥檚 been extremely different, but because of my teacher 鈥 Associate Professor of Music and Director of Choral Activities Meredith Bowen 鈥 and the students that I get to work with every single day, my time has been amazing here.
鈥淚 really appreciate being a Highlander, and I鈥檓 excited to see where everything I've learned takes me.鈥