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  • Axios Nashville

    Randy Rayburn, the Nashville restaurant giant, has died

    By Nate Rau,

    1 day ago

    Randy Rayburn , the visionary restaurateur, civic leader and consummate cheerleader for all things Nashville, was found dead on Thursday. He was 74.

    The big picture: Rayburn's restaurants Sunset Grill and Midtown Cafe put him well ahead of the curve for Nashville's now-booming food scene. But his influence on Music City extended beyond his culinary accomplishments.


    • Rayburn was extremely active in Nashville Democratic politics. Every major Metro project in the last three decades, from sports venues to convention centers, came to fruition in no small part because of Rayburn's tireless support.
    • He served on the city's auditorium and convention center boards, among others.

    Case in point: Midtown Cafe functioned as Nashville's preeminent breakfast and lunch spot for power players. Everyone from mayors to Music Row executives to journalism icon John Seigenthaler regularly dined there.

    • The city's juiciest political gossip typically crossed Rayburn's ears before any reporter got the scoop.

    What they're saying: "Everybody felt like they were Randy's best friend," Wally Dietz, the city's legal director, tells Axios. "He had such a gift for that. He knew everybody and knew everything."

    • "I think it was his storytelling. He would engage people and figure out where they were, and he would always have a story that fit them. He knew so many politicians. I just think he had a special gift for connecting with people. That's it."

    Flashback: Opened in 1987, Midtown remains one of the most highly regarded restaurants in the city, especially for its brunch menu.

    • The Hillsboro Village neighborhood owes its long-running success in no small part to Rayburn, whose investments included the dinner and bar spot Sunset Grill and the nightclub and lounge Cabana.

    Growing the next generation of Nashville chefs and hospitality workers became Rayburn's moon mission.

    Zoom in: Rayburn continued to take on projects in recent years.

    Zoom out: For all of his towering accomplishments, those who knew him best say Rayburn helped people in ways that often went unseen.

    • "He was one of the most generous and selfless people I've ever known," Rayburn's friend of 50 years David Bennett tells Axios. "He did so much good for so many people that folks will never know about. He advised people like me and you, but he was always putting money into people's hands one way or the other."

    Rayburn became a father later in life, and his sons Duke and Dean gave him significantly more pride than any business accomplishment or multimillion-dollar ribbon cutting.

    • In a final demonstration of Rayburn's love of Nashville, Bennett says he wished for his ashes to be scattered from the John Seigenthaler Bridge into the Cumberland River.
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