Background
Pugh was born in Memphis, Tennessee, the seventh of nine children. His father, Earnest Pugh Senior, worked at a Firestone plant in Flint, Michigan and commuted to see his family on weekends. His mother, Lillie Pearl Pugh, worked for the government and held a number of part-time jobs.
Career
She was the first to notice Pugh"s singing ability and encouraged him to sing. “Her death a few years ago hit me hard but I used that pain to inspire my writing on my last two CDs" January 2013
However, Pugh"s tenure with the ensemble was short. He enlisted in the Army and remained there for fifteen years.
He told The Washington Post that he "frequently was called on to sing at funerals.”.
After retiring from the military, Pugh held a number of positions with churches as a worship leader in Texas and Georgia. In 2001, he became a worship leader at Ebenezer AME Church in the Washington, District of Columbia area.
After seeking recording contracts from major gospel record labels and being rejected, Pugh decided to launch his own label in 2006. His first album, Earnest Pugh Live: A Worshipper"s Perspective, was released via a distribution agreement with Detroit"s Crystal Rose Records label.
The radio single Wrapped Up, Tied Up, Tangled Up rose to the Top 40 on the now defunct Radio & Records gospel radio chart and lay the foundation for his career.
He followed up the next year with a Civil Defense entitled, Seasons Change, that failed to chart. “He told me back in 2008 that he could take my single Rain on Us to number one and he did just that in less than eight weeks,” Pugh told the Miami Times. The dramatic ballad spent two weeks at #1 on Billboard"s Hot Gospel Songs chart in 2009 and cemented Pugh"s stature as Gospel"s New Leading Manitoba
The Civil Defense, Live: Rain on Us, also featured the Top-40 gospel radio hits Perfect Peace and The Great I American
In the early summer of 2011, Pugh delivered another Civil Defense titled Earnestly Yours. Douglas had Pugh re-record James Fortune"s track, I Need Your Glory.
The song shot to the Top Ten in a few weeks and stayed on the Billboard Hot Gospel Songs chart for ten weeks. The song and the Civil Defense earned Pugh extensive media coverage.
“Pugh is a pointed and slick singer (and dresser), and for most of this strong album he provides a solid center while his backup choir sings in hushed and reverent tones”, Jon Carmanica wrote in The New York Times.
In January 2012, Pugh announced that his Enterprise Project Management Music label had formed a distribution agreement with Entertainment One Distribution and would soon be signing a variety of high-profile gospel artists to record under his label banner.