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THOMAS A. DORSEY (1899 -
1993)
(born July 1, 1899, Villa Rica,
Georgia; died January 23, 1993, Chicago, Illinois)
Thomas A. Dorsey learned his religion
from his Baptist minister father and piano from his music teacher
mother in Villa Rica, Georgia, where he was born July 1, 1899.
He came under the influence of local blues pianist when they moved
to Atlanta in 1910.
He and his family relocated to Chicago
during World War I where they joined the Pilgrim Baptist Church, and
he studied at the Chicago College of Composition and Arranging and
became an agent for Paramount Records.
He began his musical career known as
Georgia Tom, playing barrelhouse piano in one of Al Capone’s
Chicago speakeasies and leading Ma Rainey’s Jazz band. He
hooked up with slide guitarist Hudson Tampa Red Whittaker with whom
he recorded the best selling blues hit, "Tight Like That,"
in 1928 and wrote more than 460 Rhythm and Blues and Jazz songs.
He was soon whipped into shape to do
the Lords will. Discouraged by his own efforts to publish and
sell his songs through the old method of peddled song sheets and
dissatisfied with the treatment given composers of race music by the
music publishing industry, Dorsey became the first independent
publisher of black Gospel music with the establishment of the Dorsey
House of music in Chicago in 1932.
He also founded and became the
President of the National Convention of Gospel Choirs and Choruses.
He wrote his classic and most famous song, "Precious Lord"
in the grief following the death of his first wife in childbirth in
1932.
It since has been recorded by such
diverse artists as Mahalia Jackson, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Roy Rogers
and Dale Evans, and Elvis Presley, and was the favorite Gospel song
of both Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who asked that it be sung at
the rally he led the night before his assassination, and of
President Lyndon B. Johnson who requested that it be sung at his
funeral.
Almost equally well known is his
"Peace in the Valley," which he wrote for Mahalia Jackson
in 1937. In October of 1979, he was the first black elected to
the Nashville Songwriters International Hall of Fame.
In September 1981, his native Georgia
honored him with election to the Georgia Music Hall of Fame; in
March 1982, he was the first black elected to the Gospel Music
Association's Living Hall of Fame; in August 1982, the Thomas A.
Dorsey Archives were opened at Fisk University where his collection
joined those of W. C. Handy, George Gershwin, and the Jubilee
Singers.
Summing up his life, he says all his
work has been from God, for God, and for his people.
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