Dorothy Love Coates (1928-2002)

December 01, 2013 
/ Contributed By: Amy Marie Scott-Zerr

Dorothy Love Coates||

Dorothy Love Coates||

Photo by Tbonecope (CC BY-SA 4.0)||

Dorothy Love Coates was an American gospel singer, songwriter, and composer. She was born Dorothy McGriff on January 30, 1928, in Birmingham, Alabama. Her minister father, Lillar McGriff, moved to the North when Coates was six, and her parents soon divorced. Thereafter, Lillar McGriff raised their six children in Birmingham. By age 10, Coates had begun playing piano at Evergreen Baptist Church in Birmingham. As a teenager, she performed with the Royal Travelers and with her siblings in the McGriff Singers, who had a weekly live radio broadcast on WJLD. She left school after the tenth grade to help support her family as a maid and a clerk. In 1946, she married her first husband, Willie Love (1925-1991) of the Fairfield Four, and the couple divorced a few years later.

In 1947, Coates joined the Original Gospel Harmonettes, a well-established, all-female group based in Birmingham. She worked with the group for much of the 1950s and 1960s, writing many of its songs. The group also included Mildred Miller, Vera Kilb, Willie Mae Newberry, Odessa Edwards, and Evelyn Starks Hardy. In 1949, the group recorded for RCA. Two years later, the group began recording for Specialty Records and, by 1959, had started recording for Savoy. The group toured throughout the South, Midwest, and East, as well as the Bahamas. The Harmonettes performed at Carnegie Hall in 1953, and later at the Apollo Theatre and Madison Square Garden.

In 1960, Dorothy Love married Carl Coates, who sang bass and played guitar for the Sensational Nightingales.  In 1961, the Harmonettes regrouped with Willie Mae Garth, Mildred Howard, Coates, Coates’s younger sister Lillian McGriff, and Cleo Kennedy. After the Harmonettes disbanded in 1970, Coates assembled the Dorothy Love Coates singers and toured Europe multiple times.

Coates was active in the Civil Rights Movement during the 1950s and 1960s. She marched with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and worked in voter registration drives. Many of her songs openly criticized racial discrimination and segregation. She sang at numerous benefit concerts and civil rights rallies and was arrested more than once for her civil rights activism. She also spoke out against the Vietnam War and experienced the Newark Riot of 1967.

Several artists have appropriated Coates’s music in various ways, including The Supremes, Wilson Pickett, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, James Cleveland, Ray Charles, Johnny Cash, Andrae Crouch, the Blackwood Brothers, Mahalia Jackson, and Clara Ward.

Coates appeared at several gospel festivals as well as the Newport Jazz Festival. She was also in two films, The Long Walk Home (1990) and Beloved (1998). Dorothy Love Coates died of heart failure on April 9, 2002, in Birmingham. She left behind two daughters, Cassandra Madison and Carletta Criss.

Author Profile

Amy Marie Scott-Zerr is an English and History major at the University of Washington in Seattle. She studies Afro-American, African, Caribbean and Black British histories and literatures, including music and film. She researches Marxism, Pan-Africanism, nationalist revolutions, gospel music, blues music, rhythm and blues music, feminism, LGBT studies, and prison abolitionism. Born and raised in Seattle, as well as Aberdeen, Washington and Hurricane, Utah, she enjoys the great outdoors. She is a graduate of Rainier Beach High School and has also attended Seattle Central Community College before coming to UW-Seattle. She gave a presentation on President Sékou Touré’s feminist poetry at the African Literature Association Conference held at Ohio University, Athens, Ohio on April 13-17, 2011. She was also an observer at the African Studies Association Annual Meeting, Nov. 18-21, 2010 in San Francisco. Most recently she has been researching the life and work of Willie Mae Thornton.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Scott-Zerr, A. (2013, December 01). Dorothy Love Coates (1928-2002). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/coates-dorothy-love-1928-2002/

Source of the Author's Information:

Bill Carpenter, “Dorothy Love Coates,” Uncloudy Days: The Gospel Music Encyclopedia
(San Francisco: Backbeat Books, 2005); Robert Darden, “Dorothy Love Coates,” Encyclopedia of American Gospel Music,
edited by W.K. McNeil (New York: Routledge, 2005);
Anthony
Heilbut, “‘I Won’t Let Go of My Faith’: Dorothy Love Coates,” The Gospel Sound: Good News and Bad Times
(New York: Proscenium Publishers, [1971] 2002), and
Dave
Marsh, “Dorothy Love Coates,” All Music
Guide to the Blues
, edited by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Vladimir Bogdanov,
and Chris Woodstra (San Francisco: Backbeat Books, 2003).

Further Reading