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  1. Thomas Andrew Dorsey (born July 1, 1899, Villa Rica, Ga., U.S.—died Jan. 23, 1993, Chicago, Ill.) was an American songwriter, singer, and pianist whose many up-tempo blues arrangements of gospel music hymns earned him the title of “Father of Gospel Music.”. Dorsey was the son of a revivalist preacher. He was influenced in childhood by ...

  2. A key figure in the development of Gospel was Thomas A. Dorsey (1899 -1993). Referred to today as the father of Gospel Music, Dorsey pioneered the form in Chicago. Before devoting his career to the development of Gospel, Dorsey, the son of a Georgia Baptist preacher, was a prolific blues and jazz composer and pianist.

  3. May 24, 2018 · Over the next 60 years, Dorsey became known as the “Father of Gospel Music,” penning hundreds of songs and redefining the genre in beat, rhythm, and tempo. As The Voice reported, the Chicago ...

  4. During the early 1930s, Thomas Dorsey created gospel music -- the African American religious music which married secular blues to a sacred text. Under the name “Georgia Tom” he performed with ...

  5. Jul 25, 2003 · Thomas Dorsey combined sacred and secular styles to create a revolution in music. His story is the latest in "Honky Tonks, Hymns and the Blues," a special 11-part weekly series on the creation of ...

  6. Jan 21, 2007 · Thomas Dorsey, who coined the phrase “gospel” and composed over 1,000 gospel works and 2,000 blues songs, died in Chicago, Illinois, on January 23, 1993. He was 94 and had struggled with Alzheimer’s disease. Dorsey was posthumously inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2018.

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  8. Dorsey debuted “Take My Hand, Precious Lord” for the Pilgrim congregation at a Sunday worship service. The lyrics filled the sanctuary that morning: “Precious Lord, take my hand / Lead me on, let me stand / I am tired, I am weak / I am worn.”. Dorsey was shocked to find congregants out of their seats and in the aisles, crying out in prayer.