No other group associated with gospel music’s so-called Golden Age (1945–1960) sang with more urgency than the Original Gospel Harmonettes, led by powerhouse vocalist Dorothy Love Coates. And few others, with the notable exception of the Staple Singers, were more in sync with the concerns of the civil rights movement of the 1960s.

In her 1964 composition The Righteous on the March, Dorothy described an army comprised of “soldiers of every faith” and “warriors of every race.” The singer’s stirring treatment of The Hymn from the same year was especially pointed, particularly when she cried out in anguished contralto tones, “When the President was assassinated, the nation asked, ‘Where’s God?’ When the little children lost their lives in the church bombing, the nation asked, ‘Where’s God?’ I got the answer for you: ‘God is still on the throne.’”


Release

A City Built 4 Square

Standing On The Rock

These Are The Days