Dorsey grew up in Atlanta, raised by a Baptist minister and encouraged mightily in musical aptitude that revealed itself strongly when he was still an infant. He absorbed every kind of music he heard, checking out circus music, blues, jazz, vaudeville, hymns, and even hillbilly songs. All these styles influenced the music he created during his career, but blues and ragtime were his main interests. While still a teenager, he started gigging using the stage name Georgia Tom.
In 1918 he moved to Chicago, picking up action with area jazzmen, starting up his own Wildcats Jazz Band, and going on tour with the classic blues empress Ma Rainey, but hustling song sheets became his main way of earning money simply because live gigs netted him little money. By 1932, Dorsey became more and more associated with the music of the church, starting up one of the first gospel choirs, and initiating the first publishing firm exclusively devoted to the compositions of Black gospel artists. Dorsey himself was high on the list of such performers, composing some of the most familiar gospel songs, including "Precious Lord," the serene "Peace in the Valley," the sincere "I Don't Know Why," and the probing "Search Me Lord." His involvement in the Chicago gospel scene enabled him to help forward the important careers of singers Mahalia Jackson and Mother Willie Mae Ford Smith. Dorsey died in 1193 at the age of 93. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi