Coat of Many Colors (song)
"Coat of Many Colors" is a song written and recorded by American country music singer Dolly Parton. It was released in September 1971 as the second single and title track from the album Coat of Many Colors.
For the 2023 song by Brandon Lake, see Coat of Many Colors (Brandon Lake song)."Coat of Many Colors"
"She Never Met a Man (She Didn't Like)"
September 27, 1971
April 1971
3:05
Dolly Parton
Background[edit]
She composed the song in 1969, while traveling with Porter Wagoner on a tour bus. (She explained in her 1994 memoir, My Life and Other Unfinished Business, because she could find no paper, as the song came to her, she wrote it on the back of a dry cleaning receipt from one of Wagoner's suits; when the song became a hit, Wagoner had the receipt framed.) She recorded the song in April 1971, making it the title song for her Coat of Many Colors album. The song reached #4 on the U.S. country singles charts.
Parton performed this song in April 1970, and was recorded for her album, "A Real Live Dolly", though it wasn't released in the album. It was released as a bonus track on Parton's career-spanning box set Dolly in October 2009.
Original coat[edit]
Dolly says the original coat was used for various other purposes but her mother did make a new one to use on display in her Chasing Rainbows Museum at Dollywood. (Wagoner also donated the framed dry cleaning receipt - on which Parton composed the song - to the museum, where it now hangs.)
Interpretations by other artists[edit]
Shania Twain recorded a cover version of the song on the 2003 Parton tribute album Just Because I'm a Woman: Songs of Dolly Parton, with accompaniment by Alison Krauss and Union Station. This version peaked at #57 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart based only on unsolicited airplay. Other cover versions include a 1976 recording by Emmylou Harris on her Reprise Records debut Pieces of the Sky; decades later, Harris performed the song live in 2017 for the getTV special A Nashville Christmas. A recording of the song by Eva Cassidy was released on the 2008 posthumous collection Somewhere. Scottish comedian Billy Connolly recorded a version in 1975 on his album Get Right Intae Him (Unicorn Artists). This was a serious version unlike his comical song "D.I.V.O.R.C.E." which parodied "D-I-V-O-R-C-E", made popular by Tammy Wynette and also covered by Parton. Melinda Schneider and Beccy Cole covered the song on their album Great Women of Country (2014).
Legacy[edit]
In 2005, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ranked "Coat of Many Colors" number 10 on its list of 100 Songs of the South. A 1996 children's picture book of the song, with illustrations by Judith Sutton, was published by Harpercollins Children's Books. In 2008, Kristy Lee Cook performed this song on American Idol during Dolly Parton Week.
In 2011, Parton's recording was added to the Library of Congress's National Recording Registry list of sound recordings that "are culturally, historically, or aesthetically important, and/or inform or reflect life in the United States."[2]
A TV movie was broadcast in December 2015 by NBC, with Alyvia Alyn Lind as young Dolly.[3] Lind reprised her role as young Dolly in the 2016 television movie sequel Dolly Parton's Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love.
In 2021, it was ranked at No. 263 on Rolling Stone's "Top 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[4]
On a list of the 50 best Dolly Parton songs, Rolling Stone magazine ranked "Coat of Many Colors" at number 2, saying "Had it been the only song she’d ever written, the expression of overwhelming pride and crushing anguish ... would have secured her indelible legacy."[5]