
05/20/2025
Country Music Hall of Fame member Dolly Parton recorded “Coat of Many Colors,” the title track of her eighth studio album, for RCA Victor at Studio B in April 1971.
Produced by Bob Ferguson, “Coat of Many Colors” poignantly shares a painful memory from Dolly’s childhood while demonstrating her storytelling prowess. Though rich in love, the Parton family struggled to provide for their twelve children. From a bag of donated remnants, Dolly’s mother, Avie Lee, sewed young Dolly a coat by piecing together some of the brightly colored scraps, and as she sewed, she told Dolly the biblical story of Joseph and his coat of many colors. Though Dolly proudly wore the patchwork coat to school, her classmates were not impressed with it. They laughed at her, broke the coat’s buttons and took it, then locked Dolly in a closet.
When the song came to her in 1969, Dolly was traveling on Porter Wagoner’s tour bus. Because she didn’t have paper, she scribbled the words on the back of a dry-cleaning receipt from one of Wagoner’s suits. Dolly later told journalist Chet Flippo of the song’s healing powers: “For years, I had that in my mind, and it became a masterpiece to me, and I never worried about it anymore.”
“Coat of Many Colors” is one of Dolly’s favorite songs not only because of its specific connection to her life but also for its universal appeal. Added to the Library of Congress’s National Recording Registry in 2011 and listed in 2021 in “Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time” special issue, “Coat of Many Colors” reached #4 on the “Billboard” country singles chart on Christmas Day, 1971.
Pictured: Dolly Parton with Porter Wagoner at Studio B.