Everett David McCorvey was born in Montgomery, Alabama, on December 3, 1957, to David and Olga McCorvey, a postal worker and librarian. He grew up during the
Civil Rights Movement. His father was a
deacon at
First Baptist Church where
Ralph Abernathy was the minister.
Martin Luther King Jr. lived in the same neighborhood. "The whole Civil Rights movement of the '60s was part of my life", he said in a 2015 profile by Creative Lexington. McCorvey recalled some of his childhood experiences of racism in an interview in 2020 that was broadcast on
WUKY. The grade school he attended was across the street from a church where Civil Rights leaders were meeting, he said, and as a second grader he saw troopers "go up into the church on horseback and beat everybody out of the church". Neither parent was involved in the arts but McCorvey explained in a 2011
National Endowment for the Arts Art Works interview that his family housed students who attended the local historically black college,
Alabama State Teacher's College, and that his love of music began at age eight when he heard one of them practice the trumpet. McCorvey graduated from
Jefferson Davis High School in Montgomery in 1975 then attended the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, receiving a Bachelor of Music in Vocal Performance in 1979, a Master of Music, with an emphasis on vocal performance and choral conducting, in 1981, and Doctor of Musical Arts in Vocal Performance in 1989, with a dissertation on The Art Songs of Black American Composers. In 2015 he was recognized with the Alabama Distinguished Artist Award, which honors a professional artist who "has earned significant national acclaim for their art over an extended period". == Teaching ==