Who Is Yolanda Adams? Get To Know The Gospel Singing Sensation – Hollywood Life

Yolanda Adams: 5 Things To Know About Gospel Singer Who Performed At The National Memorial Day Concert

Gospel singing sensation, Yolanda Adams, will touch hearts across America as she takes the stage at the National Memorial Day Concert. Learn more about the star, here.

Reading Time: 3 minutes
View gallery

  • Yolanda Adams is a famous gospel singer who has sold over 10 million albums worldwide
  • The Houston native won five Grammys
  • She sang “Hallelujah” at the the national COVID-19 memorial in 2021

Yolanda Adams is lending her beautiful voice for the National Memorial Day Concert at the U.S. Capitol. She’ll be performing at the special event alongside country music star Trace Adkins and the soul duo The War and Treaty. The concert, which “unites the country in remembrance and appreciation of those who gave their lives for our nation,” per its website, will take place on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.

Yolanda Adams
Yolanda Adams, pictured on the right, listens to Michigan nurse Lori Marie Key sing “Amazing Grace” at the COVID-19 memorial in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 19, 2021. (Photo Credit: AP)

The singing star is making her triumphant return to the nation’s capital. IN January 2021, she performed at the national COVID-19 memorial held at Washington D.C.’s Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.  Although it was a somber event, Yolanda’s performance of “Hallelujah” uplifted countless souls across America as viewers tuned in to the event attended by Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, a day before Inauguration Day, which she posted about on her Instagram.

Yolanda — who has five Grammy wins, six Soul Train Music Awards and many other honors under her belt — was the perfect choice to deliver the classic gospel song at the COVID-19 memorial event. Now, learn more about the singing icon who made her big breakthrough in the ’90s and has impressed fans ever since:

COVID-19 Memorial
Joe Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, along with Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, pay tribute to the people who died from COVID-19 at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on Jan. 19, 2021. (Photo Credit: AP)

1. Yolanda Yvette Adams, a Houston, Texas native, wasn’t only a singer.

Adams graduated from Texas Southern University, where she began a career as a schoolteacher. She was also a part-time model in Houston. Adams eventually gave up teaching to become a full-time singer. Today, her occupations stretch from a record producer, to an actress. She was also a former radio host of her own nationally syndicated morning gospel show.

2. Her mainstream break came in 1999.

Adams hit major fame outside of the Gospel era came after the release and success of Mountain High… Valley Low by Elektra Records. The album went 2x Platinum in 2000 and won Adams a Grammy Award. Other notable singles from the album include “Yeah“, “Fragile Heart”, and “Open My Heart”. As of September 2009, she had sold 4.5 million albums since 1991 in the United States, and nearly 8 million albums worldwide.

3. Adams is considered the “Gospel Queen.”

You may recognize her many monikers within the music industry, some of which include, “The First Lady of Modern Gospel” and “The Reigning Queen of Modern Gospel. Billboard named her the No. 1 Gospel Artist of the last decade in December 2009. In the same chart, her album Mountain High…Valley Low was acknowledged as the best gospel album.

4. She’s an author.

Adams released her first book, Points of Power in 2010; a Christian book in reference to living a pure, spirit-filled Christian life.

5. Adams was a dear friend of the late music icon, Prince.

Adams and Prince met at the Soul Train Awards. Although she said he did not have a massive influence on her music, she admitted that he had a significant impact on her heart. “Watching him sing, perform, create was always a pleasure, he always had the bar set very, very high,” Adams told ABC 13 Eyewitness News in 2016. “So people who would come after him would have to try to leap over that bar or try to reach it as far as they possibly could.”