Franklin, Aretha
Aretha Franklin
Singer, songwriter
Gospel Roots
Collaborations Launched Career
Triumphed Despite Turmoil
Selected discography
Sources
When asked by Patricia Smith of the Boston Globe how she felt about being called the “Queen of Soul,” Aretha Franklin’s reply was characterized by grace but no false modesty. “It’s an acknowledgment of my art,” she mused. “It means I am excelling at my art and my first love. And I am most appreciative.” Since she burst onto the public consciousness in the late 1960s with a batch of milestone recordings, Franklin has served as a standard against which all subsequent soul divas have been measured.
The combination of Franklin’s gospel roots and some devastating life experiences have invested her voice with a rare—and often wrenching—authenticity. “It was like I had no idea what music was all about until I heard her sing,” confessed singer-actress Bette Midler, as cited in Ebony. Though Franklin’s work in later decades has rarely matched the fire—or the sales figures—of her most celebrated singles, she has remained an enduring presence in contemporary music. The release of several CD retrospectives and the announcement in 1995 that she would publish an autobiography and start her own record label seemed to guarantee that her influence would continue unabated.
Franklin was raised in Detroit, the daughter of famed minister C. L. Franklin and gospel singer Barbara Franklin, who left the family when Aretha was small and died shortly thereafter. The singer told Ebony’s Laura B. Randolph, “She was the absolute lady,” although she admits that memories of her mother are few. The Reverend Franklin was no retiring clergyman; he enjoyed the popularity and, to some degree, the lifestyle of a pop star. He immediately recognized his daughter’s prodigious abilities, and offered to arrange for piano lessons. However, the child declined, instead teaching herself to play by listening to records.
Franklin’s talent as a singer allowed her to perform with her father’s traveling gospel show. She sang regularly before his congregation at Detroit’s New Bethel Baptist Church as well, where her performance of “Precious Lord,” among other gospel gems, was captured for posterity. She was 14 years old but already a spellbinding performer. Producer Jerry Wexler—who shepherded Franklin to greatness on behalf of Atlantic Records some years later—was stunned by the 1956 recording. “The voice was not that of a child but rather of an ecstatic hierophant [a priest in ancient Greece],” he recalled in his book Rhythm and the Blues.
Franklin’s life was no church social, however. She became a mother at age 15 and had her second child two
For the Record…
Born March 25, 1942, in Memphis, TN; daughter of Clarence L. (a Baptist minister) and Barbara Franklin (a gospel singer); married Ted White (a businessman and music manager), 1961 (divorced); married Glynn Turman (an actor), 1978 (divorced, 1984); children: Clarence, Edward, Teddy Richards, Kecalf Cunningham.
Performed with father’s touring revue, recorded gospel music for Chess label, 1950s; signed with Columbia Records and released debut album The Great Aretha Franklin, 1960; signed with Atlantic Records and released I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Love You), 1967; performed at funeral of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., 1968; performed at Democratic National Convention, 1968; performed at inauguration of President Jimmy Carter, 1977; appeared in film The Blues Brothers, 1980; signed with Arista Records and released Aretha, 1980; appeared in television specials “Aretha,” 1986, “Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul,” 1988, and “Duets,” 1993; performed at inauguration of President Bill Clinton, 1993; signed contract with Villard publisher for autobiography, 1995; contributor to The Songs of West Side Story, 1996.
Awards: 15 Grammy awards, including 1995 lifetime achievement award; honorary Doctor of Law degree, Bethune-Cookman College, 1974; American Music Award, 1984; American Black Achievement Award, Ebony magazine, 1984; declared “natural resource” of home state of Michigan, 1985; inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 1987.
Addresses: Record company —Arista Records, 6 West 57th St., New York, NY 11019; 9975 Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA 90212.
years later. “I still wanted to get out and hang with my friends,” she told Ebony’s Randolph, “so I wanted to be in two places at the same time. But my grandmother helped me a lot, and my sister and my cousin. They would babysit so I could get out occasionally.”
Alhough first inspired by gospel music, Franklin soon became interested in non-religious music. After receiving her father’s encouragement, she traveled to New York in 1960, embarked on vocal and dance lessons, and hired a manager. She then began recording demonstration tapes. Like singer-songwriter-pianist Ray Charles, who has often been credited with the invention of “soul music,” Franklin brought the fire of gospel to pop music, her spiritual force in no way separated from her earthy sexuality.
Celebrated Columbia Records executive John Hammond was so taken by Franklin’s recordings that he signed her immediately. Her first Columbia album was issued in the fall of 1960. While a few singles made a respectable showing on the charts, it was clear that the label wasn’t adequately showcasing her gifts, either in its choice of material or production. “I cherish the recordings we made together,” remarked Hammond in Rhythm and the Blues, “but, finally, Columbia was a white company [that] misunderstood her genius.”
Franklin and her husband/manager, Ted White, agreed that she should pursue other options when her contract expired. Wexler leapt at the opportunity to sign her to Atlantic, and eventually he, Arif Mardin, and Tom Dowd produced Franklin’s first Atlantic sides.
Wexler brought Franklin to the Florence Alabama Music Emporium (FAME) studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, to record with a unique group of musicians adept in soul, blues, pop, country, and rock. This crew was stunned by Franklin’s power and prowess. Accompanying herself on piano, she deftly controlled the tone and arrangement of the songs she performed. Backing vocals were provided either by her sisters Carolyn and Ermaor by the vocal group the Sweet Inspirations, whichfeatured Cissy Houston, mother of future singing star Whitney Houston. Wexler also brought in young rock guitarists Duane Allman and Eric Clapton for guest spots.
Unfortunately, only one of two songs—“I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Love You)”—was finished when White and one of the musicians had a drunken row; White grabbed Franklin and they vanished for a period of weeks. Wexler balanced jubilation with anxiety, as radio programmers around the country embraced “I Never Loved a Man,” and distributors clamored for an album. But the artist was nowhere to be found. At last she surfaced in New York, where she completed the unfinished “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man,” and inWexler’s words, “the result was perfection.”
Franklin’s first album for Atlantic, I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Love You), was released in 1967, and several hit-filled LPs followed. During this crucial period she enjoyed a succession of smash singles that included the rollicking “Baby I Love You,” the pounding groove “Chainof Fools,” the supercharged “Think,” (which she wrote), the tender” (You Make Me Feel Like a) Natural Woman,” and a blistering take on Otis Redding’s “Respect.” The latter two would become Franklin’s signature songs.
Franklin’s version of “Respect,” coming as it did at a crucial point for black activism, feminism, and sexual liberation, was particularly potent. Wexler noted that Franklin took Redding’s more conventional take on the song and “turned it inside out, making it deeper, stronger, loading it with double entendres.” What’s more, he noted, “The fervor in Aretha’s magnificent voice” implied not just everyday respect but “sexual attention of the highest order,” as implied by the “sock it to me” backup chorus she and her sisters devised.
Writer Evelyn C. White, in an Essence piece, referred to “Respect” as a revolutionary force in her own life. Franklin’s “impassioned, soulful licks and sly innuendos about sexual pleasure made me feel good about myself,” she wrote, “both as a black American and as a young girl about to discover sex.” Eventually, the song would become an American pop standard. At the time of its release, however, it served primarily as a fight song for social change, and went on to score two trophies at that year’s Grammy Awards.
Franklin’s voice was crucial to the soundtrack of the era, and not just as a record playing on the radio. Franklin’s father was a closef riend of civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and his family. When the crusading minister was assassinated in 1968, Franklin was enlisted to sing at his funeral. Wexler described her performance of “Precious Lord” as “a holy blend of truth and unspeakable tragedy.”
Franklin also sang the National Anthem at the Democratic Party’s riot-marred 1968 convention in Chicago. Yet even as her soulful wail soothed a number of difficult national transitions and transformations, Franklin’s own changes were hidden from view. “I think of Aretha as ‘Our Lady of Mysterious Sorrows, ’” Wexler wrote. “Her eyes are incredible, luminous eyes covering inexplicable pain. Her depressions could be as deep as the dark sea. I don’t pretend to know the sources of her anguish, but anguish surrounds Aretha as surely as the glory of her musical aura.”
Despite her inner turmoil, Franklin enjoyed phenomenal commercial success during these years. A number of other blockbuster Atlantic albums followed her debut on the label, and she proceeded to take home Grammys every year between 1969 and 1975. Instead of slowing down after all her overwhelming success, she continued to explore rock and pop records for new material and recorded cover versions of songs by the Beatles, Elton John, the Band, Paul Simon, Jimi Hendrix, and many others. “She didn’t think in terms of white or black tunes, or white or black rhythms,” noted Wexler. “Her taste, like her genius, transcended categories.”
In 1972 Franklin sang at the funeral of gospel giant Mahalia Jackson, which suggested her stature in the gospel world; it was no surprise when Amazing Grace, an album of church music she recorded with Wexler, soared up the pop charts that year. At the inauguration of President Jimmy Carter in 1977, she provided an a capella rendition of “God Bless America.”
Having parted ways with husband/manager Ted White some years earlier, Franklin married actor Glynn Tur-man in 1978. They divorced six years later. By the end of the 1970s, her record sales had dwindled, but she took an attention-getting turn in the Blues Brothers movie, in which she both acted and sang. The film and the Blues Brothers albums, recorded by Saturday Night Live funnymen and blues and soul fanatics Dan Ayk-royd and John Belushi, helped fuel a new mainstream interest in 1960s soul.
In 1980 Franklin elected to leave Atlantic and sign with Arista Records. The label’s slick production and commercial choice of material earned greater sales than she had enjoyed for some time, particularly for the single “Freeway of Love.” She earned three more Grammys during the decade. Nonetheless, Dave DiMartino of Entertainment Weekly grumbled that most of her hits at Arista “have been assembled by big-name producers like Narada Michael Walden and might have easily featured another singer entirely—like, say, label mate Whitney Houston” DiMartino also objected to the relentless pairing of Franklin with other stars for much-hyped duets, remarking, “Like… Aretha Franklin needs a gimmick?”
In 1979 Franklin’s father was shot by a burglar in his home and fell into a coma. He died several years later, having never regained consciousness. As Ebony’s Randolph wrote, “When you’ve said as many goodbyes as Aretha, it’s impossible not to be palpably shaped by loss.” The singer cited a point during her father’s hospi-talization as the most difficult decision of her life. “We had to have a trach [a tracheotomy, a procedure that involves cutting through the vocal chords],” she confided, “and we were afraid it would affect his voice, which was certainly his living.”
But beyond this and other painful incidents, further triumphs lay ahead for Franklin. She was the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, won a Grammy for best soul gospel performance, was the subject of an all-star documentary tribute broadcast on public television, sang at the inauguration of another president, Bill Clinton, in 1993, and won a lifetime achievement Grammy in 1995. Franklin might not have been the commercial powerhouse that some of her younger acolytes, like Houston and Mariah Carey, but she definitely had become an institution.
Franklin—who moved back to the Detroit area in the mid-1990s—announced plans for an autobiography in 1995 and also made public her intention to start a record label, which would be called World Class Records. “I’m looking for space,” she told the Boston Globe. “I’m the CEO.” She continued to perform, her band by that time featuring two of her sons, Kecalf Cunningham and Teddy Richards.
Other projects, including film and television appearances, were also in the works. “I just strive for excellence pretty much across the board, whether it’s as a producer, songwriter or singer,” Franklin proclaimed to Boston Globe writer Smith. “I give people what I feel is best, not just what everyone says is ‘hot.’ I want to do things that are going to be meaningful and inspiring to them one way or another.” Asked by the Detroit Free Press if she ever got tired of singing “Respect,” the Queen of Soul replied, “Actually, no. I just find new ways of refreshing the song.” Similarly, Franklin’s voice continues to refresh new listeners.
The Great Aretha Franklin, Columbia, 1960.
The Electrifying Aretha Franklin, Columbia, 1962.
The Tender, the Moving, the Swinging Aretha Franklin, Columbia, 1962.
Aretha Franklin’s Greatest Hits, Columbia, 1967.
I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Love You), Atlantic, 1967.
Aretha Arrives , Atlantic, 1967.
Take a Look, Columbia, 1967.
Lady Soul, Atlantic, 1968.
Aretha Now, Atlantic, 1968.
Aretha in Paris, Atlantic, 1968.
Soul ’69, Atlantic, 1969.
Aretha’s Gold, Atlantic, 1969.
This Girl’s in Love with You, Atlantic, 1970.
Spirit in the Dark, Atlantic, 1970.
Aretha Live at Fillmore West, Atlantic, 1971.
Young, Gifted and Black, Atlantic, 1972.
Amazing Grace, Atlantic, 1972.
The Beginning/The World of Aretha Franklin 1960-1967, Columbia, 1972.
Hey Now Hey (The Other Side of the Sky), Atlantic, 1973.
Let Me in Your Life, Atlantic, 1974.
Everything I Feel in Me, Atlantic, 1975.
Ten Years of Gold, Atlantic, 1977.
Sweet Passion, Atlantic, 1977.
Almighty Fire, Atlantic, 1978.
La Diva, Atlantic, 1979.
Aretha, Arista, 1980.
Jump to It, Arista, 1982.
Get It Right, Arista, 1984.
Who’s Zoomin’ Who? , Arista, 1985.
Aretha, Arista, 1987.
Love All the Hurt Away, Arista, 1987.
One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism, Arista, 1988.
Through the Storm, Arista, 1989.
What You See Is What You Sweat, Arista, 1991.
Queen of Soul: The Atlantic Recordings, Atlantic, 1992.
Greatest Hits: 1980-1994, Arista, 1994.
With other artists
Curtis Mayfield, Sparkle (soundtrack), 1976.
“Think,” The Blues Brothers (soundtrack), 1979.
“Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” Jumpin’Jack Flash (soundtrack), 1986.
George Michael, “I Knew You Were Waiting (for Me),” Columbia, 1987.
“If I Lose”, White Men Can’t Jump (soundtrack), EMI, 1992.
All Men Are Brothers: A Tribute to Curtis Mayfield, 1994.
Books
Rees, Dafydd, and Luke Crampton, Rock Movers&Shakers, Billboard, 1991.
Wexler, Jerry, and David Ritz, Rhythm and the Blues: A Life in American Music, Knopf, 1993.
Periodicals
Boston Globe, June 14, 1991, p. 39; March 21, 1994, p. 30; September 29, 1995, p. 55.
Detroit Free Press, June 10, 1994, p. 3D; June 18, 1994, p. 2A.
Ebony, April 1995, pp. 28-33.
Entertainment Weekly, May 15, 1992, p. 64.
Essence, August 1995, pp. 73-77.
Jet, August 21, 1995, p. 33.
People, February 19, 1996, p. 22.
—Simon Glickman
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Equatorial Guinea Oil Markets Investment Opportunities, Market Analysis and Forecasts to 2020.
M2 Presswire; 5/15/2009; 700+ words
; ...Research and Markets: Equatorial Guinea Oil Markets Investment Opportunities...com/research/f0a0fc/equatorial_guinea) has announced the addition of GlobalData 's new report "Equatorial Guinea Oil Markets Investment Opportunities...
|
|
Guinea smelter--the perfect model for Africa? Katrina Manson and James Knight continue their odyssey through West Africa, this month filing an exclusive report from Guinea Conakry on a new aluminium smelter that could transform the country's economy and the people's quality of life.(Business in Africa)(Global Alumina arrives in Guinea)
Magazine article from: African Business; 3/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...metal used in manufacturing. Guinea's largest foreign direct...a 30-year monopoly over Guinea's bauxite industry by the...commercial venture that sets new standards in socially responsible investment. "Guinea has never seen anything of...
|
|
PERU: GUINEA PIGS SPELL INDEPENDENCE FOR WOMEN
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 10/5/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...internet access to vital information ranging from guinea pig farming techniques to new recipes based on guinea pig meat. These culinary innovations have helped to promote guinea pig consumption at food fairs where its nutritional...
|
|
Unwanted guinea pigs have guardian angels
Newspaper article from: Oakland Tribune; 9/4/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...DuHamel already had 10 guinea pigs awaiting adoption...room and nursed the new ones back to health. Cages full of guinea pigs are now stacked...who wish to adopt a guinea pig from Cavy House...at a shelter again. New owners are sent home...
|
|
Guinea pig: It's what's for dinner in Peru - and the US; Farmers in Peru boost their income by exporting guinea pigs to immigrants in the US.(WORLD)
Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor; 11/1/2006; 700+ words
; ...earnings further by supplying the US guinea-pig market. But the guinea pigs aren't pets. And they're not for testing new drugs. They're for dinner. Agricultural...economists say increasing exports of guinea pig meat - widely eaten in the Andean...
|
|
Guinea-Bissau added to agenda of peacebuilding commission; brazil elected chair of country-specific configuration.
M2 Presswire; 12/20/2007; 700+ words
; ...provide advice on the situation in Guinea-Bissau. Joining today's...by video-link from Bissau, Guinea-Bissau Minister of Defence...explained that the situation in Guinea-Bissau remained fragile...support. Nonetheless, the new Government, which had come...
|
|
Equatorial Guinea Gas Markets Investment Opportunities, Market Analysis and Forecasts to 2020.
M2 Presswire; 5/29/2009; 700+ words
; ...com/research/8b82c0/equatorial_guinea) has announced the addition of GlobalData 's new report "Equatorial Guinea Gas Markets Investment Opportunities...2020" to their offering. Equatorial Guinea Gas Markets Investment Opportunities...
|
|
Guinea pigs go global.
M2 Presswire; 3/28/2000; 700+ words
; ...in a picnic setting where the guinea pigs discuss the benefits of...Dwarf and more recently on the new Harry Enfield Feature fiml...happy to work with the Iceland guinea pigs again, who he credited...the ad one of the performing guinea pigs has become star struck...
|
|
Guinea pigs come in many hues and are fun companions for children or adults. (Originated from Orange County Register)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 8/12/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...with hair like a shag rug. The newest breed is a teddy spinoff: the...aggressive or destructive, guinea pigs do need amusement...more than once discovered a guinea pig running around its cage...Probably the best evidence of the guinea pig's unflappable personality...
|
|
GUINEA: ECOLOGISTS WARN ON SCRAMBLE FOR IRON AND BAUXITE
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 11/9/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...caution to announcements of new plans to mine more bauxite and iron in Guinea. The plans were released after...African country last month. Guinea Ecologie, the only non-governmental organisation (NGO) in Guinea working in this area, was not...
|
|
Guinea
Encyclopedia entry from: Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations
...franc (GFr); s1 = 10 old Guinea francs. In January 1986 the Guinea franc (GFr) of 100 centimes...legal standard. HOLIDAYS: New Year's Day, 1 January; Labor...LOCATION, SIZE, AND EXTENT Guinea, on the west coast of Africa...
|
|
Guinea-Bissau
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...of independence in Portuguese Guinea in the early 1960s; in 1973 it declared the province, renamed Guinea-Bissau, independent of Portugal...coup in Portugal (1974), the new Portuguese government initiated...Sept. 10) independence to Guinea-Bissau. Luis de Almeida Cabral...
|
|
Papua New Guinea
Encyclopedia entry from: Junior Worldmark Encyclopedia of Physical Geography
Papua New Guinea Official name: Independent State of Papua New Guinea Area: 462,840 square kilometers...heaviest in the island of New Guinea's western river basin...REGIONS The island of New Guinea, the second-largest in...
|
|
Equatorial Guinea
Encyclopedia entry from: World Education Encyclopedia
...1939, that mainland Spanish Guinea began to receive broad educational...In 1959 the status of Spanish Guinea was changed when it was divided...civil governor. Under this new system, all citizens, including...came to be known as Equatorial Guinea after a measure that agreed...
|
|
New Guinea
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
New Guinea , island, c.342,000 sq...independent country of Papua New Guinea in the east. The island is...islands under the name of British New Guinea; in the same year...Renamed the Territory of New Guinea, this area became a UN trust...
|