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Official Website: Aretha
Franklin
(Born 25th March 1942 in Memphis, Tennessee)
The fate of gospel music was forever altered in 1956 when
a 14-year-old choir girl named Aretha first belted out "Precious
Lord" for a congregation of 4,500 at Detroit's New Bethel
Baptist Church. What followed this conception of the legendary
"Lady Soul" is nothing short of amazing grace -- more than
a dozen million-selling singles, 20 No. 1 R&B hits, a cover
story in Time, a civil rights award from Martin Luther King
Jr., a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, 15 Grammys
(including a lifetime achievement award in 1995) and a role
alongside John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd in the cinematic jewel,The
Blues Brothers.
Aretha Franklin's lifetime devotion to song, though often
interrupted by personal turmoil and tragedy, created a soul
standard that remains unchallenged and unbroken today.Aretha
Franklin was born on March 25, 1942 in Memphis TN to a respected
gospel singer and powerful orator who encouraged young Aretha,
Carolyn and Erma to hone their voices and free their spirits.
The three sisters sang in the church choir every Sunday, listening
to the sermons of their father, Rev. C.L. Franklin, and rubbing
elbows with future stars like Smokey Robinson and Sam Cooke.
An untouchable force behind the microphone, Franklin hit
a stumbling block when she became a 15-year-old unwed mother.
By age 17 she had two sons in Detroit and a future waiting
in New York, so in 1960, Franklin's grandmother took the children
and loaded their young mother on a bus to Manhattan, where
she began recording demonstration tapes and attracting national
attention. After declining offers from Motown and RCA, Franklin
was finally snatched up by Columbia Records' renowned talent
scout John Hammond. The Columbia years proved controversial
and confusing for Franklin, who was shepherded into unfamiliar
pop music territory rather than her native R&B. Criticized
as a white company that did not appreciate Franklin's talent,
Columbia produced 10 respectable albums, but only one bonafide
pop hit in six years: "Rock-a-bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody."
When her contract expired in 1966, producer Jerry Wexler pounced
on the raw talent, signing her to Atlantic and immediately
digging into her R&B roots.
Wexler pushed Franklin into a cauldron of red hot blues when
he brought her to the Florence Alabama Music Emporium studios
in Muscle Shoals. There Franklin was to record with a crew
of versatile and talented musicians like Cissy Houston, Duane
Allman and Eric Clapton, but a drunken brawl between then-husband/manager
Ted White and one of the musicians put those plans on hold.
The singular completed work from Muscle Shoals, "I Never Loved
a Man (the Way I Love You)," was a gospel-charged sensation
that convinced Franklin to finish the album in New York. 1967's
I Never Loved a Man was the first in a long line of LPs that
brought America to its knees.
During the next three years, Franklin burned with passion
and intensity, selling millions of albums with Top 20 gospel-crossover
hits like "Respect," "Baby I Love You," "Chain of Fools,"
"Since You've Been Gone," "Think" and "The House That Jack
Built." These radio staples contrasted with her Columbia recordings
in their raw R&B foundation, upon which Franklin built an
eclectic structure of gospel, blues, pop and rock. Perhaps
the most stimulating song of its time, "Respect," took on
several empowering translations during the era of black activism,
feminism and sexual liberation. A rallying cry for social
progress, "Respect," won Franklin two Grammy awards and an
honorary award from Martin Luther King Jr. -- a man she would
later eulogize with an uplifting rendition of "Precious Lord."
While fame tumbled down upon her, Franklin led a personal
life of hardship hidden from the world.
Her troubled eight-year marriage to White ended in 1969,
after they had a son, Teddy Jr. That same year her father
was arrested for possession of marijuana and she was rumored
to be drinking heavily, but Franklin did not allow her personal
strife to shut down the hit factory. "Bridge Over Troubled
Water," "Don't Play That Song," "Spanish Harlem" and "Rock
Steady" were just a few of the hits Franklin scored in the
early '70s, during which time she also gave birth to a fourth
son, Kecalf, out of wedlock.
Franklin won Grammy awards every year between 1969 and 1975
(Natalie Cole won in 1976), and even sang at President Jimmy
Carter's inauguration, but by the end of the '70s her record
sales were beginning to dwindle.Aretha's final album for Atlantic
was titled 'LaDiva', and it didn't do much to restore ReRe's
chart domination. Franklin gave her career a kick-start in
1980 with a cameo appearance in The Blues Brothers, a movie
that introduced Franklin to a younger audience. That same
year she left Atlantic for Arista, which produced sleek new
hits like "Freeway of Love" and "Who's Zoomin' Who." Franklin's
first Arista album, 'Aretha', released one year after her
father died of gunshot wounds suffered during a robbery attempt
at his home, became her highest charting album since 1972.
The album included Aretha's soulful rendition of the Doobie
Brothers classic 'What A Fool Believes', and it fared better
than any of her final 3 albums for Atlantic.The next album,
'Love all The Hurt Away', was a moderate success in 1981 that
featured a duet by Aretha and the legendary George Benson
on the title track.At this point, Clive Davis decided to tap
the 'hot' Luther Vandross & Marcus Miller to produce the 1982
hit album & title track, 'Jump To It'.Aretha's return to the
top of the R&B charts was long overdue, and Arista wanted
more hits, so Vandross & Miller returned for 1983's 'Get It
Right', which continued the formula they used 2 years earlier,
and the response was lukewarm at best.
After a 2 year hiatus, Aretha was teamed with the talented
Narada Michael Walden, who produced her comeback hit album
'Who's Zoomin' Who ?' in 1985.The album won critical praise,
and Aretha returned to the top of the Billboard charts with
her most successful Arista project, which also earned The
Queen the 1985 Grammy Award for the hit 'Freeway Of Love'.This
was Aretha's first award since 1974, and her greatness was
reaffirmed. The 1987 follow-up album, 'Aretha', included the
Grammy-winning & #1 smash duet with George Michael, "I Knew
You Were Waiting (For Me)".While her pop comeback continued
in 1987, Aretha also returned to her gospel roots with 'One
Lord, One Faith, One Baptism', which also earned her a Grammy
for Best Soul Gospel Performance.In 1987, Aretha Franklin
became the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame, while also winning multiple Grammy Awards.
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Aretha Franklin
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