Aretha Franklin
From the
moment that she came to public attention Aretha Franklin appeared to be an
anointed figure, elevated to a pantheon of greats that include Bessie Smith, Ma
Rainey, Billie Holliday and Sister Rosetta Tharpe. Songs such as Respect, Natural Woman and I Say A
Little Prayer testify to the power of her artistry.
Like Ray
Charles and Sam Cooke -the key progenitors in transforming Gospel music into
Soul music- she succeeded in working out an innovative hybrid of Black American
music styles. But unlike Charles and Cooke, she was able to return to her
gospel roots and receive popular and critical acclaim in 1972 by creating the
seminal Amazing Grace, the highest
selling album of her life, and the greatest selling live gospel album of all
time.
She showed
great versatility by recording songs for a cross-over audience such as her
remake of Ben E. King’s Spanish Harlem
and for the Disco-Funk era offered the classic Jump to It in 1982.
An indicator
of her significance in popular music was the fact that like Elvis Presley, she
became one of the few artists to be known by first name alone. As a celebrity
stories of her marriages, weight battles as well as her loss of innocence at an
early age under the parental regime of her father, the Reverend C.L. Franklin
became the staple of news magazine gossip and book revelations.
It is true to
say that she reflected the era that she lived in. Her afros spoke to the ‘Black
Pride’ movement and her songs about freedom and respect attested to her
commitment to the Women's Liberation and Civil Rights movements. She helped
finance several civil rights programmes and participated in fundraisers. Of her
willingness to post bail for Angela Davis, the black, feminist radical in 1970,
Franklin said the following:
Jail is hell
to be in. I’m going to see her free if there is any justice in our courts, not
because I believe in communism but because she’s a black woman and she wants
freedom for black people.
The wealth of
connections provided by her father meant that she had known the Reverend Martin
Luther King since she was a young girl and he presented her with an award in
Detroit only shortly before his assassination in 1968.
As a singer,
Franklin was seemingly always on a pedestal and remained there until her death.
Needless to say that she was the quintessential soul and gospel singer. She
was, is and will be the standard by which serious singers will be appraised and
defined.
Aretha Franklin was born on March 25th 1942 in Memphis, Tennessee and
died on August 16th 2018 in Detroit, Michigan.
© Adeyinka
Makinde (2018)
Adeyinka
Makinde is a writer based in London, England.
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