 | ARETHA FRANKLIN
She is known the world over by her first name and as the undisputed, reigning "Queen Of
Soul," Aretha Franklin is peerless. This 2005 recipient of a Presidential Medal Of Freedom
honor (the U.S.A.'s highest honor), 17 Grammy Awards (and counting), a Grammy Lifetime
Achievement Award and a Grammy Living Legend Award. She has received countless
international and national awards and accolades.
Aretha has achieved global recognition on
an unprecedented scale. She has influenced generations of singers from Chaka Khan,
Natalie Cole and Mary J. Blige to "American Idol" winner Fantasia Burrino and Oscarwinning
Jennifer Hudson. |
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Her ever-distinctive soulful, to-the-bone vocal style has graced
the music charts for over four decades and while her 'live' performances have touched the
hearts of literally millions since she began her musical journey as a gospel-singing child
prodigy, it is her rich legacy of recordings that are a testament to the power, majesty and
genius of this one-of-a-kind artist of the first order.
Beyond the timeless classic hits such as "Respect," "A Natural Woman," "Chain Of Fools,"
"Think," "Daydreaming" and "Freeway Of Love" among the dozens of chart-topping records
that have established her as a cultural icon, Aretha Franklin's catalog of over forty albums
informs listeners of her unmatched, unparalleled artistry as an interpreter of song, bar
none. Her elevation to 'royal' status is indeed not just a function of her hitmaking ability
but of her unique inventiveness as a musician who fuses art and soul seamlessly. Indeed,
it's often been said that Aretha could take 'happy birthday' and turn it into a veritable opus
and while those who know her will testify to her culinary skills in the kitchen, it is her
mastery as a musical chef that is evident on each and every one of those forty-plus
albums, many of which have achieved gold and platinum status.
As is widely known, Aretha, born in Memphis, reared in Buffalo but a longtime resident of
Detroit, began her personal musical journey singing at her much-revered father Reverend
C.L. Franklin's New Bethel Baptist Church at a very young age. While she was
unquestionably influenced by the presence of such gospel luminaries as Clara Ward (a
strong influence), Mahalia Jackson and the Reverend James Cleveland in the Franklin
household, it was secular performers such as Dinah Washington and Sam Cooke (also
visitors to the Franklin residence) who helped shape Aretha's wide-ranging interest in
popular music. Young Aretha also heard the doo-wop sounds of Nolan Strong and The
Diablos, The Moonglows, The 5 Royales and The Satins as well as popular '50s hitmakers
such as Johnny Ace, Little Willie John, Jackie Wilson, Big Maybelle and Little Esther on the
radio.
Inventive, innovative, always stretching her own artistic boundaries, we can be sure that
when Aretha herself says she still has "so much more music to share," the best is yet to
come from the one and only "Queen Of Soul."
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