Showing posts with label Aretha Franklin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aretha Franklin. Show all posts

Friday, June 9, 2023

Aretha Franklin - Unforgettable: A Tribute To Dinah Washington

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:15
Size: 90,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:40) 1. Unforgettable
(4:34) 2. Cold, Cold Heart
(3:29) 3. What A Difference A Day Made
(3:27) 4. Drinking Again
(5:09) 5. Nobody Knows The Way I Feel This Morning
(2:39) 6. Evil Gal Blues
(2:44) 7. Don't Say You're Sorry Again
(4:32) 8. This Bitter Earth
(3:35) 9. If I Should Lose You
(2:18) 10. Soulville
(3:02) 11. Lee Cross

Since her youth Franklin had admired Dinah Washington, and it's a safe bet that the level of emotional commitment Washington brought to her work was a major influence on the blossoming style of Aretha, not to mention Washington's effortless sense of swing. Shortly before she died, Washington took appreciate notice of her acolyte as well. So Aretha's tribute to Washington is as logical as it is satisfying.

Recorded when Aretha was just 21, UNFORGETTABLE is somewhat of a departure from her more R&B-oriented early work. However, the string arrangements of Johnny Mersey adn the jazzy bass work of George Duvivier mesh perfectly with Franklin's high-flying vocal fireworks. From the slow, subtle caress of "What a Difference a Day Made" to the organ-led blues of "Nobody Knows the Way I Feel This Morning," the young Aretha is in total command of the material here, simultaneously paying homage to and progressing from the influence of Washington. By AllMusic
https://www.allmusic.com/album/unforgettable-a-tribute-to-dinah-washington-mw0000123999

Unforgettable: A Tribute To Dinah Washington

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Aretha Franklin - Runnin' Out of Fools

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1964
File: MP3@224K/s
Time: 38:06
Size: 62,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:33) 1. Mockingbird
(2:32) 2. How Glad I Am
(2:47) 3. Walk On By
(2:46) 4. Every Little Bit Hurts
(2:21) 5. The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)
(2:36) 6. You'll Lose a Good Thing
(2:43) 7. I Can't Wait Until I See My Baby's Face
(2:58) 8. It's Just a Matter of Time
(2:33) 9. Runnin' Out of Fools
(3:02) 10. My Guy
(2:26) 11. Two Sides of Love
(2:06) 12. One Room Paradise
(0:39) 13. A General Market Advertisement from Columbia Records
(0:53) 14. A Special Ad for Christmas
(2:52) 15. The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)
(2:12) 16. Winter Wonderland

Before signing to Atlantic in the late ‘60s and cementing her musical legacy, Tennessee teenager Aretha Franklin was dutifully climbing the charts, lending her mighty voice to some of pop’s most celebrated standards. Here she tackles “Mockingbird” with a singular sultry swing arguably casting it as the definitive version while Burt Bacharach’s “Walk On By” is gentle and atmospheric, her skyscraping vocals taking a more controlled, mellow turn. The winking sway of “The Shoop Shoop Song (It’s in His Kiss)” foreshadows her later sass. https://music.apple.com/us/album/runnin-out-of-fools-expanded-edition/425847724

Runnin' Out of Fools

Sunday, August 19, 2018

Aretha Franklin - The Queen Of Soul Disc 3 And Disc 4 of 4 Discs

Styles: Vocal Soul
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:36
Size: 176,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:18)  1. Son Of A Preacher Man
(2:31)  2. Try Matty's
(4:42)  3. The Thrill Is Gone [From Yesterday's Kiss]
(4:42)  4. Dark End Of The Street
(3:35)  5. You And Me
(3:30)  6. You're Taking Up Another Man's Place (Spirit In The Dark Outtake)
(3:01)  7. Don't Play That Song
(3:04)  8. Why I Sing The Blues
(4:02)  9. Spirit In The Dark
(4:08) 10. My Way (Spirit In The Dark Outtake)
(2:52) 11. One Way Ticket
(3:37) 12. Pullin'
(3:23) 13. Border Song (Holy Moses)
(4:27) 14. A Brand New Me
(3:37) 15. You're All I Need To Get By
(5:32) 16. Bridge Over Troubled Water
(3:33) 17. Spanish Harlem
(4:40) 18. Lean On Me
(8:13) 19. Spirit In The Dark (Reprise With Ray Charles) [Live At Fillmore West, San Francisco, February 5, 1971]


Album: The Queen Of Soul   Disc 4

Time: 79:10
Size: 181,9 MB

(3:14)  1. Rock Steady
(3:34)  2. Young, Gifted And Black
(3:54)  3. All The King's Horses
(3:42)  4. Oh Me Oh My (I'm A Fool For You Baby)
(4:01)  5. Day Dreaming
(7:09)  6. Mary, Don't You Weep [Live At New Temple Missionary Baptist Church, Los Angeles, January 14, 1972]
(2:45)  7. Climbing Higher Mountains (Live 1972)
(7:21)  8. Precious Memories [Live At New Temple Missionary Baptist Church, Los Angeles, January 14, 1972]
(3:27)  9. Master Of Eyes [The Deepness Of Your Eyes]
(4:29) 10. Angel
(6:19) 11. Somewhere
(4:18) 12. So Swell When You're Well
(2:52) 13. I'm In Love
(3:49) 14. Ain't Nothing Like The Real Thing
(3:28) 15. Until You Come Back To Me [That's What I'm Gonna Do]
(4:03) 16. Look Into Your Heart
(4:13) 17. Sparkle
(6:22) 18. Something He Can Feel

R.I.P.
Born on March 25, 1942
Died on August 16, 2018


Saturday, August 18, 2018

Aretha Franklin - The Queen Of Soul Disc 2 Of 4 Discs

Styles: Vocal Soul
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 79:00
Size: 181,8 MB
Art: Front

(2:18)  1. Think
(2:28)  2. You Send Me
(3:36)  3. I Say A Little Prayer
(2:21)  4. The House That Jack Built (Mono Version)
(2:18)  5. You're A Sweet Sweet Man
(2:34)  6. I Take What I Want
(2:27)  7. A Change
(2:44)  8. See Saw
(3:33)  9. My Song (Mono Version)
(3:04) 10. I Can't See Myself Leaving You
(3:45) 11. Night Life (Live At The Olympia Theatre, Paris, May 7, 1968)
(3:09) 12. Ramblin'
(4:25) 13. Today I Sing The Blues
(2:40) 14. River's Invitation
(3:04) 15. Pitiful
(3:29) 16. Talk To Me, Talk To Me (Soul '69 Outtake) (Mono Version)
(2:56) 17. Tracks Of My Tears
(2:58) 18. The Weight
(3:21) 19. Share Your Love With Me
(4:13) 20. Pledging My Love / The Clock
(3:23) 21. It Ain't Fair
(3:53) 22. Sit Down And Cry
(3:32) 23. Let It Be
(2:38) 24. Eleanor Rigby
(3:57) 25. Call Me

Aretha Franklin is one of the giants of soul music, and indeed of American pop as a whole. More than any other performer, she epitomized soul at its most gospel-charged. Her astonishing run of late-'60s hits with Atlantic Records "Respect," "I Never Loved a Man," "Chain of Fools," "Baby I Love You," "I Say a Little Prayer," "Think," "The House That Jack Built," and several others earned her the title "Lady Soul," which she has worn uncontested ever since. Yet as much of an international institution as she's become, much of her work outside of her recordings for Atlantic in the late '60s and early '70s is erratic and only fitfully inspired, making discretion a necessity when collecting her records.  Franklin's roots in gospel ran extremely deep. With her sisters Carolyn and Erma (both of whom would also have recording careers), she sang at the Detroit church of her father, Reverend C.L. Franklin, while growing up in the 1950s. In fact, she made her first recordings as a gospel artist at the age of 14. It has also been reported that Motown was interested in signing Aretha back in the days when it was a tiny start-up. Ultimately, however, Franklin ended up with Columbia, to which she was signed by the renowned talent scout John Hammond.  Franklin would record for Columbia constantly throughout the first half of the '60s, notching occasional R&B hits (and one Top 40 single, "Rock-a-bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody") but never truly breaking out as a star. The Columbia period continues to generate considerable controversy among critics, many of whom feel that Aretha's true aspirations were being blunted by pop-oriented material and production. In fact, there's a reasonable amount of fine items to be found on the Columbia sides, including the occasional song ("Lee Cross," "Soulville") where she belts out soul with real gusto. It's undeniably true, though, that her work at Columbia was considerably tamer than what was to follow, and suffered in general from a lack of direction and an apparent emphasis on trying to develop her as an all-around entertainer, rather than as an R&B/soul singer.  When Franklin left Columbia for Atlantic, producer Jerry Wexler was determined to bring out her most soulful, fiery traits. As part of that plan, he had her record her first single, "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)," at Muscle Shoals in Alabama with esteemed Southern R&B musicians. In fact, that was to be her only session actually at Muscle Shoals, but much of the remainder of her '60s work would be recorded with the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section, although the sessions would actually take place in New York City. The combination was one of those magic instances of musical alchemy in pop: the backup musicians provided a much grittier, soulful, and R&B-based accompaniment for Aretha's voice, which soared with a passion and intensity suggesting a spirit that had been allowed to fly loose for the first time. In the late '60s, Franklin became one of the biggest international recording stars in all of pop. Many also saw Franklin as a symbol of black America itself, reflecting the increased confidence and pride of African-Americans in the decade of the civil rights movement and other triumphs for the black community. The chart statistics are impressive in and of themselves: ten Top Ten hits in a roughly 18-month span between early 1967 and late 1968, for instance, and a steady stream of solid mid- to large-size hits for the next five years after that. Her Atlantic albums were also huge sellers, and far more consistent artistically than those of most soul stars of the era. Franklin was able to maintain creative momentum, in part, because of her eclectic choice of material, which encompassed first-class originals and gospel, blues, pop, and rock covers, from the Beatles and Simon & Garfunkel to Sam Cooke and the Drifters. 

She was also a fine, forceful, and somewhat underrated keyboardist. Franklin's commercial and artistic success was unabated in the early '70s, during which she landed more huge hits with "Spanish Harlem," "Bridge Over Troubled Water," and "Day Dreaming." She also produced two of her most respected, and earthiest, album releases with Live at Fillmore West and Amazing Grace. The latter, a 1972 double LP, was a reinvestigation of her gospel roots, recorded with James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir. Remarkably, it made the Top Ten, counting as one of the greatest gospel-pop crossover smashes of all time. Franklin had a few more hits over the next few years "Angel" and the Stevie Wonder cover "Until You Come Back to Me" being the most notable. Her Atlantic contract ended at the end of the 1970s. She signed with the Clive Davis-guided Arista and scored number one R&B hits with "Jump to It," "Get It Right," and "Freeway of Love." Many of her successes were duets, or crafted with the assistance of contemporaries such as Luther Vandross and Narada Michael Walden. In 1986 Franklin released her follow-up to Who's Zoomin' Who?, the self-titled Aretha, which saw the single "I Knew You Were Waiting for Me," a duet with George Michael, hit the top of the charts. There was also another return to gospel in 1987 with One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism. Franklin shifted back to pop with 1989's Through the Storm, but it wasn't a commercial success, and neither was 1991's new jack swing-styled What You See Is What You Sweat. Now solidly an iconic figure and acknowledged as one of the best singers of her generation no matter what her record sales were, Franklin contributed songs to several movie soundtracks in the next few years before releasing the R&B-based A Rose Is Still a Rose in 1998. So Damn Happy followed five years later in 2003 and again saw disappointing sales, but it did generate the Grammy-winning song "Wonderful." Franklin left Arista that same year and started her own label, Aretha's Records, two years later. A duets compilation, Jewels in the Crown: All-Star Duets with the Queen, was issued in 2007, followed by her first holiday album, 2008's This Christmas. The first release on her own label, A Woman Falling Out of Love, appeared in 2011. She signed to RCA and realigned with Clive Davis, who connected her with the likes of Babyface and OutKast's André 3000 for Sings the Great Diva Classics, for which she covered Gladys Knight, Barbra Streisand, and Adele, among others. ~ Richie Unterberger https://www.allmusic.com/artist/aretha-franklin-mn0000927555/biography

R.I.P.
Born on March 25, 1942
Died on August 16, 2018

The Queen Of Soul Disc 2

Friday, August 17, 2018

Aretha Franklin - The Queen Of Soul Disc 1 Of 4 Discs

Styles: Vocal Soul
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:23
Size: 178,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:52)  1. I Never Loved A Man (The Way I Love You) (Mono Version)
(3:15)  2. Do Right Woman - Do Right Man (Mono Version)
(2:26)  3. Respect
(4:06)  4. Drown In My Own Tears (Mono Version)
(2:38)  5. Soul Serenade (Mono Version)
(2:22)  6. Don't Let Me Lose This Dream (Mono Version)
(2:54)  7. Baby, Baby, Baby (Mono Version)
(3:21)  8. Dr. Feelgood [Love Is Serious Business]
(2:09)  9. Good Times (Mono Version)
(2:19) 10. Save Me (Mono Version)
(2:44) 11. Baby, I Love You
(2:40) 12. Satisfaction
(4:21) 13. You Are My Sunshine (Mono Version)
(2:55) 14. Never Let Me Go (Mono Version)
(2:59) 15. Prove It (Mono Version)
(4:24) 16. I Wonder (Mono Version)
(2:37) 17. Ain't Nobody (Gonna Turn Me Around) (Mono Version)
(3:46) 18. It Was You (Mono Version)
(2:47) 19. (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman
(2:48) 20. Chain Of Fools
(3:44) 21. People Get Ready
(2:27) 22. Come Back Baby
(3:58) 23. Good To Me As I Am To You
(2:25) 24. Since You've Been Gone (Sweet Sweet Baby)
(4:13) 25. Ain't No Way

Aretha Franklin is one of the giants of soul music, and indeed of American pop as a whole. More than any other performer, she epitomized soul at its most gospel-charged. Her astonishing run of late-'60s hits with Atlantic Records "Respect," "I Never Loved a Man," "Chain of Fools," "Baby I Love You," "I Say a Little Prayer," "Think," "The House That Jack Built," and several others earned her the title "Lady Soul," which she has worn uncontested ever since. Yet as much of an international institution as she's become, much of her work outside of her recordings for Atlantic in the late '60s and early '70s is erratic and only fitfully inspired, making discretion a necessity when collecting her records.  Franklin's roots in gospel ran extremely deep. With her sisters Carolyn and Erma (both of whom would also have recording careers), she sang at the Detroit church of her father, Reverend C.L. Franklin, while growing up in the 1950s. In fact, she made her first recordings as a gospel artist at the age of 14. It has also been reported that Motown was interested in signing Aretha back in the days when it was a tiny start-up. Ultimately, however, Franklin ended up with Columbia, to which she was signed by the renowned talent scout John Hammond.  Franklin would record for Columbia constantly throughout the first half of the '60s, notching occasional R&B hits (and one Top 40 single, "Rock-a-bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody") but never truly breaking out as a star. 

The Columbia period continues to generate considerable controversy among critics, many of whom feel that Aretha's true aspirations were being blunted by pop-oriented material and production. In fact, there's a reasonable amount of fine items to be found on the Columbia sides, including the occasional song ("Lee Cross," "Soulville") where she belts out soul with real gusto. It's undeniably true, though, that her work at Columbia was considerably tamer than what was to follow, and suffered in general from a lack of direction and an apparent emphasis on trying to develop her as an all-around entertainer, rather than as an R&B/soul singer.  When Franklin left Columbia for Atlantic, producer Jerry Wexler was determined to bring out her most soulful, fiery traits. As part of that plan, he had her record her first single, "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)," at Muscle Shoals in Alabama with esteemed Southern R&B musicians. In fact, that was to be her only session actually at Muscle Shoals, but much of the remainder of her '60s work would be recorded with the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section, although the sessions would actually take place in New York City. The combination was one of those magic instances of musical alchemy in pop: the backup musicians provided a much grittier, soulful, and R&B-based accompaniment for Aretha's voice, which soared with a passion and intensity suggesting a spirit that had been allowed to fly loose for the first time. In the late '60s, Franklin became one of the biggest international recording stars in all of pop. Many also saw Franklin as a symbol of black America itself, reflecting the increased confidence and pride of African Americans in the decade of the civil rights movement and other triumphs for the black community. 

The chart statistics are impressive in and of themselves: ten Top Ten hits in a roughly 18-month span between early 1967 and late 1968, for instance, and a steady stream of solid mid to large-size hits for the next five years after that. Her Atlantic albums were also huge sellers, and far more consistent artistically than those of most soul stars of the era. Franklin was able to maintain creative momentum, in part, because of her eclectic choice of material, which encompassed first-class originals and gospel, blues, pop, and rock covers, from the Beatles and Simon & Garfunkel to Sam Cooke and the Drifters. She was also a fine, forceful, and somewhat underrated keyboardist. Franklin's commercial and artistic success was unabated in the early '70s, during which she landed more huge hits with "Spanish Harlem," "Bridge Over Troubled Water," and "Day Dreaming." She also produced two of her most respected, and earthiest, album releases with Live at Fillmore West and Amazing Grace. The latter, a 1972 double LP, was a reinvestigation of her gospel roots, recorded with James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir. Remarkably, it made the Top Ten, counting as one of the greatest gospel-pop crossover smashes of all time. Franklin had a few more hits over the next few years "Angel" and the Stevie Wonder cover "Until You Come Back to Me" being the most notable. Her Atlantic contract ended at the end of the 1970s. She signed with the Clive Davis-guided Arista and scored number one R&B hits with "Jump to It," "Get It Right," and "Freeway of Love." 

Many of her successes were duets, or crafted with the assistance of contemporaries such as Luther Vandross and Narada Michael Walden. In 1986 Franklin released her follow-up to Who's Zoomin' Who?, the self-titled Aretha, which saw the single "I Knew You Were Waiting for Me," a duet with George Michael, hit the top of the charts. There was also another return to gospel in 1987 with One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism. Franklin shifted back to pop with 1989's Through the Storm, but it wasn't a commercial success, and neither was 1991's new jack swing-styled What You See Is What You Sweat. Now solidly an iconic figure and acknowledged as one of the best singers of her generation no matter what her record sales were, Franklin contributed songs to several movie soundtracks in the next few years before releasing the R&B-based A Rose Is Still a Rose in 1998. So Damn Happy followed five years later in 2003 and again saw disappointing sales, but it did generate the Grammy-winning song "Wonderful." Franklin left Arista that same year and started her own label, Aretha's Records, two years later. A duets compilation, Jewels in the Crown: All-Star Duets with the Queen, was issued in 2007, followed by her first holiday album, 2008's This Christmas. The first release on her own label, A Woman Falling Out of Love, appeared in 2011. She signed to RCA and realigned with Clive Davis, who connected her with the likes of Babyface and OutKast's André 3000 for Sings the Great Diva Classics, for which she covered Gladys Knight, Barbra Streisand, and Adele, among others. 
~ Richie Unterberger https://www.allmusic.com/artist/aretha-franklin-mn0000927555/biography

R.I.P.
Born on March 25, 1942
Died on August 16, 2018

The Queen Of Soul  Disc 1

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Aretha Franklin - Chain Of Fools

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:49
Size: 70.6 MB
Styles: Soul, R&B
Year: 1993
Art: Front

[2:25] 1. Respect
[2:42] 2. Chain Of Fools
[4:00] 3. I Never Loved A Man (The Way I Love You)
[3:13] 4. Do Right Woman, Do Right Man
[2:51] 5. The Weight
[2:39] 6. Baby I Love You
[4:09] 7. Ain't No Way
[3:29] 8. My Song
[2:24] 9. You Send Me
[2:52] 10. The Tracks Of My Tears

Aretha Franklin was born in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1942. A gifted singer and pianist, Franklin toured with her father's traveling revival show and later visited New York, where she signed with Columbia Records. Franklin went on to release several popular singles, many of which are now considered classics. In 1987, she became the first female artist to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and in 2008 she won her 18th Grammy Award, making her one of the most honored artists in Grammy history.

Chain Of Fools

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Aretha Franklin - Trouble in Mind

Styles: Vocal, Soul
Year: 2015
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:43
Size: 168,6 MB
Art: Front

(4:51)  1. Rock-A-Bye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody
(2:34)  2. Lover Come Back to Me
(2:35)  3. Exactly Like You
(2:38)  4. It's so Heartbreakin
(2:41)  5. I'm Sitting On Top of the World
(2:38)  6. Are You Sure
(2:40)  7. You Grow Closer
(2:46)  8. I Surrender, Dear
(2:44)  9. Who Needs You?
(2:47) 10. Rough Lover
(2:52) 11. Blue Holiday
(2:53) 12. I Apologize
(2:50) 13. It Ain't Necessarily So
(2:56) 14. Operation Heartbreak
(2:53) 15. Trouble in Mind
(2:53) 16. Never Grow Old
(2:55) 17. All Night Long
(3:03) 18. God Bless the Child
(3:04) 19. Look for the Silver Lining
(3:06) 20. Won't Be Long
(3:20) 21. That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day)
(3:21) 22. Don't Cry, Baby
(3:27) 23. I'm Wandering
(4:03) 24. Skylark

Aretha Franklin is one of the giants of soul music, and indeed of American pop as a whole. More than any other performer, she epitomized soul at its most gospel-charged. Her astonishing run of late-'60s hits with Atlantic Records "Respect," "I Never Loved a Man," "Chain of Fools," "Baby I Love You," "I Say a Little Prayer," "Think," "The House That Jack Built," and several others earned her the title "Lady Soul," which she has worn uncontested ever since. Yet as much of an international institution as she's become, much of her work outside of her recordings for Atlantic in the late '60s and early '70s  is erratic and only fitfully inspired, making discretion a necessity when collecting her records.  Franklin's roots in gospel ran extremely deep. With her sisters Carolyn and Erma (both of whom would also have recording careers), she sang at the Detroit church of her father, Reverend C.L. Franklin, while growing up in the 1950s. In fact, she made her first recordings as a gospel artist at the age of 14. It has also been reported that Motown was interested in signing Aretha back in the days when it was a tiny start-up. Ultimately, however, Franklin ended up with Columbia, to which she was signed by the renowned talent scout John Hammond.

Franklin would record for Columbia constantly throughout the first half of the '60s, notching occasional R&B hits (and one Top 40 single, "Rock-a-bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody") but never truly breaking out as a star. The Columbia period continues to generate considerable controversy among critics, many of whom feel that Aretha's true aspirations were being blunted by pop-oriented material and production. In fact, there's a reasonable amount of fine items to be found on the Columbia sides, including the occasional song ("Lee Cross," "Soulville") where she belts out soul with real gusto. It's undeniably true, though, that her work at Columbia was considerably tamer than what was to follow, and suffered in general from a lack of direction and an apparent emphasis on trying to develop her as an all-around entertainer, rather than as an R&B/soul singer.

When Franklin left Columbia for Atlantic, producer Jerry Wexler was determined to bring out her most soulful, fiery traits. As part of that plan, he had her record her first single, "I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)," at Muscle Shoals in Alabama with esteemed Southern R&B musicians. In fact, that was to be her only session actually at Muscle Shoals, but much of the remainder of her '60s work would be recorded with the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section, although the sessions would actually take place in New York City. The combination was one of those magic instances of musical alchemy in pop: the backup musicians provided a much grittier, soulful, and R&B-based accompaniment for Aretha's voice, which soared with a passion and intensity suggesting a spirit that had been allowed to fly loose for the first time.

In the late '60s, Franklin became one of the biggest international recording stars in all of pop. Many also saw Franklin as a symbol of black America itself, reflecting the increased confidence and pride of African-Americans in the decade of the civil rights movement and other triumphs for the black community. The chart statistics are impressive in and of themselves: ten Top Ten hits in a roughly 18-month span between early 1967 and late 1968, for instance, and a steady stream of solid mid- to large-size hits for the next five years after that. Her Atlantic albums were also huge sellers, and far more consistent artistically than those of most soul stars of the era. Franklin was able to maintain creative momentum, in part, because of her eclectic choice of material, which encompassed first-class originals and gospel, blues, pop, and rock covers, from the Beatles and Simon & Garfunkel to Sam Cooke and the Drifters. She was also a fine, forceful, and somewhat underrated keyboardist. Franklin's commercial and artistic success was unabated in the early '70s, during which she landed more huge hits with "Spanish Harlem," "Bridge Over Troubled Water," and "Day Dreaming." She also produced two of her most respected, and earthiest, album releases with Live at Fillmore West and Amazing Grace. The latter, a 1972 double LP, was a reinvestigation of her gospel roots, recorded with James Cleveland and the Southern California Community Choir. Remarkably, it made the Top Ten, counting as one of the greatest gospel-pop crossover smashes of all time. Franklin had a few more hits over the next few years "Angel" and the Stevie Wonder cover "Until You Come Back to Me" being the most notable. Her Atlantic contract ended at the end of the 1970s. She signed with the Clive Davis-guided Arista and scored number one R&B hits with "Jump to It," "Get It Right," and "Freeway of Love." Many of her successes were duets, or crafted with the assistance of contemporaries such as Luther Vandross and Narada Michael Walden. In 1986 Franklin released her follow-up to Who's Zoomin' Who?, the self-titled Aretha, which saw the single "I Knew You Were Waiting for Me," a duet with George Michael, hit the top of the charts. There was also another return to gospel in 1987 with One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism. Franklin shifted back to pop with 1989's Through the Storm, but it wasn't a commercial success, and neither was 1991's new jack swing-styled What You See Is What You Sweat.

Now solidly an iconic figure and acknowledged as one of the best singers of her generation no matter what her record sales were, Franklin contributed songs to several movie soundtracks in the next few years before releasing the R&B-based A Rose Is Still a Rose in 1998. So Damn Happy followed five years later in 2003 and again saw disappointing sales, but it did generate the Grammy-winning song "Wonderful." Franklin left Arista that same year and started her own label, Aretha's Records, two years later. A duets compilation, Jewels in the Crown: All-Star Duets with the Queen, was issued in 2007, followed by her first holiday album, 2008's This Christmas. The first release on her own label, A Woman Falling Out of Love, appeared in 2011. She signed to RCA and realigned with Clive Davis, who connected her with the likes of Babyface and OutKast's André 3000 for Sings the Great Diva Classics, for which she covered Gladys Knight, Barbra Streisand, and Adele, among others. Despite sometimes poor health, she continued to select new projects to work on; ever the institution, her reputation is secure as one of the best singers of the modern era. ~ Richie Unterberger  http://www.allmusic.com/artist/aretha-franklin-mn0000927555/biography

Trouble in Mind

Monday, December 19, 2016

Aretha Franklin - Take A Look: The Clyde Otis Sessions

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:56
Size: 123.5 MB
Styles: Soul
Year: 1964/2011
Art: Front

[2:51] 1. I'll Keep On Smiling
[3:14] 2. Shangri-La
[2:32] 3. Zing! Went The Strings Of My Heart
[4:16] 4. People
[2:32] 5. A Mother's Love
[2:15] 6. Friendly Persuasion (Thee I Love)
[2:56] 7. But Beautiful
[1:49] 8. That's Entertainment
[2:39] 9. Take A Look
[4:41] 10. (Ah, The Apple Trees) When The World Was Young
[2:27] 11. Jim
[2:57] 12. Sweet Bitter Love
[4:52] 13. Only The Lonely
[4:05] 14. My Coloring Book
[2:53] 15. I Wish I Didn't Love You So
[4:19] 16. People (Mono Mix0
[2:29] 17. A Mother's Love (Mono Mix)

Initial July 1964 sessions with Clyde Otis were productive but Columbia didn’t release the material as an album. Those efforts are represented here by The Clyde Otis Sessions. It’s amazing that so much quality material was left aside, including the song which gives the box set its title. “Take a Look” predates “What’s Going On?” and other socially-conscious songs (“Lord, what’s happening to this human race?/I can’t even see one friendly face…”) that drew headlines in the years to come. In spite of a powerful, pointed statement (“Take a look at your children…”) and ending summation (“Nobody wins when the price is hate”), “Take a Look” perhaps didn’t have a great impact because of its string-drenched arrangement that didn’t speak to the youth culture upon its release by Columbia in 1967 after Franklin’s departure for Atlantic.

Take A Look: The Clyde Otis Sessions

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Aretha Franklin - The Great American Songbook

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:02
Size: 130.6 MB
Styles: R&B, Soul, Traditional pop
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[3:16] 1. Little Brown Book
[2:54] 2. Trouble In Mind
[3:13] 3. Try A Little Tenderness
[2:50] 4. It Ain't Necessarily So
[2:46] 5. How Deep Is The Ocean
[4:34] 6. Cold, Cold Heart
[2:29] 7. Love For Sale
[2:30] 8. How Glad I Am
[2:50] 9. Skylark
[4:33] 10. This Bitter Earth
[2:14] 11. Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate The Positive
[3:29] 12. What A Difference A Day Made
[4:51] 13. Only The Lonely
[2:21] 14. Rock A Bye Your Baby With A Dixie Melody
[3:01] 15. God Bless The Child
[3:06] 16. Say It Isn't So
[2:39] 17. Are You Sure
[3:17] 18. That Lucky Old Sun (Just Rolls Around Heaven All Day)

Legacy released this 18-track disc less than two months prior to the 11-CD/one-DVD Take a Look: Aretha Franklin Complete on Columbia. In a sense, The Great American Songbook is nothing more than a box-set sampler, but it shall remain an excellent overview of Franklin’s overlooked (or willfully ignored) early-‘60s releases, which were heavy on interpretations of songs written by the likes of Hoagy Carmichael and Johnny Mercer, George and Ira Gershwin, Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn, and Irving Berlin. While she had not fully blossomed and was years away from the gutsier material of her commercial peak -- only “Rock-a-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody” scratched the Top 40 -- her voice was nonetheless supremely expressive, rooted in her gospel upbringing and drenched in soul. She was no mere stylist; when she sings “Ooh, honey, I’d like to really melt your cold, cold heart,” there is as much fire as there is in any given line of “(You Make Me Feel Like A) Natural Woman.” Even the earliest cuts here, taken from late 1960 and early 1961 sessions with the Ray Bryant Combo, are soul through and through. (Note for fanatics: the mixes of "Trouble in Mind" and "Love for Sale" eliminate the fabricated crowd noise heard on Yeah!!!.) ~Andy Kellman

The Great American Songbook

Saturday, February 7, 2015

Aretha Franklin - The Tender, The Moving, The Swinging Aretha Franklin

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:53
Size: 132.5 MB
Styles: Soul
Year: 1963/2011
Art: Front

[3:18] 1. Don't Cry Baby
[3:13] 2. Try A Little Tenderness
[2:51] 3. I Apologize
[2:45] 4. Without The One You Love
[3:02] 5. Lokk For The Silver Lining
[2:39] 6. I'm Sitting On Top Of The World
[2:30] 7. Just For A Thrill
[3:01] 8. God Bless The Child
[3:24] 9. I'm Wandering
[2:46] 10. How Deep Is The Ocean
[2:47] 11. I Don't Know Anymore
[2:33] 12. Lover Come Back To Me
[2:13] 13. Trouble In Mind (Mono Mix)
[2:45] 14. Without The One You Love (Mono Mix)
[3:13] 15. Don't Cry, Baby (Mono Mix)
[3:23] 16. I'm Wandering (Mono Mix)
[3:12] 17. Try A Little Tenderness (Mono Mix)
[2:50] 18. I Apologize (Mono Mix)
[2:32] 19. Lover Come Back To Me (Mono Mix)
[2:46] 20. I Don't Know Anymore (Mono Mix)

The Tender, The Moving, The Swinging Aretha Franklin is the Queen of Soul's third studio album for Columbia. It was her first album to receive commercial success, becoming a massive hit on the Billboard 200. Here, Franklin performs hits and standards including “God Bless the Child,” “Try a Little Tenderness” and “How Deep Is the Ocean.” Absolutely essential.

The Tender, The Moving, The Swinging Aretha Franklin

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Aretha Franklin - Aretha's Jazz

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1984
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 34:48
Size: 88,0 MB
Art: Front

(3:09)  1. Ramblin'
(4:25)  2. Today I Sing The Blues
(3:04)  3. Pitiful
(3:25)  4. Crazy He Calls Me
(3:44)  5. Bring It On Home To Me
(6:17)  6. Somewhere
(2:59)  7. Moody's Mood
(7:42)  8. Just Right Tonight

A good anthology that covers various album cuts, B-sides, and assorted material in a jazz vein that Aretha cut for Columbia. It's great to hear her underrated piano playing given some more space, and Columbia should really reissue her Dinah Washington tribute album, from which they pulled a couple of these songs. Aretha wasn't a jazz vocalist from the standpoint of approach or inspiration, but she really can sing anything and showed it on these cuts, even if they weren't, for the most part, hits. ~ Ron Wynn   http://www.allmusic.com/album/arethas-jazz-mw0000203101

Aretha's Jazz