1952–1960: Beginnings Just after her mother's death, Franklin began singing solos at
New Bethel Baptist Church, debuting with the hymn "Jesus, Be a Fence Around Me". When Franklin was 12, her father began
managing her; he would take her on the road with him, during his "gospel caravan" tours for her to perform in various churches. He also helped her sign her first recording deal with
J.V.B. Records. Franklin was featured on vocals and piano. In 1956, J.V.B. released Franklin's first single, "Never Grow Old", backed with "You Grow Closer". "Precious Lord (Part One)" backed with "Precious Lord (Part Two)" followed in 1959. These four tracks, with the addition of "There Is a Fountain Filled with Blood", were released on side one of the 1956 album,
Spirituals. This was reissued by Battle Records in 1962, under the same title. In 1965,
Checker Records released
Songs of Faith, featuring the five tracks from the 1956
Spirituals album, with the addition of four previously unreleased recordings. Aretha was only 14 when
Songs of Faith was recorded. During this time, Franklin would occasionally travel with
the Soul Stirrers. As a young gospel singer, Franklin spent summers on the gospel circuit in Chicago and stayed with
Mavis Staples's family. According to music producer
Quincy Jones, while Franklin was still young,
Dinah Washington let him know that "Aretha was the 'next one. Franklin and her father traveled to California, where she met singer
Sam Cooke. At the age of 16, Franklin went on tour with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and she would ultimately sing at his funeral in 1968. Other influences in her youth included
Marvin Gaye, as well as Ray Charles and Sam Cooke, "two of Franklin's greatest influences". Also important was
James Cleveland, known as the King of Gospel music, "who helped to focus her early career as a gospel singer"; Cleveland had been recruited by her father as a pianist for the Southern California Community Choir.
1960–1966: Columbia years '' ad for Franklin's debut single, "
Today I Sing the Blues", November 21, 1960 After turning 18, Franklin confided to her father that she aspired to follow Sam Cooke in recording pop music, and moved to New York. Serving as her manager, C. L. Franklin agreed to the move and helped to produce a two-song demo that soon was brought to the attention of
Columbia Records, who agreed to sign her in 1960, as a "five-percent artist". During this period, Franklin would be coached by choreographer
Cholly Atkins to prepare for her pop performances. Before signing with Columbia, Sam Cooke tried to persuade Franklin's father to sign her with his label,
RCA Victor, but she had already decided to go with Columbia. Franklin's first Columbia single, "
Today I Sing the Blues", In January 1961, Columbia issued Franklin's first album,
Aretha: With The Ray Bryant Combo. The album featured her first single to chart the
Billboard Hot 100, "
Won't Be Long", which also peaked at number 7 on the R&B chart. Mostly produced by
Clyde Otis, Franklin's Columbia recordings saw her performing in diverse genres, such as
standards,
vocal jazz,
blues,
doo-wop and
rhythm and blues. Before the year was out, Franklin scored her first hit-single with her rendition of the standard "
Rock-a-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody". By the end of 1961, Franklin was named as a "new-star female vocalist" in
DownBeat magazine. In 1962, Columbia issued two more albums,
The Electrifying Aretha Franklin and
The Tender, the Moving, the Swinging Aretha Franklin, the latter of which became her first charting album, reaching number 69 on the
Billboard Top LPs – Monaural chart. In the 1960s, during a performance at the
Regal Theater in Chicago,
WVON radio personality
Pervis Spann announced that Franklin should be crowned "the Queen of Soul". By 1964, Franklin began recording more pop music, reaching the top 10 on the R&B chart with the ballad "Runnin' Out of Fools", in early 1965. She had two R&B charted singles in 1965 and 1966, with the songs "
One Step Ahead" and "Cry Like a Baby", while also reaching the
Easy Listening charts with the ballads "
You Made Me Love You" and "(No, No) I'm Losing You". By the mid-1960s, Franklin was making $100,000 per year from countless performances in nightclubs and theaters. Also during that period, she appeared on rock-and-roll shows, such as
Hollywood a Go-Go and
Shindig! However, she struggled with commercial success while at Columbia. Label executive
John H. Hammond later said he felt Columbia did not understand Franklin's early gospel background and failed to bring that aspect out further during her period there.
1966–1979: Atlantic years In November 1966, Franklin's Columbia recording contract expired; at that time, she owed the company money because record sales had not met expectations. Producer
Jerry Wexler convinced her to move to
Atlantic Records. Wexler decided that he wanted to take advantage of her gospel background; his philosophy in general was to encourage a "tenacious form of rhythm & blues that became increasingly identified as soul". In January 1967, Franklin traveled to
Muscle Shoals, Alabama, to record at
FAME Studios and recorded the song "
I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)", backed by the
Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Franklin only spent one day recording at FAME, as an altercation broke out between her manager and husband
Ted White, studio owner
Rick Hall, and a horn player, and sessions were abandoned. The song was released the following month and reached number one on the R&B chart, while also peaking at number nine on the
Billboard Hot 100, giving Franklin her first top-ten pop single. The song's B-side, "
Do Right Woman, Do Right Man", reached the R&B top 40, peaking at number 37. "
Respect" was
Otis Redding's
song but Aretha modified it with a "supercharged interlude featuring the emphatic spelling-out of the song's title". Upon hearing her version, Otis Redding said admiringly: "That little girl done took my song away from me." Franklin's debut Atlantic album,
I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You, also became commercially successful, later going gold. According to
National Geographic, this recording "would catapult Franklin to fame". Working with Wexler and Atlantic, Franklin had become "the most successful singer in the nation" by 1968. In 1968, Franklin issued the top-selling albums
Lady Soul and
Aretha Now, which included some of her most popular hit singles, including "
Chain of Fools", "
Ain't No Way", "
Think", and "
I Say a Little Prayer". That February, Franklin earned the first two of her Grammys, including the debut category for
Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. On February 16, Franklin was honored with a day named for her and was greeted by longtime friend Martin Luther King Jr., who gave her the
SCLC Drum Beat Award for Musicians less than two months before
his death. Franklin toured outside the US for the first time in late April/May 1968, including an appearance at the
Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, where she played to a near-hysterical audience who covered the stage with flower petals. She performed two concerts in London, at the
Finsbury Park Astoria and the
Hammersmith Odeon on May 11 and 12. In June 1968, she appeared on the
cover of Time magazine in a portrait illustration by
Boris Chaliapin. In March 1969, Franklin was unanimously voted winner of
Académie du Jazz's R&B award, Prix Otis Redding, for her albums
Lady Soul,
Aretha Now, and
Aretha in Paris. That year, Franklin was the subject of a criminal
impersonation scheme. Another woman performed at several Florida venues under the name Aretha Franklin. Suspicion was drawn when the fake Franklin charged only a fraction of the expected rate to perform. Franklin's lawyers contacted Florida authorities and uncovered a coercive scheme in which the singer,
Vickie Jones, had been threatened with violence and constrained into impersonating her idol, whom she resembled closely both in voice and looks. After being cleared of wrongdoing, Jones subsequently enjoyed a brief career of her own, during which she was herself the subject of an impersonation. Franklin's success further expanded during the early 1970s, during which she recorded the multi-week R&B number one "
Don't Play That Song (You Lied)", as well as the top-ten singles "
Spanish Harlem", "
Rock Steady", and "
Day Dreaming". Some of these releases were from the acclaimed albums
Spirit in the Dark (released in August 1970, in which month she again performed at London's Hammersmith Odeon) and
Young, Gifted and Black (released in early 1972). In 1971, Franklin became the first R&B performer to headline
Fillmore West, later that year releasing the live album
Aretha Live at Fillmore West. In January 1972, she returned to
gospel music in a two-night, live-church recording, with the album
Amazing Grace, in which she reinterpreted standards such as Mahalia Jackson's "
How I Got Over". Originally released in June 1972,
Amazing Grace sold more than two million copies, and is one of bestselling gospel albums of all time. The live performances were filmed for
a concert film directed by
Sydney Pollack, but because of synching problems and Franklin's own attempts to prevent the film's distribution, the film's release was only realized by producer Alan Elliott in November 2018. Franklin's career began to experience problems while recording the album
Hey Now Hey, which featured production from
Quincy Jones. Despite the success of the single "
Angel", the album bombed upon its release in 1973. Franklin continued having R&B success with songs such as "
Until You Come Back to Me" and "
I'm in Love", but by 1975 her albums and songs were no longer top sellers. After Jerry Wexler left Atlantic for
Warner Bros. Records in 1976, Franklin worked on the
soundtrack to the film
Sparkle with
Curtis Mayfield. The album yielded Franklin's final top 40 pop hit of the decade, "
Something He Can Feel", which also peaked at number one on the R&B chart. Franklin's follow-up albums for Atlantic, including
Sweet Passion (1977),
Almighty Fire (1978) and
La Diva (1979), bombed on the charts, and in 1979 Franklin left the company. On November 7, 1979, she guested
The Mike Douglas Show with her yellow costume from her
La Diva album, and sang "Ladies Only", "What If I Should Ever Need You" and "
Yesterday" by
the Beatles.
1980–2007: Arista years In 1980, after leaving Atlantic Records, Franklin signed with
Clive Davis's
Arista Records. "Davis was beguiling and had the golden touch", according to
Rolling Stone. "If anybody could rejuvenate Franklin's puzzlingly stuck career, it was Davis." In November of that year, Franklin participated in the Royal Variety Performance at the
London Palladium in front of
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, directed by Louis Benjamin in celebration of fifty years of entertainment. Franklin's first Arista release,
Aretha, was released in 1980 and produced the top three R&B hit single "United Together". While not released as a single, Franklin's
funk-influenced cover of Otis Redding's "
I Can't Turn You Loose" on the same album resulted in her first Grammy nomination in four years. The follow-up album,
Love All the Hurt Away (1981) featured her hit R&B duet of the title track with
George Benson, while a
post-disco rendition of
Sam & Dave's "
Hold On, I'm Comin'" won Franklin her first Grammy in six years. For her next Arista release, Clive Davis hired rising soul singer
Luther Vandross to produce, resulting in
Jump to It (1982). Producing her first top 40 single on the
Billboard Hot 100 since "Something He Can Feel" with the danceable
title track", the album would become her first since the
Sparkle soundtrack seven years earlier to receive a gold certification from the RIAA. When her immediate Vandross-helmed follow-up,
Get It Right (1983), failed to perform successfully despite the
title track becoming a number one R&B single, Arista hired a young
Narada Michael Walden to produce the album, ''
Who's Zoomin' Who''. Eschewing her R&B and soul roots, the album brought on a crossover
pop sound with elements of synthesized
dance-rock and
urban pop. Featuring the top ten Hot 100 hits such as "
Freeway of Love" and
the title track, the album peaked at number thirteen on the
Billboard 200, her highest peak in nearly 20 years and was her first album to be certified platinum in the United States. Part of the album's success was due to exposure on the then-fledgling
music video channel
MTV, which also exposed Franklin to a younger audience. Franklin also achieved a top 20 hit with the duet, "
Sisters Are Doing It for Themselves" with the new wave band
Eurythmics. More than a year later in 1986, Franklin issued her sixth Arista release,
Aretha (sometimes referred to as ''Aretha '86
). The Walden-produced album went gold on the strength of her globally successful duet with George Michael, "I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)", which became her first single in nearly twenty years to top the Billboard
Hot 100 and also topped the charts in the United Kingdom and Australia and resulted in Grammy wins for Franklin. Other hit singles on Aretha'' included a pop-rock rendition of "
Jumpin' Jack Flash", culled from the
Whoopi Goldberg-starring
film of the same name, and "
Jimmy Lee". Throughout 1987, Franklin provided vocals to the theme songs of the TV shows
A Different World and
Together. Also in 1987, the artist performed "
America the Beautiful" at
WWE's
Wrestlemania III; one source states that "to this day her WrestleMania III performance might be the most memorable" of the event openers by many artists. That same year, Franklin released her second full-length gospel album,
One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism, which was recorded at her late father's New Bethel church. After 1988, "Franklin never again had huge hits", according to
Rolling Stone. In 1995, Franklin portrayed
Aunt Em in the
Apollo Theater revival of
The Wiz. That year, Franklin contributed to the
soundtrack of
Waiting to Exhale, after being handpicked by Whitney Houston to perform the ballad "It Hurts Like Hell", which reached the
Billboard R&B charts. Three years after that, Franklin released the album,
A Rose Is Still a Rose, which produced her final top 40 single with the
title track, with both the album and single earning gold certifications. in
Dallas, Texas That same year, Franklin received global praise after her
1998 Grammy Awards performance. She had initially been asked to perform in honor of the 1980 film
The Blues Brothers, in which she appeared with
Dan Aykroyd and
John Belushi. That evening, after the show had already begun, another performer, opera tenor
Luciano Pavarotti became too ill to perform the aria "
Nessun dorma" as planned. The show's producers, desperate to fill the time slot, approached Franklin with their dilemma. She was a friend of Pavarotti and had sung the aria two nights prior at the annual
MusiCares event. She asked to hear Pavarotti's rehearsal recording, and after listening, agreed that she could sing it in the
tenor range that the orchestra was prepared to play in. More than one billion people worldwide saw the performance, and she received an immediate
standing ovation. She would go on to record the selection and perform it live several more times in the years to come. The last time she sang the aria live was for
Pope Francis at the
World Meeting of Families in
Philadelphia in September 2015. A small boy was so touched by her performance that he came onto the stage and embraced her while Franklin was still singing. Her final Arista album,
So Damn Happy, was released in 2003 and featured the Grammy-winning song "Wonderful". In 2004, Franklin announced that she was leaving Arista after more than 20 years with the label. To complete her Arista obligations, Franklin issued the duets compilation album
Jewels in the Crown: All-Star Duets with the Queen in 2007. In February 2006, she performed "
The Star-Spangled Banner" with
Aaron Neville and
Dr. John for
Super Bowl XL, held in her hometown of Detroit.
2007–2018: Final years In 2008, Franklin issued the holiday album
This Christmas, Aretha on DMI Records. On February 8, 2008, Franklin was honored as the
MusiCares Person of the Year, and performed "
Never Gonna Break My Faith", which had won her the
Grammy for best gospel performance the year before. Twelve years later, an unheard performance of "
Never Gonna Break My Faith" was released in June 2020 to commemorate
Juneteenth with a new video visualizing the American human rights movement. This caused the song to enter the
Billboard gospel charts at number one, giving Franklin the distinction of having had a number one record in every decade since the 1960s. On November 18, 2008, she performed "
Respect" and "
Chain of Fools" at
Dancing with the Stars. On January 20, 2009, Franklin made international headlines for performing "
My Country, 'Tis of Thee" at President
Barack Obama's
inaugural ceremony with her church hat becoming a popular topic online. In 2010, Franklin accepted an honorary degree from
Yale University. In 2011, under her own label, Aretha's Records, she issued the album
Aretha: A Woman Falling Out of Love. of the
White House in 2015 In 2014, Franklin was signed under RCA Records, controller of the Arista catalog and a sister label to Columbia via
Sony Music Entertainment, and worked with Clive Davis. There were plans for her to record an album produced by
Danger Mouse, who was replaced with
Babyface and
Don Was when Danger Mouse left the project. On September 29, 2014, Franklin performed to a standing ovation, with
Cissy Houston as backup, a compilation of
Adele's "
Rolling in the Deep" and "
Ain't No Mountain High Enough" on the
Late Show with David Letterman. Franklin's cover of "Rolling in the Deep" was featured among nine other songs in her first RCA release,
Aretha Franklin Sings the Great Diva Classics, released in October 2014. In doing so, she became the first woman to have 100 songs on
Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart with the success of her cover of Adele's "Rolling in the Deep", which debuted at number 47 on the chart. In December 2015, Franklin gave an acclaimed performance of "(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman" at the 2015
Kennedy Center Honors during the section for honoree
Carole King, who co-wrote the song. During the swelling
bridge of the song, Franklin dramatically dropped her fur coat from her shoulders to the stage, for which the audience rewarded her with a mid-performance
standing ovation. Franklin released the album
A Brand New Me in November 2017 with the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, which uses archived recordings from Franklin. Franklin canceled some concerts in 2017 for health reasons. Nevertheless, she was still garnering highly favorable reviews for her skill and showmanship. At the
Ravinia Festival on September 3, 2017, she gave her last full concert. Franklin's final public performance was at the
Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City during
Elton John's 25th anniversary gala for the
Elton John AIDS Foundation on November 7, 2017. ==Music style and image==