Lunch with Lady Soul: A revitalized Aretha speaks out
“Listen,” Aretha Franklin says to a waiter as she points at her fish sandwich. “Don’t you have the smoked salmon?” She’s sitting in the restaurant at New York’s Ritz-Carlton on a rainy Friday afternoon, wearing a bright fur coat, hair spilling out of a winter cap. The waiter explains that Franklin’s lunchtime staple ”“ salmon and cream cheese on whole-wheat bread ”“ isn’t on the menu anymore. “But I will talk to the chef,” he adds quickly. “He will do it for you right now.”
This week, Respect, a new biography by David Ritz, has been getting a lot of publicity ”“ and Franklin is not happy about it. Ritz ghostwrote Franklin’s 1999 autobiography but was unsatisfied with the results. “Self-reflection doesn’t come easy to her,” Ritz says. So, drawing from his interviews with her and her close family, he published a book that details the wild offstage promiscuity of the Fifties gospel circuit as well as Franklin’s troubled marriage to Ted White, who managed her before their divorce in 1969. “[It’s] a very trashy book ”“ all lies,” she said recently.
Today, Franklin is careful with her words and at times combative. When I ask if I can record our conversation, she flatly declines. “You can take notes,” she says. When I mention praise in the book from her sister Carolyn ”“ “She slips into a zone when she sings”‰.”‰.”‰.”‰and connects to the Holy Spirit” ”“ Aretha cringes. “I don’t think Carolyn ever said anything like that. That doesn’t even sound like Carolyn.”
Franklin’s new album ”“ on which she covers Gladys Knight’s “Midnight Train to Georgia” and Adele’s “Rolling in the Deep” ”“ reunites her with Clive Davis, who helped revive her career in the Eighties with a series of hits on his Arista label. Davis had been pushing Franklin to record an album of diva classics for years, sometimes over dinner at the Four Seasons. According to Davis, Franklin hasn’t lost any fire. “She’s come back in peak form,” he says. “The wonder of Aretha is she can do any song. And with very, very few exceptions, two takes is as close to the maximum as she does.”
For Franklin, the album is a chance to prove herself in a pop world with more divas than ever. “It was never as competitive as it is now,” Franklin says. “People are being very selective about what they spend their money on. I understand that this year they haven’t had any platinum records. I hope to have the first one. That would be fabulous.”
Soon, the salmon hors d’oeuvre arrives, which she offers me. “A little caviar, too,” she says, savoring a bite. “Great!”
Franklin has lived in Detroit for most of her life, but visiting New York reminds her of when she moved there in 1960. She was 18 and had just been signed to Columbia Records. “I always had a chaperone,” she says with a smile. “I was working with the jazz greats ”“ Charlie Mingus, John Coltrane, Blue Mitchell. All of the best of the best.”
Franklin had been a star in the gospel world for years before signing to Columbia. At 12, she joined her father, the Rev. C.L. Franklin ”“ whose sermons sold millions of copies on Chess Records ”“ on the road. “His delivery was very dynamic,” she says. “If he had chosen to be a singer, he would’ve been a great one.” Her favorite sermon of his was “A Wild Man Meets Jesus,” about a man who goes insane, abandons his family and winds up living in a graveyard. Jesus sails through a rainstorm to meet him and exorcises him of demons, to the dismay of townspeople who prefer the man as the village idiot. “The man walks into someone he immediately knows is superior and supreme to him, without any words,” says Franklin. “That’s what I love about that. It underscores a supreme being.”
Franklin was no stranger to big personalities growing up ”“ her parents’ parties included Nat King Cole, Duke Ellington and Sam Cooke. “I had a teenage crush on him,” Franklin says of Cooke. “Very classy, very classy. He came from the church, so it would be hard not to have class.”
Franklin’s early records sold poorly ”“ her Columbia material was lounge-y and overly slick, and she was mistakenly marketed as a supper-club soul singer in the mold of Dinah Washington. She didn’t become the Queen of Soul until she signed to Atlantic Records in 1966. There, she was backed by the Muscle Shoals rhythm section and produced by Jerry Wexler, who added a funky, psychedelic edge to match her gospel fervor. “Jerry asked me to play the piano [in the studio],” she says. “You could call my piano my trademark, or one of my trademarks.”
Soon, Franklin was topping the charts with songs like 1967’s “I Never Loved a Man (the Way I Love You)” and “Respect,” which she singles out as her two favorite songs in her catalog. “Everybody wants respect,” she says. “In their own way, three-year-olds would like respect, and acknowledgment, in their terms.” As for the “sock it to me” backing vocals in “Respect,” she clarifies: “There was nothing sexual about that. Some people thought that, but it wasn’t.”
Franklin lights up when she remembers February 16th, 1968. The mayor of Detroit christened it Aretha Franklin Day, ahead of her show that night at Cobo Hall. “Dr. King was there, my dad was there,” she recalls. “When we walked into the arena and became visible to the audience, then the crowd erupted. It was like the ceiling was coming down.”
Songs like “Respect,” “Chain of Fools” and “Think” became anthems for the civil rights and women’s liberation movements, though Franklin downplays her influence on the latter: “I think that’s Gloria Steinem’s role. I don’t think I was a catalyst for the women’s movement. Sorry. But if I were? So much the better!” Today, she praises Beyoncé for carrying the torch for feminism in pop. “Astrologically, for what it’s worth, she’s a Virgo, like Michael Jackson,” Franklin says. “A very hard worker.”
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