Aretha Louise Franklin
(born March 25, 1942) is an American singer and musician. Franklin
began her career singing gospel at her father, minister C. L. Franklin's
church as a child. In 1960, at age 18, Franklin embarked on a secular
career, recording for Columbia Records only achieving modest success.
Following her signing to Atlantic Records in 1967, Franklin achieved
commercial acclaim and success with songs such as "Respect", "(You Make
Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman" and "Think". These hits and more helped
her to gain the title The Queen of Soul by the end of the 1960s decade.
Franklin eventually recorded a total of 112 charted singles on
Billboard, including 77 Hot 100 entries, 17 top ten pop singles, 100
R&B entries and twenty number-one R&B singles, becoming the most
charted female artist in the chart's history. Franklin also recorded
acclaimed albums such as I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You, Lady
Soul, Young, Gifted & Black and Amazing Grace before experiencing
problems with her record company by the mid-1970s. After her father was
shot in 1979, Franklin left Atlantic and signed with Arista Records,
finding success with a cameo appearance in the film, The Blues Brothers
and with the albums, Jump to It and Who's Zoomin' Who?. In 1998,
Franklin won international acclaim for singing the opera aria, "Nessun
Dorma", at the Grammys of that year replacing Luciano Pavarotti. Later
that same year, she scored her final Top 40 recording with "A Rose Is
Still a Rose".
Franklin has won a total of 18 Grammy Awards and is one of the
best-selling female artists of all time, having sold over 75 million
records worldwide. Franklin has been honored throughout her career
including a 1987 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, in which
she became the first female performer to be inducted. She was inducted
to the UK Music Hall of Fame in 2005. In August 2012, Franklin was
inducted into the GMA Gospel Music Hall of Fame. Franklin is listed in
at least two all-time lists on Rolling Stone magazine, including the 100
Greatest Artists of All Time, in which she placed number 9, and the 100
Greatest Singers of All Time in which she placed number 1.
Franklin has often been described as a great singer and musician due to
"vocal flexibility, interpretive intelligence, skillful piano-playing,
her ear, her experience." Franklin's voice has been described as being a
"powerful mezzo-soprano voice" and has been praised for her
arrangements and interpretations of other artists' hit songs. Of
describing Franklin's voice as a youngster on her first album, Songs of
Faith, released when she was just fourteen, Jerry Wexler explained that
Franklin's voice "was not that of a child but rather of an ecstatic
hierophant." Franklin's image went through rapid changes throughout her
career. During the 1960s, Franklin was known for wearing bouffant
hairdos and extravagant dresses that were sometimes surrounded enveloped
in either mink fur or feathers. In the 1970s, embracing her roots,
Franklin briefly wore the Afro hairdo and wore Afrocentric styled
clothing admired by her peers. In the mid-1970s, after dropping weight,
Franklin began wearing slinkier attire. By the 1980s, she had settled on
wearing nightgowns and extravagant dresses.
Franklin received an honorary degree from Harvard University. She has
also received other degrees, including honorary doctorates in music from
Princeton University, in 2012; Yale University, 2010; the Berklee
College of Music, 2006; the New England Conservatory of Music, 1995; and
the University of Michigan, 1987. She also received an honorary Doctor
of Humane Letters degree from Wayne State University in 1990 and an
honorary Doctor of Law degree from Bethune-Cookman College in 1975.
Official Site: www.arethafranklin.net