Young, Gifted And Black Aretha Franklin

Album info

Album-Release:
1972

HRA-Release:
20.10.2014

Label: Atlantic Records

Genre: R&B

Subgenre: Soul

Artist: Aretha Franklin

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Oh Me Oh My [I'm A Fool For You Baby]03:43
  • 2Day Dreaming04:03
  • 3Rock Steady03:15
  • 4Young, Gifted And Black03:35
  • 5All The King's Horses03:56
  • 6A Brand New Me04:27
  • 7April Fools03:32
  • 8I've Been Loving You Too Long03:36
  • 9First Snow In Kokomo04:04
  • 10The Long And Winding Road03:39
  • 11Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time)03:43
  • 12Border Song (Holy Moses)03:20
  • Total Runtime44:53

Info for Young, Gifted And Black

Recorded over a seven-month period in 1970 and 1971, „Young, Gifted And Black“ captures Aretha Franklin at the peak of her artistic and commercial powers. A stirring, rock-solid release that holds its own with the singer's better-known albums, it also includes some eclectic song choices. Nestled against original, uptempo groovers like 'Rock Steady,' for example, is a soulful reading of the Beatles' 'The Long and Winding Road.' (Beatles sideman Billy Preston's signature organ playing is featured throughout the recording.)

Upon its release in January 1972, the album yielded four Top Ten singles on the R&B charts and two Top Ten singles on the pop charts. Franklin baffled some fans at the time by covering 'Border Song (Holy Moses),' but the song, composed by a then-obscure team of Elton John and Bernie Taupin, landed at #5 on the R&B charts. Franklin's stirring cover of Simon and Garfunkel's 'Bridge Over Troubled Water,' recorded during the same sessions but omitted from the initial release, appears on the reissue. Overall, „Young, Gifted And Black“ is one of the brightest releases in what would prove to be Franklin's most fertile, diverse, and productive period. For many, her greatest album from start to finish, with Rock Steady one highlight among many.

Aretha Franklin, vocals, piano, celesta, electric piano
Neal Rosengarden, trumpet, vibraphone, percussion
Don Arnone, guitar, acoustic guitar
Cornell Dupree, guitar
Hugh McCracken, guitar
Hubert Laws, flute, alto flute
Andrew Love, tenor saxophone
Wayne Jackson, trumpet
Donny Hathaway, electric piano, organ
Billy Preston, organ
Robert 'Pops' Popwell, bass, percussion
Chuck Rainey, bass
Eric Gale, bass
Ray Lucas, drums
Bernard 'Pretty' Purdie, drums, percussion
Al Jackson, Jr., drums
Mac Rebennack, percussion
Dr. John, percussion
Neal Rosengarden, percussion
J.R. Bailey, background vocals
Pat Smith, background vocals
Erma Franklin, background vocals
Ronald Bright, background vocals
Ann S. Clark, background vocals
Sammy Turner, background vocals
Margaret Branch, background vocals
The Sweet Inspirations, background vocals
Carolyn Franklin, background vocals

Engineered by Chuck Kirkpatrick, Gene Paul, Howard Albert, Howie Albert
Produced by Jerry Wexler, Arif Mardin, Tom Dowd

Digitally remastered


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 Oscar- winning Jennifer Hudson. 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.

Aretha's interest in a wide range of popular music became evident when she began her own recording career at Columbia Records, although it should be noted that her powerful, emotive style was first heard on a gospel recording made in 1956 with her father and released by Chess Records in the mid-'60s. With the support of her father, Aretha traveled to New York City in 1960 and after a demo which contained her version of a Helen Humes tune titled 'Today I Sing The Blues' made its way to the ears of executive John Hammond (responsible for signing such artists as Billie Holiday, Bessie Smith and Bob Dylan), Aretha was signed to Columbia in 1960. For more information please visit the Aretha Franklin homepage.

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