You may have heard the expression, “The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.”
In the most general sense, it means that kids are similar to their parents, that they often have the same qualities or talents as Mom and Dad. For example, if a parent is an actor, his or her child may become an actor or be involved in some way in the performing arts. If a parent is a doctor, the person’s child may also become a doctor or involved in some other way in health care. The same is true for painters and firefighters and lawyers. And the same was true for Aretha Louise Franklin.
Aretha, born in 1942 in Memphis, Tennessee, had music in her blood. Her mother, Barbara Siggers Franklin, was a gospel singer and pianist. Her father (right), Reverend Clarence LaVaughn “C.L.” Franklin, was a Baptist minister widely known for his sermons and his singing voice. (Aretha can be seen on the far right in this photograph.) All this music paved the way for Aretha’s 60-year career as one of the best female artists of all time, selling over 75 million albums worldwide. ▶

MUSIC SIDENOTE
Before there was Black gospel, there was African American spiritual music, a kind of religious folk song connected to African people’s enslavement in the American South. “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot” is an example. Soon after emancipation in the mid-19th century, African Americans began writing songs that drew on spirituals, call-and-response phrasing, and biblical themes. (Call-and-response is a singing style in which the first part, often sung by one person, is answered by a second part, usually sung by a group, just as the name suggests.) This was the first gospel music. Aretha Franklin’s version of “Amazing Grace” is an example of gospel.


◀ Gospel music was a constant presence in Aretha’s childhood. When she was five, the family moved to Detroit, where her father became pastor at the New Bethel Baptist Church. His reputation as a powerful singer drew Mahalia Jackson (shown here), Sam Cooke, and other talented artists to his home and into Aretha’s life. Civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was also a frequent visitor. These two influences – gospel and social justice – would guide Aretha’s music and many of her decisions in the years to come.
Aretha was a self-taught, gifted pianist. She got her start as a performing artist singing in front of her father’s congregation and touring with him to churches in the surrounding area. When she was 14, she recorded her first album at her father’s church. The album is called Songs of Faith. ▶

In 1960, when she was 18, Aretha Franklin moved to New York City and signed a recording contract with Columbia Records. There, she turned away from religious music but didn’t focus on any one particular type of music. People at Columbia wanted her to sing Broadway ballads – songs that tell a story – and music that kids of the time were listening to. She did that, but in spite of her talent, she was not as successful as she and others thought she could be. It was time for something different. ▶


▲ Everything changed when Franklin signed a contract with Atlantic Records in 1967. There, producer Jerry Wexler suggested she sing what and how she wanted to. As you might guess, she returned to her roots in gospel. . . with extraordinary results. In that same year, Franklin had her first million-selling single. She also released her version of “Respect.”

REFLECTION
The civil rights movement and the women’s rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s were about demanding equal treatment. Reflect on the lyrics of “Respect.” Why would they be especially meaningful to these social movements?
All I’m askin’
Is for a little respect when you come home
Baby when you get home
Yeah
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Find out what it means to me
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Take care, TCB
A little respect
Whoa, babe
A little respect
I get tired
Keep on tryin’

◀ Franklin’s version of “Respect” immediately became an anthem for matters of race and gender. The song was still on people’s minds and lips in 2014 when Franklin herself spoke about it.
As women . . . we have the power. We are very resourceful. Women absolutely deserve respect.

▲ Aretha Franklin rose to fame during the era of segregation. Her hit song “Respect” was only one of many contributions she made to the social justice and women’s movements of her time. She also toured with Martin Luther King Jr. and gave free concerts to help pay for his civil rights campaign. Bernice King, Martin Luther King Jr.’s daughter, called Franklin a “shining example” of how the arts can be used to support social change. As if to emphasize the point, Franklin had it written into her contracts that she would not perform before a segregated audience. According to the civil rights activist Reverend Jesse Jackson (front row, left, in this photograph), she was a fighter who used her art as a platform.