The legendary queen of soul
Aretha Franklin, winner of 18 Grammy Awards, lost her long battle with
pancreatic cancer on Thursday in her Detroit home.
Condolences are pouring in from across the country and around
the world for the greatest soul singer to ever live.
On March 25, 1942, Aretha
Louise Franklin was born in a ramshackle cottage in Memphis, Tennessee to
promiscuous Baptist preacher Clarence LaVaughn “C. L.” Franklin and his wife
Barbara Siggers.
Tired of his promiscuity, Siggers soon divorced Franklin and
moved to Buffalo, NY with her son, Vaughn, leaving 6-year-old Aretha and her
older sisters, Erma and Carolyn, with their father.
Thanks to her father’s army of girlfriends and admirers, Aretha
was influenced by gospel music before she took her first baby steps.
Aretha’s mother died on March 7, 1952 before Aretha turned 10.
Her grandmother Rachel, and gospel singer Mahalia Jackson took turns helping to
raise the children while C. L. Franklin preached his fiery sermons at various
churches around the country.
After Franklin relocated with his family to Detroit, Michigan,
his New Bethel Baptist Church became a popular destination for gospel musicians
such as Clara Ward, James Cleveland, Albertina Walker, and notables Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., Jackie Wilson and Sam Cooke.
Shortly after her mother’s death, 10-year-old Aretha began
singing in the choir at her father’s church. 4 years later, C.L. Franklin began
managing his 14-year-old child prodigy and took her out on the road with him to
perform in various churches.
The road was no place for a 14-year-old girl with an insatiable
appetite for food and attention from much older men.
In this excerpt from the book RESPECT, by David Ritz,
Aretha is described as a promiscuous girl who bore 2 children by age 14:
“Two months before turning
thirteen, she gave birth to a baby boy she named Clarence, after her dad.
Rumors swirled that her own father was the father of her first child but it was
Donald Burk, a guy she knew from school.
Aretha had
a second child before she was fifteen by Edward Jordan, described by her
brother as just a player. Both children would take the last name of Franklin
and be raised in the Franklin home.”
Aretha reportedly developed a serious crush on singer-songwriter
Sam Cooke, who was 11 years her senior. She allegedly spent nights in his hotel
room where he serenaded her with his hit song “You Send Me”.
Franklin helped Aretha sign her first record deal with J.V.B.
Records, where her first album, Songs of Faith, was released
in 1956.
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