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Aretha Now

Aretha Now
 

It's Your Turn

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Aretha Franklin

Aretha Now

 
Cover Aretha Now click the image to get it in cd-cover size
Release Date:
Label: Wea/Rhino
Rating: 5.0
 
»» Download Aretha Now for free
Description:
 
 

 
Tracklist of Aretha Now

Disc 1
1 Think  2:16 view lyrics
2 I Say A Little Prayer  3:34 view lyrics
3 See Saw  2:46 no lyrics yet - submit it
4 Night Time Is The Right Time  4:47 no lyrics yet - submit it
5 You Send Me  2:28 no lyrics yet - submit it
6 You're A Sweet Sweet Man  2:17 no lyrics yet - submit it
7 I Take What I Want  2:32 no lyrics yet - submit it
8 Hello Sunshine  3:04 no lyrics yet - submit it
9 A Change   no lyrics yet - submit it
10 I Can't See Myself Leaving You  3:02 no lyrics yet - submit it

Reviews:

An early classic

I LOVE this album! My parents had it when it first came out and I fondly recall coming into the house after a day at play grooving to this. This version of "I say a little prayer" blows Dionne Warwick out of the water! "See Saw" is an underrated gem as well as the version of her friend Sam Cooke's "You Send Me." This is one of those CD/Albums that you can play all the way through and will make you thank God for allowing Thomas Edison for inventing the phonograph.

Aretha On A Roll

This was Aretha's fourth album for Atlantic and was top five in both UK and US, despite a playing time of under half-an-hour. When the grooves are as funky as these, who cares? Two great tracks had already been hit singles when the album came out - Think, which had been recorded on 15 April 1968, the day Martin Luther King was assassinated; and her fantastic re-interpretation of Burt Bacharach's I Say A Little Prayer, which she and the Sweet Inspirations had apparently worked up while on tour, just for fun. In America I Say A Little Prayer was buried as a flipside before discerning deejays turned it over, but it had been the bona-fide A-side the month before in the UK where it reached number 4.

Her revival of Don Covay's See Saw was the first single lifted from the album, with I Can't See Myself Leaving You being extracted the following year while she was taking time off to avoid burn out. 

Sam Cooke had apparently come to the Franklin household while he was still in the Soul Stirrers and considering turning secular with an acetate of You Send Me. After its success she said, "I'd sure like to sing that, too" and here turns in a smoldering version which is not only secular but intensely sexualized to boot. 

The Muscle Shoals crew were flown in to New York for all sessions and were augmented by the Sweet Inspirations and, in April 1968, the Memphis Horns. Most of the album was recorded that April, but three tracks held over from the Lady Soul sessions of December 1967 make up the remainder and feature Bobby Womack on guitar, an 8-piece brass section and Carolyn Franklin on additional background vocals. Two of these were written by Ronnie Shannon who had written I Never Loved A Man and Baby, I Love You.

Aretha had found her voice and was on a roll, complemented by Tom Dowd and Arif Mardin's arrangements and sure-footed production by Jerry Wexler. The album went gold.

Now overdue for a remaster, let's hope it comes with the full complement of bonus tracks from the period, singles and unreleased material that are bound to be gold dust

Her fourth Atlantic triumph in a row

Whatever day it was that the deal was finalized in ink, it was a damn great one for lovers of soul music when Atlantic agreed to have Rhino records rejuvenate their priceless Aretha Franklin catalog from the 60's and 70's. Long before the 90s, Rhino's reputation was sterling with this music lover as a company dedicated to excellence when it came to reissuing lost pop and soul treasures. Though it seemed impossible, they managed to surpass even themselves when it came to Miss Franklin's key works.

Of course, I went for that overwhelming, kitchen-sink box set first, "Queen Of Soul." It's a masterpiece equal to Motown's "Hitsville" singles collection, the Temptations' "Emperors of Soul" set, and James Brown's "Star Time." Then it was time to update some of my original vinyl collection of Aretha's albums depending on their existing condition. That's why this 1968 one and "Aretha Arrives" got chosen first over the more obvious "Never Loved A Man," and "Lady Soul."

Another reviewer notes the lack of No. 1 status of this album and it's hits. Well, it may not have contained another "Respect," but "Think" comes close enough to satisfy even the most demanding. We know now, thanks to this set's superb liner notes that Franklin was immersed in the New York recording session for "Think" on the very day (April 15, 1968) the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King was assassinated in Memphis. What a moment in African-American history - stunning artistic triumph in one city, and the deepest type of tragedy half a country away. Though I don't love the song any less (and maybe love it MORE), it's impossible to separate from this knowledge when now listening to this album's cornerstone song.

"Think" and it's single flip-side, a superb new interpretation of Sam Cooke's "You Send Me," preceded the album by about six weeks, and when it was time for a new single - guess what - only half of it was on this album. "The House That Jack Built," was released with "I Say A Little Prayer," but, hardly a surprise in Franklin's case by this time, both sides of the single sailed up the charts. (If you wanted "Jack" on an LP, you had to wait for the next years 'greatest hits' package, "Aretha's Gold.") "See Saw" was issued as a 45 that autumn and did quite well too. Spring of the following year saw "I Can't See Myself Leaving You" issued with Franklin's wonderful, up-tempo take of the Glen Campbell(!) hit, "Gentle On My Mind." In this album, the tunes "A Change," "I Take What I Want," and especially "You're A Sweet Sweet Man," also had 'single-ready' written all over them from the first listen.

Finally, there was that album cover, originally Atlantic LP #8186, and how it caught your gaze from store shelves that summer of 1968. After years of what had to be frequent and grueling dues paying, Miss Franklin had finally ascended the throne of Queen of Soul that she entirely earned. How could you resist that confident and welcoming smile?