ARETHA FRANKLIN: FROM SERMONS ON SUNDAY TO ALL WEEK SUCCESS . . . JULY 13, 1968

From the MCRFB NEWS archive: 1968

Miss Franklin Riding Big Wave In ’68 On New Found R&B Success

 

 

 


Detroit’s beautiful soul sensation Aretha Franklin from a Vogue spread, 1968.

NEW YORK — Before soul music moved “downtown” into the money, Aretha spent her Sundays singing in her father’s Baptist church in Detroit. Then, eight years ago, Aretha jumped off the gospel train, arrived in New York and kicked off a career that so far has netted her riches, five gold records, including one for an album, and a Billboard citation as the top female vocalist in 1967. But it wasn’t until last year, when “Lady Soul” met Lady Luck dressed up at Atlantic Records did Aretha move into the real money.

“I wanted to have a gold record,” remembers Aretha. “I wanted one so bad — to sell a million of something.” Jerry Wexler, Atlantic’s dean of soul, brought Aretha from Columbia, where her talent sputtered in their “pop inclined” climate, and gave her complete freedom to further expand more of her abilities and talents. But along with her artistic freedom, Wexler also supplied the tools to form her own free expression into self-discovery; tuned-in musicians from Memphis, a full hopper of materials to pick from, and plenty of gold records lining the walls for inspiration. “Atlantic came up with the same sound that I was feeling at the same time,” said Aretha. What Wexler did was allow the singer to grow at her own pace, into her own style.

In 1968, Miss Franklin will earn more than $750,000. Atlantic Records will reap a portion of Aretha’s record harvest in return for a million-dollar contract payable over the next several years. On the strength of her soaring stock, Time magazine toasted Miss Franklin with a front cover and, with a five-page story in the June 28 issue, marking her official coronation as “Lady Soul.” Miss Franklin will only talk in public about the cover, but not about what’s inside. The length of the article, she says wryly, is “something to speak about.” Privately, she thinks Time “could have stayed a little closer to the fact” concerning her personal life.

Husband as Manager

Aretha Franklin makes Time magazine cover, June 28, 1968.

In addition to her Atlantic contract, Aretha has signed up with her husband, Ted White, for personal manager. “We haven’t had any real trouble so far,” said Aretha about the boss-husband twist, “but it is difficult having your husband as manager. You never know what side he’s coming from — from the husband side or manager side.” But when the bookings are in and they can retreat to their 12-room colonial home in Detroit as a couple and not as partnership, Aretha’s business demons dissolve with the immediate pleasure of her family. “All I want to do,” Aretha muses, “is to be able to function as a simple, honest and true citizen as a human being.”

On stage, Aretha blends earthly humor with the dignity of a Sunday sermon. She will talk about her stiff piano stool back, the sting of new shoes pinching at her heels and, the next moment, belt out “Think” or “Baby, I Love You” with brilliant bursts of gospel power, back-porch blues or rhythm and blues. She toured Europe in the spring and plans to do it again. “It was the greatest,” she said. In Holland, the audience threw flowers — bouquets of flowers and roses — and in Stockholm, the Crown Prince and Princess sat in the audience.”

But despite the gold already won and new gold on the way for albums Aretha: Lady Soul and Aretha Now, she shuns the refinement of pop royalty. “I buy about 20 pounds of chitlins every two weeks,” says the young soul singer. Ray Charles called her “one of the greatest I’ve heard any time.”

Miss Franklin will follow up her recent Madison Square Garden appearance for the Martin Luther King fund with a special solo concert at Newport in August. On August 20, she will be featured on an ABC-TV special and, later this summer, she will perform in Caracas, Venezuela. END

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(Information and news source: Billboard; July 13, 1968)

 

 

A MCRFB Note: This article was previously featured on Motor City Radio Flashbacks on November 20, 2012.

 

Atlantic Records studio producer Jerry Wexler and Aretha Franklin strikes gold in 1967.


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DETROIT’S ROCK ‘N’ EASY 100.3 FM: THIS MONTH, 1979!

WNIC-FM 100 August 1979

WNIC-FM 100 August 1979

WNIC-FM 100 August 1979

WNIC-FM 100 August 1979

WNIC 100.3

WNIC 100.3 FM. 39 YEARS AGO

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A SPECIAL THANK YOU

In Memory of George Griggs

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Above WNIC music chart courtesy of Mrs. Patty Griggs and the George L. Griggs estate.



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WNIC 100.3: FROM THE PROGRAMMER. A STAFF MEMO

WNIC-FM Memo June 1987

WNIC-FM Memo June 1987

WNIC-FM Staff Memo June 1987

 

A MCRFB NOTE

JIM FELICIANO

 

 

A typical staff memo, from the desk of Joel Lind, WNIC programmer (1986-1988)

Revamping the weekend scheduling

 

Johnny Williams joined the airstaff in late 1985, having replaced Renee Greenwood, interim host to WNIC’s ‘Pillowtalk.’ For several weeks, Greenwood temporarily replaced Alan Almond after he left WNIC for WMJC in November 1985.

In this memo, Renee Greenwood’s “Saturday Night Rendezvous” program was added to Saturday nights, retaining the “Pillowtalk” hours, 7-12 M. As the memo suggests, “Pillowtalk” music (now with Johnny Williams) was to be heard across the Detroit airways — 7 nights a week.  

While I was employed there (1983-1987), Jim Harper, morning host and program director at WNIC, left for WDTX 95.5 in July 1986. Joel Lind, replacing Harper, was hired as WNIC station programmer in May, 1986.

This was the weekend schedule. As mandated by the program director. Over 31 years ago on 100.3 WNIC . . . ‘Detroit’s Nicest Rock’

 

 

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WNIC-FM Staff Memo December 1986

 

 

 

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WARMEST WISHES… HAPPY BIRTHDAY! TOM SHANNON

WMJC Tom Shannon (Press Photo) 1987

WCXI Tom Shannon (Press Photo) 1981

CKLW Tom Shannon (Press Photo) 1977

WCAR Tom Shannon (Press Photo) 1981

CKLW Tom Shannon (Press Photo) 1965

CKMR Tom Shannon (Press Photo) 1991

CKLW Tom Shannon (Press Photo) 1969

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, TOM SHANNON!

*****

A Detroit radio and television broadcast legend, his voice has been heard for four decades on numerous great Detroit radio stations, such as CKLW, WJBK, WXYZ, WCAR, WMJC, WTWR, CKMR, and WCXI.

He formally began his illustrious radio career as a news person, while in his teens, in Buffalo in 1955. He left Buffalo’s WKBW for CKLW in Windsor in December 1964, replacing Terry Knight.

After 50 years in radio (and television) after having been in multiple radio markets around the country, Tom Shannon retired from broadcasting radio in 2005. Tom’s last DJ stint was on WHTT-FM, Buffalo. He was 67.

He is a member of the Buffalo Broadcasting Hall of Fame and Buffalo Music Hall of Fame.

*****

In observation of his 80th birthday, Saturday, August 11, 2018, today, Motor City Radio Flashbacks extends warmest birthday wishes to Tom Shannon! 🙂


Detroit Free Press September 6, 1971

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WXYZ-TV Tom Shannon w/ co-producer Mary Fisher (Press Photo) 1971

WXYZ-TV Tom Shannon w/ co-producer Mary Fisher (Press Photo) 1971


 

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FROM DJ TO TV: A TOM SHANNON NEWS FEATURE, ’71


Detroit Free Press August 26, 1971

Thursday, August 26, 1971

A DETROIT RADIO BACK-PAGE

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DETROIT FREE PRESS: Tom Shannon | “From DJ to TV Host”

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TOM SHANNON: TWO DETROIT MEDIA NEWSPRINT ADS!


Detroit Free Press January 20, 1980

Detroit Free Press February 3, 1969

Sunday, January 20, 1980

*****

Monday, February 3, 1969

*****

DETROIT RADIO BACK-PAGE ADS

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DETROIT FREE PRESS: TOM SHANNON

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The above featured ads was ‘clipped,’ saved, and imaged from the credited source by Motor City Radio Flashbacks


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