The Hamilton Spectator

R-E-S-P-E-C-T

How Aretha Franklin turned a song into an anthem for civil rights and feminism

- DENEEN L. BROWN

It was Valentine’s Day 1967 when Aretha Franklin sat down at a piano in the Atlantic Records studio in New York and recorded “Respect.”

The Queen of Soul, now gravely ill, took the song written and first recorded by Otis Redding and made it her own, transformi­ng it into what would become an anthem for the civil rights movement and for the women’s movement.

“Respect” became a soundtrack for the 1960s. Franklin, then just 24 years old, infused it with a soulful and revolution­ary demand, a declaratio­n of independen­ce that was unapologet­ic, uncompromi­sing and unflinchin­g: “R-E-S-P-E-C-T

Find out what it means to me R-E-S-P-E-C-T

Take care, TCB

Oh (sock it to me, sock it to me, sock it to me, sock it to me)

A little respect (sock it to me, sock it to me, sock it to me, sock it to me)

Whoa, babe (just a little bit) A little respect (just a little bit) I get tired ( just a little bit) Keep on tryin’ (just a little bit) You’re runnin’ out of fools ( just a little bit)

And I ain’t lyin’ (just a little bit)”

The song was a demand for something that could no longer be denied. She had taken a man’s demand for respect from a woman when he got home from work and flipped it. The country had never heard anything like it.

“Aretha shattered the atmosphere, the esthetic atmosphere,” Peter Guralnick, author of “Sweet Soul Music,” told The Washington Post in 1987, on the 20th anniversar­y of the song. “She set a new standard which, in some way, no one else could achieve.”

When Franklin’s version of “Respect” was released in April 1967, and it soared to No. 1 on the charts and stayed there for at least 12 weeks.

The country was in the throes of a revolution. The Vietnam War was raging, and protests against it were growing. By summer, racial unrest would grip dozens of American cities, including Detroit. The country was a tinder box, as people of colour demanded equality and justice that had been too long coming.

“Respect” would become an anthem for the black power movement, as symbolic and powerful as Nina Simone’s “Mississipp­i Goddamn,” and Sam Cooke’s “A Change is Gonna Come.”

Otis Redding, a songwriter and star who performed crossover hits, had recorded “Respect” in 1965.

“I had heard his version,” Franklin told The Post in 1987. “And I liked his version. Of course, I felt I could bring something new to it.”

Franklin, and her sisters Carolyn Ann Franklin and Erma Franklin who sang background vocals, came up with the idea to add the line “sock it to me, sock it to me.”

Tom Dowd, the legendary recording engineer, told Rolling Stone that when Carolyn began singing “sock it to me,” “I fell off my chair when I heard that!”

It was Aretha’s idea to spell out “R-E-S-P-E-C-T.”

Before arriving at the studio, Franklin and her sisters had worked out the groove and the tracks.

“My sister Carolyn and I got together and — I was living in a small apartment on the west side of Detroit, piano by the window, watching the cars go by — and we came up with that infamous line, the ‘sock it to me’ line,” she told Fresh Air’s Terry Gross in 1999. “Some of the girls were saying that to the fellas, like ’sock it to me’ in this way or ’sock it to me’ in that way. It’s not sexual. It was nonsexual, just a cliché line.”

The song immediatel­y crossed over, obliterati­ng colour lines.

“In black neighbourh­oods and white universiti­es, her hits came like cannon balls, blowing holes in the stylized bouffant and chiffon Motown sound, a strong new voice with a range that hit the heavens and a centre of gravity that was very close to earth,” wrote Gerri Hirshey, author of “Nowhere to Run: The Story of Soul Music.”

When Franklin recorded the song, she wasn’t trying to make it into a political anthem, David Ritz, author of the biography “Respect: The Life of Aretha Franklin,” said in an interview with The Post. If anything, the song was personal.

“She deconstruc­ted and reconstruc­ted the song,” Ritz said. “She gave it another groove the original song did not have. She added background parts. Before she sang the lead part, she turned the beat around and rewrote all these background vocals.”

In the same way an engineer might take an engine apart and put it back together, Ritz said, Franklin took apart the song and put it back together.

The song caught on with the black power movement and feminists and human rights activists across the world. And it’s appeal remains powerful. In the last year, it’s become a symbol of the #MeToo movement.

Aretha Louise Franklin grew up in Detroit, where her father, the Rev. C.L. Franklin, preached black-liberation theology and led a thriving flock at New Bethel Baptist Church. The church was where a young Aretha learned to sing spirituals and gospel.

“His services were broadcast locally and in other urban markets around the country, and 60 of his sermons (including the legendary “The Eagle Stirreth Her Nest”) were released in album form,” according to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. “One of the best-known religious orators of the day, Rev. Franklin was a friend and colleague of Martin Luther King, Jesse Jackson, Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and other key figures in the civilright­s movement.”

Whenever King visited Detroit, he stayed at Franklin’s father’s home.

After King’s assassinat­ion in 1968, Franklin performed at his funeral.

Aretha Franklin was just 18 years old when she signed a major deal with Columbia Records in 1960. Six years later, after her Columbia Records contract expired, she signed with Atlantic Records, releasing a string of hits.

But Franklin’s greatest song was “Respect,” according to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, where she was the first woman to be inducted in 1987.

In 1967, Franklin won two Grammys for “Respect” — one for Best Rhythm & Blues Solo Vocal Performanc­e, and the other with producer Jerry Wexler for Best Rhythm & Blues Recording.

Wexler recounted its significan­ce in Rolling Stone in 2004.

“It was an appeal for dignity combined with a blatant lubricity,” wrote Wexler, who produced the song. “There are songs that are a call to action. There are love songs. There are sex songs. But it’s hard to think of another song where all those elements are combined.”

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 ?? ANTHONY BARBOZA GETTY ?? Singer and musician Aretha Franklin, 1973.
ANTHONY BARBOZA GETTY Singer and musician Aretha Franklin, 1973.

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