The Borneo Post

Aretha Franklin funeral set for Aug 31

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DETROIT: The funeral of legendary singer Aretha Franklin will be held in her hometown Detroit on Aug 31, after a twoday public viewing at a city museum to allow fans to mourn, her publicist said on Friday.

Plans for the final farewell to the “Queen of Soul” — who died on Thursday at age 76 after a battle with pancreatic cancer — started coming together as tributes poured in from around the world, and fans congregate­d at key sites in the city, the home of Motown.

The funeral at Greater Grace Temple — which seats about 4,000 people — will be limited to family, friends and invited guests, expected to range from music royalty to dignitarie­s from around the world.

On Aug 28 and 29, fans will be able to say a final farewell at a public viewing staged at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History. The visitation will last 12 hours each day, according to Franklin’s publicist Gwendolyn Quinn.

Franklin is to be buried with other members of her family at Woodlawn Cemetery.

The days-long celebratio­n of Franklin’s life is also expected to include a tribute concert, but details of that event were not immediatel­y available.

Franklin — an 18-time Grammy winner with a clear, rich voice able to span musical genres — influenced generation­s of singers with unforgetta­ble hits including “Respect” (1967), “Natural Woman” (1968) and “I Say a Little Prayer” (1968).

On Friday, fans continued to pay their respects, leaving mementos outside her father’s New Bethel Baptist Church and queuing outside the Motown Museum, which will play her music on loudspeake­rs through the weekend and is hosting a book of condolence.

“It’s just been amazing. Of course we’re all very saddened and heartbroke­n with the thought of her passing, but people are flocking to the museum,” general manager Sheila Spencer told AFP.

“She performed at our gala for our 20th anniversar­y and it was a phenomenal, phenomenal performanc­e. So we’re just so honoured.”

At the Motown Museum, Fred Zilian, a university teacher from Rhode Island on a reunion with classmates from the US military academy West Point, danced with his wife to an Aretha track.

“I want to be sad because we lost Aretha Franklin, but I had to go in the street and dance,” he told AFP, rememberin­g how he loved her music and those of black artistes who recorded at Motown in the 1960s.

“The country was riven by race relations tension and we, you can see, are all white — we didn’t give a damn,” he said. “It’s really a statement about the unifying effect that music can have.”

In 1987, Franklin became the first woman inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In 2010, Rolling Stone magazine put her at the top of its list of the 100 greatest singers of all time, male or female.

She performed for several presidents, including at the 2009 inaugurati­on of Barack Obama, the country’s first AfricanAme­rican head of state.

Franklin — who was widely known by only her first name, in true diva style — rose from singing gospel in her father’s church to regularly topping rhythm and blues and pop charts in the 1960s and 1970s.

Other than “Respect” — her powerful cover of the Otis Redding tune that became a feminist anthem and her calling card — Franklin had dozens of Top 40 singles, according to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

The singer lived in Detroit — the Motor City — most of her life. — AFP

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ARETHA FRANKLIN

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