Product Details
Young, Gifted and Black

Young, Gifted and Black
Aretha Franklin

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Product Description

Recorded over a seven-month period in 1970 and 1971, YOUNG,GIFTED AND BLACK captures Aretha Franklin at the peak of her artistic and commercial powers. A stirring, rock-solid release that holds its own with the singer's better-known albums, it also includes some eclectic song choices. Nestled against original, uptempo groovers like "Rock Steady", for example, is a soulful reading of the Beatles' "The Long and Winding Road". (Beatles sideman Billy Preston's signature organ playing is featured throughout the recording.)
Upon its release in January 1972, the album yielded four Top Ten singles on the R&B charts and two Top Ten singles on the pop charts. Franklin baffled some fans at the time by covering "Border Song (Holy Moses)", but the song, composed by a then-obscure team of Elton John and Bernie Taupin, landed at #5 on theR&B charts. Franklin's stirring cover of Simon and Garfunkel's "Bridge Over Troubled Water", recorded during the same sessions but omitted from the initial release, appears on thereissue. Overall, YOUNG, GIFTED AND BLACK is one of the brightest releases in what would prove to be Franklin's most fertile, diverse, and productive period.

Track Listing

  1. Oh Me Oh My
  2. Daydreaming
  3. Rock Steady
  4. Young Gifted And Black
  5. All The King's Horses
  6. Brand New Me
  7. April Fools
  8. I've Been Loving You Too Long
  9. First Snow In Kokomo
  10. Long And Winding Road
  11. Didn't I
  12. Border Song

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #63356 in Music
  • Released on: 1994-01-31
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Like its predecessor, Spirit in the Dark, 1972's Young, Gifted and Black found Aretha moving with soul music's elite into a progressive phase that opened up the emotional content of her work even further. "All the King's Horses" mourns the death of her first marriage, while "Day Dreaming" and "A Brand New Me" point toward what we'd now call "healing". Two stabs at social comment, Nina Simone's title cut and, intriguingly, Elton John's "Border Song", round out this impressive portrait. --Rickey Wright


Customer Reviews

Sublime5
By the time Aretha released "Young Gifted and Black" in 1972, she had proved that she could bounce back from something of a commercial slump, with her triumphant live concerts in San Francisco (Feb 1971), which resulted in a hugely succesful live album. Some of the songs here had been recorded well before those live dates, with Aretha going back into the studio shortly afterwards to complete the album. Looking back over her career, this period can be seen as possibly Aretha's most creative - she is clearly at her peak, both interpreting other's material and writing her own songs.

Aretha had produced an anthem for Black pride with "Respect", and she revisited that theme with the title track, a gospel infused rendition of Nina Simone's composition, and there is a similar feel on her interpretations of both "Long and Winding Road" and "Border Song". The latter surprised many, but surely can be viewed as a plea for equality and tolerance, in keeping with the title track. That said, it is the deeply personal songs which define this set, giving a portrait of the artist that had been only glimpsed previously.

Of these, "All the Kings Horses", a bleak tribute to her failed marriage to Ted White, and "A Brand New Me" a celebration of her new found optimism stand out. Similarly "Day Dreaming" is clearly a reference to her new love, as is "First Snow in Kokomo". From the same sessions, "Bridge Over Troubled Water" became a smash single (only appearing on a Greatest Hits album) and "With Pen in Hand" was held over to her 1974 album "Let Me n Your Life", probably because it was TOO personal for the 1972 release.

Throughout the album, there is impressive support on backing vocals, from her sisters, Erma and Caroline, and The Sweet Inspirations. In fact, the contributing musicians on this album read like a "who's who" of 70's Soul - Donny Hathaway, Billy Preston, Al Jackson Jr, Bernard Purdie, Hubert Laws, Dr John, the list goes on - all in the hands of producers Jerry Wexler, Tom Dowd and Arif Mardin.

You could view this album as just another Aretha classic - as it is - but it is also a testament to her resiliance, as well as her talent. It also illustrates the link between an artists personal life and their art. Buy it and immerse yourself in Soul.

Fine, Talented and Beautiful5
Young Gifted and Black is my favorite Aretha Franklin album. It's not her most highly acclaimed, and not her most succesful. There isn't a British hit single here, but what feeling and what healing pours out of the grooves.

The title track was a No 1 British hit for Bob & Marcia in 1970. As much as I like that version and Nina Simone's original, Aretha takes the song to a whole new place. Her voice swoops and soars around the melody, taken at a slow pace.

'Brand New Me', 'Oh Me Oh My (I'm A Fool For You Baby)' and 'Day Dreaming' are joyous statements of new love. Her own song 'First Snow In Kokomo' offers a rare glimpse into Aretha's personal life, and a happy new relationship.

The album has it's dark corners, notably 'All The Kings Horses' (covered a couple of years ago by Joss Stone on 'Soul Sessions'). Never was a hopeless lost love lamented so finely. Given that, the album is much more upbeat than much of her earlier work. There isn't a single blues on this set. I love Aretha singing blues, but she was always capable of a lot more too.

She was never a prolific songwrier, most of the songs here were versions of songs that had been out before. I don't use the term 'cover versions', because Aretha Franklin brought something new and special to every song she sang. She chose her songs with care, wisdom and the odd flash of genious. She was probably the first major artist to acknowledge Elton John by including 'Border Song'.

'Rock Steady' proves that the lady could funk it up with the best of them, and she makes The Beatles 'Long and Winding Road' sound like a gospel song.

If you have a greatest hits compilation and want to get into Aretha Franklin a bit more, then I recommend this one as a great starting place.