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Andres's avatar

I agree with you that this song, and Aretha’s 80s music in general, don’t always get the love they deserve. Fantastic write-up! I love that entire album.

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Brad Kyle's avatar

(For some reason, the "Post" button wasn't working on a reply to you, Matt, or David. So, I'll give it a try here! I was trying to reply, David, to your comment below about her 2 "A" labels)!

Hey, David! Broad overview, broad brush: 1961-1967, Columbia: The Internship: She was under the thumb of the namby-pamby A&R guidance of Mitch Miller (artists hated him. Rosemary Clooney couldn't stand the "Come On-a My House" Miller made her sing, or face being cut from the label); I later heard Aretha wanted to do the pop stuff to follow in the footsteps of landmark artists like Nat "King" Cole, and the lane she thought would help her with crossover popularity.

1967-1979, Atlantic: The Legend is Born: Jerry Wexler, Ahmet Ertegun (and so many more) guide her, and carefully craft her image to attract white/pop audiences without diluting her natural gift (or alienating a burgeoning Black audience), and made sure to find suitably soulful material, and surround her with the "right" musicians to even "toughen" the pop songs she still dabbled in (Bacharach/David, Lennon/McCartney).

1980 and following, Arista: Clive wouldn't be axed by Columbia til '73, which means Clive (however involved with her artistic output he may have--or not--been there) had her talent ripped right out from under him on her '67 Atlantic signing. I'd love to think Clive wanted to have the "Queen" he had just missed when she moved to Atlantic.

It was quite an undertaking to (not unlike Tina Turner's '80s output) to maneuver a radically new and different record-selling landscape (adding MTV to the mix), and with Clive at the helm, he made sure the pieces were in place for her there.

Thanks for listening, David, and thanks for the space, Matt!😁👍

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