Aretha Franklin - Aretha (Expanded Edition) (1980/2019)
Artist: Aretha Franklin
Title: Aretha (Expanded Edition)
Year Of Release: 1980/2019
Label: Arista/Legacy
Genre: Vocal Jazz, Soul, RnB
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:58:36
Total Size: 140 mb | 394 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Aretha (Expanded Edition)
Year Of Release: 1980/2019
Label: Arista/Legacy
Genre: Vocal Jazz, Soul, RnB
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:58:36
Total Size: 140 mb | 394 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Come to Me
02. Can't Turn You Loose
03. United Together
04. Take Me with You
05. Whatever It Is
06. What a Fool Believes
07. Together Again
08. Love Me Forever
09. School Days
10. What a Fool Believes (12" Version)
11. I Can't Turn You Loose (12" Version)
12. United Together (Single Version)
13. What a Fool Believes (Single Version)
Aretha is the debut album by Aretha Franklin released on Arista Records in 1980. Franklin's first Arista single release, "United Together", reached #3 on the Soul chart and crossed over to #56 on Billboard's Hot 100. The album itself peaked at #47 and spent 30 weeks on Billboard's main album chart, eventually selling close to 350,000 copies. It is currently out of print. This was the second album with this title to be released by the artist, and the first ever for Arista, after a 13-year tenure with Atlantic Records. Other Franklin albums titled "Aretha" were also released in 1986 and 1961. The disc's opening track "Come To Me" appeared again on her 1989 album "Through The Storm". ARETHA FRANKLIN: ARETHA (1980) Review by Jason Elias: This is her first album with Arista after ending a 13-year, largely successful stint with Atlantic Records. By as early as 1973, Franklin's album turnout became spotty as late-'70s entries, Sweet Passion and La Diva came and went quickly. For Aretha, Arista label president Clive Davis drummed out a certain amount of fanfare for this initial effort, and for the most part it was deserved. Aretha attempts to pull out all of the stops, which is suitable for a major artist coming to a new label. The best moments here reestablish Franklin as a phenomenal singer, not just an icon. The brilliantly sung "United Together" and autumnal "Come to Me" have both Franklin and producer Chuck Jackson seemingly like they'd recorded together for years. What undoes Aretha is a few overproduced tracks of dubious distinction. The too busy cover of the Doobie Brothers "What a Fool Believes" fails Franklin, skimming past the song's lyrical. Her gospel-fueled childhood recollection "School Days" and a discofied cover of "I Can't Turn You Loose" are both ingratiating and potentially nerve racking. This effort was meant to reestablish Franklin, and it was more popular than most of her late-'70s Atlantic albums, but this could have been better.