Aretha Franklin - A Grand Selection Of Her Beloved Songs (Restored Edition '25) (2025) Hi Res

  • 29 Jan, 14:04
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Artist:
Title: A Grand Selection Of Her Beloved Songs (Restored Edition '25)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: Mouton Recordings
Genre: R&B, Soul
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks) | 24Bit/96 kHz FLAC
Total Time: 00:32:07
Total Size: 79 mb | 168 mb | 564 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Aretha Franklin - Won't Be Long (Restored Edition '25)
02. Aretha Franklin - Sweet Lover (Restored Edition '25)
03. Aretha Franklin - Right Now (Restored Edition '25)
04. Aretha Franklin - Today I Sing The Blues (Restored Edition '25)
05. Aretha Franklin - You Made Me Love You (Restored Edition '25)
06. Aretha Franklin - Nobody Like You (Restored Edition '25)
07. Aretha Franklin - Exactly Like You (Restored Edition '25)
08. Aretha Franklin - It's So Heartbreakin' (Restored Edition '25)
09. Aretha Franklin - Try A Little Tenderness (Restored Edition '25)
10. Aretha Franklin - Trouble In Mind (Restored Edition '25)
11. Aretha Franklin - Without The One You Love (Restored Edition '25)
12. Aretha Franklin - Lover Man Come Back To Me (Restored Edition '25)

Aretha Franklin was one of the giants of soul music, and indeed of American pop as a whole. More than any other performer, she epitomized soul at its most gospel-charged. Her astonishing run of late-'60s hits with Atlantic Records -- "Respect," "I Never Loved a Man," "Chain of Fools," "Baby I Love You," "I Say a Little Prayer," "Think," "The House That Jack Built," and many others -- earned her the title Queen of Soul. Franklin never rested on her laurels. Following the early-'70s LPs Spirit in the Dark and Young, Gifted and Black, she scored more hits on the R&B charts than pop, adeptly following the progression of soul in the '70s and '80s thanks to her collaborations with Curtis Mayfield (1976's Sparkle) and Luther Vandross (1982's Jump to It). Franklin made a triumphant return to pop with 1985's Who's Zoomin' Who? and its Top Ten single "Freeway of Love," which was followed in 1987 by the George Michael duet "I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me)," which became her first number one hit on the Billboard charts since "Respect" in 1967. Franklin spent the next three decades performing and recording regularly, maintaining her status as the Queen of Soul until her death in 2018.


  • mufty77
  •  15:14
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Many thanks for Flac & 24-96!!