Aretha Franklin, Indomitable ‘Queen of Soul,’ Dies at 76

"Ms.
Franklin’s airborne, constantly improvisatory vocals had their roots in
gospel. It was the music she grew up on in the Baptist churches where
her father, the Rev. Clarence LaVaughn Franklin, known as C. L.,
preached. She began singing in the choir of her father’s New Bethel
Baptist Church in Detroit, and soon became a star soloist.
Gospel
shaped her quivering swoops, her pointed rasps, her galvanizing
buildups and her percussive exhortations; it also shaped her piano
playing and the call-and-response vocal arrangements she shared with her
backup singers. Through her career in pop, soul and R&B, Ms.
Franklin periodically recharged herself with gospel albums: “Amazing
Grace” in 1972 and “One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism,” recorded at the
New Bethel church, in 1987.
But
gospel was only part of her vocabulary. The playfulness and harmonic
sophistication of jazz, the ache and sensuality of the blues, the
vehemence of rock and, later, the sustained emotionality of opera were
all hers to command."
READ THE OBIT BY JON PARELES