The 10 Best Aretha Franklin Songs
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty
This article was originally posted on Oct. 7, 2015. We’re republishing to honor the achievements of Aretha Franklin, who died this morning at the age of 76.
You don’t earn the title Queen of Soul without turning in your share of outstanding vocal performances, so it should come as no surprise that this list of Aretha Franklin’s best could be much, much longer. There’s no cover of Bridge Over Troubled Water here, no The House That Jack Built No Since You’ve Been Gone (Sweet Sweet Baby), and no cover of I Say A Little Prayer. But in limiting ourselves to the most exceptional pieces of her extensive repertoire, we’ve compiled the 10 best songs by Aretha Franklin.
10. “Dr. Feelgood (Love is a Serious Business)”
Franklin penned this 1967 track with her husband at the time, Ted White, and whatever…uh, chemistry the two may have had is evident as Aretha lays down some of her sexiest vocals ever, announcing she’s got a man named Dr. Feelgood and that you’ll understand where he gets his name after just one visit.
9. “Chain of Fools”
That minor chord gives “Chain of Fools” a woefulness fitting for a song about being duped by an ex-lover, but there’s no weakness here. When the guitar cuts out and we’re left with Aretha belting “you told me to leave you alone” backed solely by drums and some “ooo”s from her backup singers, the power is palpable, and we get the sense that she’s gonna be just fine.
8. “Do Right Woman, Do Right Man”
“Do Right Woman, Do Right Man” lays out a simple concept: give me the attention and respect I deserve, or I’ll find it elsewhere. After all, “a woman’s only human, you should understand / she’s not just a plaything, she’s flesh and blood just like her man.” Seems pretty straightforward, but in 1967, such overtly feminist songs were still a relatively new phenomenon in popular music; when Aretha belts “they say it’s a man’s world, but you can’t prove that by me / As long as we’re together, baby, show some respect to me,” she sounds as though she’s fully aware of what’s to come and drawing a line in the sand—either you’re with her, on the right side of history, or you’ll be left behind for a new, do-right man.
7. “Share Your Love With Me”
You know that part in every rom-com ever where the two leads are temporarily separated and we get the “Determined Protagonist Bettering Him-or-Herself to Win Back Their Love” montage of them cleaning their apartment or helping an old lady cross the street or fixing whatever flaws their partner has discovered to set up their big reunion in the third act? “Share Your Love With Me” could be the soundtrack for every single one of those. For a song about what a shame it’d be if the person she’s got her eye on doesn’t love her, it’s got a surprising confidence—the kind only Aretha can deliver—that makes a relationship sound like an inevitability. And those wails alone probably earned Franklin her third Best Female R&B Vocal Performance Grammy (of eight consecutive ones!).