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Aretha Live at Fillmore West is a live album by American singer Aretha Franklin. [1] Released on May 19, 1971, by Atlantic Records . It was reissued on compact disc in 1993 through Rhino Records .
In 1971, Franklin became the first R&B performer to headline Fillmore West, later that year releasing the live album Aretha Live at Fillmore West. [74] In January 1972, she returned to Gospel music in a two-night, live-church recording, with the album Amazing Grace, in which she reinterpreted standards such as Mahalia Jackson's "How I Got Over ...
Aretha Franklin's Live at Fillmore West album was a huge hit, he had contributed to two tracks on John Lennon's album, Imagine, recorded the theme to the television show Soul Train and had made a highly acclaimed performance at the Montreux Jazz Festival with Champion Jack Dupree. It was in this climate that the album was released in August 1971.
Aretha Franklin) Tapestry Revisited: A Tribute to Carole King "Christmas Here With You" (Four Tops feat. Aretha Franklin) Christmas Here With You "White Christmas" (Four Tops feat. Aretha Franklin) "Silent Night" (Four Tops feat. Aretha Franklin) "Somewhere" 1996 Somewhere: The Songs of West Side Story "Back To Living Again" New World Order (album)
The King of Rock ‘n’ Roll and the Queen of Soul are united in death even as they were joined in superstardom in life. Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin both died on August 16 – Long live the ...
“I live a beautiful, easy two-and-a-half-hour drive from where he is,” Oldham says. “So over the years, any excuse that I could come up with to go down and work with him, I would.”
Fans of Aretha Franklin came together at New York City's landmark Apollo Theater and on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Thursday to pay their respects to the Queen of Soul, singing along to her hits ...
Crystal Gayle performed Night Life, accompanied by B.B. King on guitar, on her first CBS TV show, The Crystal Gayle Special (1979). The song "Night Life," on the 1974 Thin Lizzy album Nightlife, borrows the title and chorus of the Willie Nelson song, but Thin Lizzy lead singer Phil Lynott is credited as the song's sole writer. [15]