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Ahmet Ertegun Earned Aretha Franklin's Respect

DEBBIE ELLIOTT, host:

In the early, 1960s Aretha Franklin sounded like this.

(Soundbite of song)

Ms. ARETHA FRANKLIN (Singer): (Singing) What is romance? Was I the one who love? It's heartbreaking misery. Was I the one you love?

ELLIOTT: Then something happened to make her sound like this.

(Soundbite of song, "Think")

Ms. FRANKLIN: (Singing) You better think. Think about what you're trying to do to me. Think. Let your mind go. Let yourself be free. Let's go back, let's go back, let's go way on way back when. I didn't even know you. You couldn't have been too much more than ten.

ELLIOTT: This is the Aretha Franklin who had signed in 1966 with Atlantic Records, the company founded by Ahmet Ertegun. Ertegun and his co-producer, Jerry Wexler, decided simply to sit her down at the piano and let her do her thing. When Ahmet Ertegun died this week, we called the queen of soul. I asked if she remember the first time they met.

Ms. FRANKLIN: The very first time was, yes, in the offices of Atlantic Records. And there was no question that he was the commander-in-chief. He carried that authority and that air. But it wasn't arrogant. It was friendly and warm. He nurtured and he cared and he was so protective of my voice, my career and myself. Because I was a very young girl when I signed with Atlantic Records, a long way from home, but Jerry and Ahmet always oversaw everything with my career.

ELLIOTT: When you say they were protective of your voice, what did he do?

Ms. FRANKLIN: Protective of my voice in, do you think you're smoking a little too much? That kind of thing.

ELLIOTT: Oh.

Ms. FRANKLIN: Because I used to smoke when I first signed with them and I was smoking like two packs of cigarettes a day. And so casually, you might hear a mention of, boy, maybe you're smoking a little too much, or do you think you're smoking too much? Or that kind of genuine concern.

ELLIOTT: Did they chaperone you because you were such a young woman?

Ms. FRANKLIN: No, they didn't chaperone me. My father sent a chaperone with me to New York. But being my record company and being the kind of people that they were, they simply just checked on me to see that everything was okay.

ELLIOTT: What do you think his legacy will be?

Ms. FRANKLIN: Certainly music, and the fact that he was such a great humanitarian and one of the last great record men. And the fact that he cared about his artists and he cared about people. He had wonderful, wonderful stories about many of his early artists long before I got to Atlantic Records, like Joe Turner and Ruth Brown and The Drifters and Benny King and Herbie Mann and Ray Charles and all of these different artists who were there long - and some of my favorite artists long before I signed. And the fact that he'd find and he recognized and he appreciated so many African-American artists, as well as putting them in executive and power positions. God bless Ahmet Ertegun for everything that he did for me. I'm very, very thankful. He had a genuine love for music.

ELLIOTT: Well, thank you so much. It has been a pleasure to speak with you.

Ms. FRANKLIN: It's been my pleasure. Thank you.

ELLIOTT: The great Aretha Franklin, remembering her producer and her friend, Ahmet Ertegun. Mr. Ertegun, the legendary founder of Atlantic Records, died this week at the age of 83. He had been in a coma for the past two months after falling backstage at a Rolling Stones concert in New York. Aretha Franklin joined us by phone from her home in Michigan.

(Soundbite of song "The House That Jack Built"_

Ms. FRANKLIN: (Singing) This is the house that Jack built y'all. Remember this house. This was the land that he worked by hand. This was the dream of an upright man. There was the room that was filled with love. This was a love that I was proud of. This was a life of a love that he planned on the love, the same old love in the house that Jack built. The house that Jack built. Remember this house. There was the fence that held our love. There was the gate that he walked out of. This is the heart that is turned to stone. This was the house, but it ain't no home. This is the love that I just had in a dream that I thought was love in the house that Jack built. The house that Jack built. I'm gonna remember this house. Oh what's the use of crying? Because I brought it on myself, there's no denying. But it seems awful funny that I didn't understand it was a house of an upright man. Up on the hill there's a big plan still in the house that Jack built. House that Jack built. I'm gonna remember this house. The house that Jack built. Listen, I got the house. I got the car. I got the world and I got rug and I got the rack. But I ain't got Jack. And I want my Jack back. I turned my Jack. He said he wasn't coming back. I turned my back on Jack. He said he wasn't coming back. Oh Jack. You ought to come on back. Oh Jack. You ought to come on back to the one that you miss. It's the same one that you miss. You ought to come on back Jack. Come on. Come on. Oh come back. I didn't understand...

ELLIOTT: That's ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Debbie Elliott. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.