Hundreds gathered at Detroit’s Greater Grace Church on Friday morning to honor the legendary Aretha Franklin, who died on Aug. 16 after a long battle with pancreatic cancer.
Among those closest to the Queen of Soul was Clive Davis,
whose long career in the music industry includes nearly four decades
during which they worked together. Davis signed Franklin to Arista
Records, which he founded in 1974.
Davis delivered a eulogy to Franklin at the funeral. Read it in its entirety below:
When I sat down in her kitchen to have dinner with Aretha in 1979
she was already, of course, The Queen of Soul. She had given the world
“Respect,” “Natural Woman,” “Chain of Fools,” “I Never Loved a Man (The
Way I Love You),” “Rock Steady,” “Amazing Grace,” “Think” and so much
more. We talked into the night about the next five years of recording
when Aretha would be over 40 years old. Much of music had changed. Could
she still compete? Well, there was no doubt in Aretha’s mind and,
frankly, there was no doubt in my mind.
I signed her to Arista Records and five years turned into more
than three decades. We were committed to show all budding musicians how
long a career can last. For Aretha was indeed a true genius of American
music. Every time I was with her, whether professionally or personally, I
was conscious that she was, and would always be, a significant part of
history.
Over the course of my life, I have been blessed with the
opportunity to spend time with presidents of countries, and presidents
of successful trend-setting companies. I’ve spent time with many
successful artists, writers and movie makers. Most of these individuals
have affected the world in some way. But Aretha is in her own very
special category. Aretha’s voice will be heard, Aretha’s voice will be
impacting, Aretha’s voice will be influencing others, literally for
centuries to come.
And so we got to work… year after year, well into her 40s, and
well into her 50’s, and beyond. And we had hits like “Jump To It,” “Get
it Right,” “Who’s Zoomin Who’,” “Freeway of Love, I Knew You Were
Waiting For Me, Sisters Are Doin’ It For Themselves, A Rose Is Still A
Rose, Aretha would once again have # 1 records, gold albums, platinum
albums and several new Grammy Awards. She relished and cherished every
moment of it.
And I was so privileged to be there and personally witness the
magnitude of talent of this singer’s singer, this musician’s musician.
And let me add for you that behind her God-given, natural talent, was
the drive of a total perfectionist. After we decided on the material for
an ensuing album, she would go into Aretha mode and privately rehearse,
practice and prepare. By the time she came into the studio, she
literally owned the song. Everyone in the studio would be in awe of her
mastery when she stepped up to the microphone. It was a real rarity if
she ever were to do more than two takes. She was in control and she was
to nail it.
Plus Aretha was electrifyingly intuitive. We were about to go to
Washington D.C. for her to perform at President Clinton’s inauguration.
We brainstormed the song and chose “ I Dreamed a Dream” from “Les
Miserables” as most appropriate. Flash forward to the performance. She
was totally in command right from the beginning, hitting those soaring
notes as only she could. Everyone in the audience was transfixed as the
performance kept building, and then the one and only Aretha, on her own,
spontaneously changed the lyric from “I Dreamed a Dream” to “I Have a
Dream” and that instinctive switch to the Martin Luther King mantra made
the climax chillingly unforgettable to this day. Aretha was being
Aretha, in a class by herself.
So today, on this very special day, permit me to talk of Aretha,
the person. Yes, as you’ve heard, Aretha was indeed kind and thoughtful.
When she loved you, she really loved you. She was genuinely funny;
occasionally with on-the-money topical sarcasm, but she definitely had a
keen wit and a great sense of humor. But what stood out, personally to
me, was that she really defined loyalty. If I were to ask her to perform
at a special event, she was there. Yes, she traveled the country by bus
and, in the winter, roads are not very friendly, but she would be
there.
One year I was getting a Lifetime Achievement Award at New York’s
Waldorf Astoria Hotel and she was telling me she had begun seriously
studying something totally new that she had never before tried: she was
studying ballet. She refused to tell me anything about the performance
that was to come, other than “Clive, it’s gonna knock your socks off,
and everyone in the audience’s, socks off. Well, I couldn’t imagine what
it would be. And no one there will ever forget it, least of all me.
The night came, the curtain went up, the orchestra started
playing, and then Aretha came on, straight-faced, in a tutu. Yes, a
tutu. There was the Queen of Soul, accompanied by members of the City
Center Ballet Company, she doing well-rehearsed pirouettes and dancing
with most impressive agility and dignity. It was wonderful. My friend,
Aretha, was going to extraordinary lengths to make sure the night would
be a night always to be remembered.
Hopefully, this reveals to you the incredible wide-ranging quest
for knowledge Aretha had. She studied classical music at Juilliard. She
loved opera and, of course, her performance, without notice, of “Nessun
Dorma” at the 1998 Grammys — you never forget it — that truly shows
there was nothing she couldn’t inimitably master. And, of course, her
commitment to political activism is well-known as is her famous quote:
“I have the money. I get it from black people and I want to use it in
ways that will always help our people.” And you all know that Aretha did
just that for the Reverend Martin Luther King and so many others.
She was a true renaissance woman. She loved art; she loved
fashion; and she loved food. Yes, Aretha loved her soul food but, over
the years, as she came to New York, the two of us would go to Le
Bernardin or The Four Seasons or La Grenouille for the finest cuisine in
the most beautiful environment. And although she would no longer fly to
Europe, every time I got back from St. Tropez or Capri she would want
all the details: what restaurants did I go to? What did I eat? Who was
there?
She loved life. Aretha loved life.
I’m so glad that two years ago I finally purchased Andy Warhol’s
great portrait that he did for one of Aretha’s album covers. Yes, I walk
by this painting several times each week and I think of the
irreplaceable Aretha. I think of her timeless influence on the countless
generations to come. But, you know something, there is, and there will
always be, a huge void. I will deeply miss that once-in-a-lifetime
voice. I will miss her hearty laugh, those endless curiosity questions,
that thirst and wonderful hunger for life. Yes, I will deeply miss my
great friend, the ultimate natural woman. Aretha, may you rest in
eternal peace forever.

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