Last Modified: May 20, 2011 12:37AM
Near the end of Aretha Franklin’s reflective show Thursday at
the Chicago Theater, she put her heart and considerable soul into the gospel
ballad “One Night With the King,” based on the biblical book of queen Esther.
The Queen of Soul then passed on her grandmother’s wisdom before the sold-out
theater: “It’s not the goin’ in when you’re going into the operating room, it’s
when you’re coming out.”
Franklin, 69, was indeed a renewed spirit.
She has lost weight after undergoing surgery late last year
for a mysterious illness. Her first public appearance was only in mid-February.
when she took in a Pistons game in Detroit. The 18-time Grammy winner’s voice is
more full-bodied than in recent Chicago appearances, and her energy level is
high. Franklin finished “One Night With The King” in cresting jubilee gospel
before jumping into a disco-gospel version of her hit “Freeway of Love.”
A few times Franklin seemed to transcend age. She interpreted
her hit “Something I Can Feel” with sexuality, shaking back and forth and ending
the song by patting her bootie. Chicago soul icon Curtis Mayfield wrote the
punchy ballad for the 1976 “Sparkle” soundtrack. Wearing a sequined lavender
gown and matching shawl, Franklin opened her show with the uptempo 1967 Jackie
Wilson hit “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher” that was produced by
Carl Davis in Chicago.
Franklin fronted a Chicago-based orchestra with 10 horns, two
percussionists, gospel great Inez Andrews’ son Richard Gibbs on piano. The
bandleader was Fred Nelson III of the First Church of Deliverance at 43rd and
Wabash. Franklin cited the Blues Brothers before sliding into a too-uptempoed
“Think,” from the movie soundtrack.
There was so much of a local flavor to the show you would
have thought Franklin was from Chicago and not Memphis-born and
Detroit-reared.
She sat down at the piano and paid tribute to Sam Cooke, one
of her musical mentors with a fiery version of his hit “You Send Me.” A screen
dropped down from above the stage with portraits of the Chicago soul-gospel
singer. Franklin then recalled being on the road with Cooke in New Orleans and
how on the way to his hotel room, he stopped by her room.
Franklin smiled and let out a flirtatious squeal.
The next day Franklin visited Cooke’s room. Franklin reported
that Mavis and Yvonne Staples of the Chicago-based Staple Singers were across
the hall and saw her go into Cooke’s room. Soon after, Franklin’s father, the
Rev. C.L. Franklin, came knocking at Cooke’s door looking for his daughter.
Franklin said Mavis covered for her. Franklin continued, “And then I ran back
down the hall and went to my room so fast.
“My Dad didn’t know it but he changed the course of history
that day.”
I’ve seen Franklin several times and she’s never been this
loquacious.
Franklin is a force of nature, and nature can be
unpredictable. She sang about 40 minutes and then went offstage while her band
performed a 10-minute musical interlude. Before she could resume any pacing,
Cong. Danny Davis, her longtime family friend Rev. Jesse Jackson and Judge Greg
Mathis were among those who came on stage to help proclaim May 19 as “Aretha
Franklin Day” in Chicago in one of the first such declarations from Mayor Rahm
Emanuel and the City Council.
Hey, we lose Oprah, we get Aretha.
Franklin’s vocal range scaled the blues of “Sweet Sixteen”
and dropped low for the Memphis soul groove of her 1967 hit “Baby, I Love You.”
Her connections with Chicago are deep and true. Her first record, “The Gospel
Soul of Aretha Franklin,” was released in 1956 on Chicago’s Checker label. Her
first professional gig was in 1962 at the long-gone Trade Winds nightclub on
Rush Street. She opened for comic Buddy Hackett. Even from her salad days of the
early 1960s, Franklin still hears a deep call that escapes most of us. Her soul
is stirred by church, love, pain, and last but not least, empowerment. If the
Rapture is coming on Saturday, this was a hell of a way to go out.