Lady Soul

~ Release group by Aretha Franklin

Album

ReleaseArtistFormatTracksCountry/DateLabelCatalog#Barcode
Official
Lady SoulAretha Franklin12" Vinyl10
  • US1968-01-22
Atlantic (Warner Music imprint)SD 8176[none]
Lady SoulAretha Franklin12" Vinyl11
Atlantic (Warner Music imprint)0920 033[none]
Lady SoulAretha FranklinCD10
Atlantic (Warner Music imprint)781 818-2075678181825
Lady SoulAretha FranklinCD14
  • US1995-06-20
Rhino (reissue label)R2 71933081227193324
Lady SoulAretha FranklinCD14
BMG Direct (BMG’s direct marketing company/club editions), Rhino (reissue label)D121585, R2 71933
Lady SoulAretha FranklinHDCD10
  • JP1998-05-29
Atlantic (Warner Music imprint)AMCY-27174988029271747
Lady SoulAretha FranklinCD10
Atlantic (Warner Music imprint)7567-81818-28431588066324
Lady SoulAretha FranklinDigital Media10
  • GB2012-04-24
Rhino Atlantic (digital releases only!)603497933570
Lady Soul (Reissue, Stereo, 180 Gram)Aretha Franklin12" Vinyl10
  • XE2012-10-15
Atlantic (Warner Music imprint)8122797163081227971632
Lady SoulAretha FranklinDigital Media10
Rhino Atlantic (digital releases only!)603497933563
Lady SoulAretha FranklinDigital Media10
Rhino Atlantic (digital releases only!)603497896646
Lady Soul (with bonus selections)Aretha FranklinDigital Media14Rhino Atlantic (digital releases only!)603497983803

Relationships

associated singles/EPs:(Sweet Sweet Baby) Since You’ve Been Gone
(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman / Baby, Baby, Baby
Ain’t No Way / Do Right Woman – Do Right Man
Chain of Fools / Prove It
included in:Lady Soul / Aretha Now
Original Album Series
The Atlantic Albums Collection
The Atlantic Collection
Trilogy: 3 Classic Albums
part of:Prix Soul (Académie du Jazz) (number: 1968) (order: 2)
Rolling Stone: 500 Greatest Albums of All Time: 2020 edition (number: 75) (order: 75)
Rolling Stone: 500 Greatest Albums of All Time: 2003 edition (number: 84) (order: 84)
Rolling Stone: 500 Greatest Albums of All Time: 2012 edition (number: 85) (order: 85)
1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die (2005 edition) (number: 117) (order: 178)
Discogs:https://www.discogs.com/master/123018 [info]
reviews:https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/qgcg [info]
other databases:https://rateyourmusic.com/release/album/aretha_franklin/lady_soul/ [info]
Allmusic:https://www.allmusic.com/album/mw0000194521 [info]
Wikidata:Q928442 [info]

CritiqueBrainz Reviews

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Released in January 1968, Lady Soul completed a remarkable 12 months of achievement for Aretha Franklin. Having been signed to Atlantic in 1966 after years in the doldrums at Columbia, her Jerry Wexler-produced albums, I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You and Aretha Arrives had finally made her the critical and commercial toast of America.

Pieced together from material recorded since the start of 1967 - with the bulk captured at a December session in New York - Lady Soul won a set of remarkable statistical achievements that testify to how widely it cast its net. For example, the album peaked at numbers 1, 2 and 3 on Billboard's Black Album, Pop Album and Jazz Album charts respectively.

It is one of those rare records that truly captures a moment; not just of Franklin's singing, playing and writing, but of the electrifying support of the FAME studios session players. Guests included Bobby Womack and Eric Clapton, then in his imperial phase with Cream, and the album featured the vocal majesty of Franklin's sisters, Carolyn and Erma.

Lady Soul hooks the listener in from the first very note of Joe South's detuned guitar on Chain of Fools. Written by Don Covay, it became one of Franklin's biggest hits and was to take on an incredible resonance as the Vietnam War destructively limped on for America.

And (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman is one of the greatest performances of one of the most sublime songs ever written.

At a little over two minutes into Good to Me as I Am to You, there is possibly the answer to the vexed and ongoing question, "What is soul?" It's when Franklin sings the phrase "listen to this" over swelling horns, led by King Curtis, and the bass of Tommy Cogbill, sounding like he has several pairs of hands. It is simply perfect.

Nobody does it quite like Franklin (or, as Wexler called her, "the lady of mysterious sorrows") - that irresistible marriage of the spiritual and the secular, the warm passion of her vocal.

Often copied, yet never equalled, these 10 tracks represent Aretha Franklin's coronation as the Queen of Soul.