Friday 13 March 2020

Erma Franklin born 13 March 1938

Erma Franklin (March 13, 1938 – September 7, 2002) was an American gospel and soul singer. Her musical accomplishments will forever be overshadowed by those of her younger sister Aretha, especially since she recorded very sporadically through the '60s. As a singer in her own right, Franklin is best known for recording the original version of "Piece of My Heart,", written and produced by Bert Berns, and recorded in 1967, for which she was nominated for a Grammy Award.

Erma Venice Franklin was born in Shelby, Mississippi, and moved with her family to Memphis, Buffalo (where she made her singing debut in her father's church at age five), and finally Detroit. She sang with sisters Aretha and Carolyn in their church choir, Aged 14, Erma started a secular group called the Cleopatrettes, which won a state- wide singing competition and recorded with JVB label (who also recorded her father's sermons).  The Cleopatrettes broke up after high school, and Franklin toured with her father's gospel group for two years; she subsequently had chances to record for Chess and to join Motown's early roster, but wound up following her father's wishes that she attend college before trying a singing career. She studied Business at Clark Atlanta University (then known as Clark College).

Returning to Detroit in the late 1950s, she met the young entrepreneur Berry Gordy, busy searching for a female star to launch Motown Records. His partner, Billy Davis, took Erma to Chicago's Chess studios, where she rehearsed a few songs including an early version of All I Could Do Was Cry (later a hit for Etta James.) Unfortunately her father stopped any recording as he was opposed to Erma entering the music business at such an early age. 

Later Franklin successfully auditioned for Epic in 1961, and moved to New York to record. Aretha was on the parent label Columbia at the time, and Erma had much the same problem as her sister, namely that pure R&B wasn't the label's area of expertise, and they simply didn't know how to handle her. 


Franklin's debut album, Her Name Is Erma, appeared in 1962, and featured jazz and pop standards as well as R&B tunes; one of several commercially ignored singles, "Abracadabra," was written by Van McCoy, later of "The Hustle" fame. Frustrated with Epic's choice of directions for her, Franklin waited out her contract while spending 1961-1966 on the road as a featured vocalist in New Orleans R&B legend Lloyd Price's show.



                            

When Aretha's career suddenly took off at Atlantic, Franklin signed with producer/songwriter Bert Berns' Shout Records in 1967. "Piece of My Heart," a song Berns had co-written with Jerry Ragovoy, became Franklin's first Top Ten R&B hit later that year but unfortunately, before Franklin could 
begin work on a proper LP, Berns died suddenly of a heart attack, throwing the company into chaos. In the meantime, Franklin backed her sister on many Atlantic recordings, and toured the U.S. and Europe behind "Piece of My Heart." She signed with Brunswick in 1969 and scored a minor R&B hit with "Gotta Find Me a Lover (24 Hours a Day)," also releasing her second LP, Soul Sister. But once again, Franklin found herself with a label that didn't know what to do with her; after Brunswick nixed a proposed session with Aretha in the producer's chair.

Aretha & Erma
Franklin waited out her Brunswick contract and moved back to Detroit in 1972. She toured the UK in 1973. But career frustrations continued when a planned album, to be produced by Aretha, had to be scrapped after the death of sax player King Curtis. She then left the music industry, apart from occasional engagements with her sister. She was one of the special guests on Aretha's 1986 Showtime cable television special — filmed at Detroit's Music Hall — and also performed on June 28, 1990 at Nelson Mandela's rally at Tiger Stadium.

It was not until 1992 that she received real recognition for her greatest recording, Piece Of My Heart, when the jeans company Levi Straus used the 25-year-old song in a European advertising campaign, catapulting it into the UK top 10.

Franklin's original recording of "Piece of My Heart" enjoyed an early-'90s revival in Europe, where it was featured in a jeans commercial. She also performed with Aretha off and on through the '80s and '90s,

Franklin married Thomas Garrett and gave birth to their two children: Thomas Garrett Jr. (1954–2011) and Sabrina Garrett (b. 1958). For 25 years, Franklin worked for the Boysville Holy Cross Community Centre, a Detroit organization that helps homeless and disadvantaged minority children.

The news that Erma was suffering from throat cancer became public knowledge earlier in 2002; both her younger brother Cecil (who had managed Aretha’s career for so many years) and younger sister Carolyn had also succumbed to the disease and while she had shown some improvement, Erma’s condition ultimately deteriorated until she died in Detroit, Michigan on September 7, 2002 at age 64. She is interred at Detroit's historic Woodlawn Cemetery.

 (Edited mainly from AllMusic & The Guardian)

9 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Erma Franklin - Higher & Higher” (Discography 1961 – 1970) go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/Vc9MYpVD

01. Erma Franklin - 1961 - What Kind Of Girl Do You Think I Am (Epic 9468)
02. Erma Franklin - 1961 - Don't Blame Me (Epic 9468)
03. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Hello Again (Epic 9488)
04. Erma Franklin - 1962 - It's Over (Epic 9488)
05. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Time After Time (Epic 9511)
06. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Each Night I Cry (Epic 9511)
07. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Dear Momma (Epic 9516)
08. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Never Again (Epic 9516)
09. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Don't Wait Too Long (Epic 9559)
10. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye (Epic LN 3824)
11. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Detour Ahead (Epic LN 3824)
12. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Never Let Me Go (Epic LN 3824)
13. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Saving My Love For You (Epic LN 3824)
14. Erma Franklin - 1962 - Pledging My Love (Epic LN 3824)
15. Erma Franklin - 1962 - The Man I Love (Epic LN 3824)
16. Erma Franklin - 1963 - I Don't Want No Mama's Boy (Epic 9594)
17. Erma Franklin - 1963 - Have You Ever Had The Blues (Epic 9594)
18. Erma Franklin - 1963 - Abracadabra (Epic 9610)
19. Erma Franklin - 1963 - Love Is Blind (Epic 9610)
20. Erma Franklin - 1967 - Big Boss Man (Shout 218)
21. Erma Franklin - 1967 - Don't Catch The Dog's Bone (Shout 218)
22. Erma Franklin - 1967 - Piece Of My Heart (Shout 221)
23. Erma Franklin - 1967 - Baby, What You Want Me To Do (Shout 221)
24. Erma Franklin - 1967 - Open Up Your Soul (Shout 230)
25. Erma Franklin - 1967 - I'm Just Not Ready For Love (Shout 230)
26. Erma Franklin - 1968 - Don't Have The Right To Cry (Shout 234) +
27. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Gotta Find Me A Lover (24 Hours A Day) (Brunswick 55402)
28. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Change My Thoughts From You (Brunswick 55403)
29. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Saving My Love For You (Brunswick 55415)
30. Erma Franklin - 1969 - You've Been Cancelled (Brunswick 55415)
31. Erma Franklin - 1969 - By The Time I Got To Phoenix (Brunswick BL 754147)
32. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Light My Fire (Brunswick BL 754147)
33. Erma Franklin - 1969 - For Once In My Life (Brunswick BL 754147)
34. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Can't See My Way (Brunswick BL 754147)
35. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Hold On, I'm Coming (Brunswick BL 754147)
36. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Son Of A Preacher Man (Brunswick BL 754147)
37. Erma Franklin - 1969 - Baby I Love You (Brunswick BL 754147)
38. Erma Franklin - 1969 - It Could've Been Me (Brunswick 55424)
39. Erma Franklin - 1969 - I Just Don't Need You At All (Brunswick 55424)
40. Erma Franklin - 1970 - Higher & Higher (Brunswick Unissued)
41. Erma Franklin - 1970 - Whispers (Getting Louder) (Brunswick 55430)
42. Erma Franklin - 1970 - (I Get The) Sweetest Feelin' (Brunswick 55430)

A big thank you to Groovy Gumbo for his compilation and original post.

Tchouley said...

Many Thanks, Great post.

Anonymous said...

Maybe I misread it, but it sounds as if you're implying that Erma Franklin wrote "All I Could Do Was Cry." The 45 rpm record label indicates that it was written by Berry Gordy, Gwen Gordy and Billy Davis.

Erwin said...

Many thanks.

boppinbob said...

Thanks Marie, the information regarding the song "All I Could Do Was Cry" was from The Guardian obit. I have now corrected it. Regards, Bob

USMAN47 said...

Great Post
All the best
Keep the faith
Yves

D said...

Hi Bob, can you shoot me a link for
Erma Franklin - Higher & Higher” (Discography 1961 – 1970)

much appreciated mate,
thanks, denis

boppinbob said...

Hello D, Here's Erma .......
https://krakenfiles.com/view/ee8778b692/file.html
Regards, Bob

puw said...

I somehow missed this one ....

Many thanks Bob for the new link & thanks to Groovy Gumbo