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Erma
Franklin's 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," which of course became one of Janis Joplin's signature
tunes in a much different arrangement. Franklin was born March 13,
1938, in Shelby, MS, 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, and during high school performed with a vocal
group called the Cleo-Patrettes, which won a state talent contest
and recorded for the small Detroit label JVB. The Cleo-Patrettes
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.
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; 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, Franklin waited out
her contract and moved back to Detroit in 1972 to work at a public
relations firm. She performed with Aretha off and on through the
'80s and '90s, and eventually took an upper-level job at the Boysville
children's charity. Franklin's original recording of "Piece
of My Heart" enjoyed an early-'90s revival in Europe, where
it was featured in a jeans commercial. Franklin passed away on September
7, 2002, after a battle with cancer.
All Music Guide

Erma
Franklin
Baby I Love You
By The Time I Get To Pheonix
Can't See My Way
Change My Thoughts Of You
For Once In My Life
Got To Find Me A Lover (24 Hours A Day)
Hold On! I'm Comin'
I Get The Sweetest Feeling
I Just Don't Need you At All
It Could Have Been Me
Light My Fire
Saving My Love
Whispers (Getting Louder)
(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher
You've Been Cancelled
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