Jump to content

Soft and Beautiful

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 05:02, 22 January 2021 (References: add authority control). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Soft and Beautiful
Studio album by
Releasedc. April 1969
RecordedJuly 9–16, 1964
GenreSoul, R&B
LabelColumbia
ProducerClyde Otis
Aretha Franklin chronology
Soul '69
(1969)
Soft and Beautiful
(1969)
Aretha's Gold
(1969)

Soft and Beautiful is the fifteenth studio album by the American singer Aretha Franklin, released in the spring of 1969, by Columbia Records.

Background

The album was recorded when Franklin was 22 years old between July 9 and 16, 1964,[1] It was her last album on Columbia before she moved to Atlantic Records and until 1969, unreleased, although an alternative version of "A Mother's Love" appeared on Franklin's 1966 Columbia LP Soul Sister.[2] It reached Number 29 on Billboard's R&B chart. Mark Bego, in Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul, called it "the most consistently paced album of her later Columbia years".[2] Originally released by Columbia Records, the album was reissued on CD with her 1962 album The Tender, The Moving, The Swinging Aretha Franklin.

Track listing

Side One

  1. "Only the Lonely" (Sammy Cahn, Jimmy Van Heusen)
  2. "I Wish I Didn't Love You So" (Frank Loesser)
  3. "(Ah, the Apple Trees) When the World Was Young" (Johnny Mercer, M. Philippe-Gérard)
  4. "Shangri-La" (Carl Sigman, Robert Maxwell, Matty Malneck)
  5. "A Mother's Love" (Cliff Owens)

Side Two

  1. "My Coloring Book" (John Kander, Fred Ebb)
  2. "Jim" (Nelson Shawn, Caesar Petrillo, Edward Rose)
  3. "Friendly Persuasion (Thee I Love)" (Paul Francis Webster, Dimitri Tiomkin)
  4. "But Beautiful" (Johnny Burke, Jimmy Van Heusen)
  5. "People" from Funny Girl (Jule Styne, Bob Merrill)

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Take a Look - Aretha Franklin Complete on Columbia liner notes
  2. ^ a b Bego, Mark Aretha Franklin: The Queen of Soul. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80935-4. p. 76.