The Essential Aretha Franklin Playlist

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Lauren is a former Deputy Editor of The Root.

Video will return here when scrolled back into view
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Originally recorded in 1965 by Otis Redding, the song, which Franklin won two Grammys for in 1968, truly came alive when she sang it. In 2002 the Library of Congress added her "Respect" to the National Recording Registry, and it's been named, by Rolling Stone and others, one of the top songs of the 20th century. Just reading about it is making you want to listen to it โ€ฆ just a little bit โ€ฆ right?

Captions by Lauren Williams

This tune is also on Rolling Stone's list of the best songs of the 20th century, and it earned Franklin not only a Grammy in 1968 but also a Grammy Hall of Fame Award. The bluesy ode to a bad boyfriend is classic Aretha.

It's been remade โ€” by Carole King, who wrote it; Mary J. Blige; and Celine Dion, to name a few โ€” but there's nothing like Aretha's original.

A feminist anthem (one of many that Franklin would belt out over the course of her career), "Think" was Franklin's seventh top 10 pop hit.

Did we mention feminist anthems? Franklin teamed up with Annie Lennox to prove to the world exactly what sisters could do for themselves.

A song about persevering even when it looks like hope is gone, "Until You Come Back to Me" was also recorded by Stevie Wonder, who co-wrote the song. But Franklin's celebrated version is by far the best known.

A cover that outperformed the 1960 original, Franklin's "Spanish Harlem" switches up the lyrics from "a red rose in Spanish Harlem" to "a rose in black and Spanish Harlem." Gotta keep it relevant!

The fun, fast-paced and oh-so-'80s "Freeway of Love" was Franklin's first single off her album Who's Zoomin' Who? Please try to listen to it once without singing it for the rest of the day.

One of the many hits from the album Aretha Arrives that have stood the test of time, the soulful "Baby, I Love You" is a must on any Franklin playlist.

The title track off the Grammy-nominated album, this duet pairs Franklin's famous voice with Lauryn Hill's hip-hop-inflected vocals. The result: a top 40 pop hit.

Straight From The Root

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