War Cry 11 May 2019: Selected articles

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11 May 2019 • WAR CRY • INTERVIEW 3 Studiocanal

Aretha Franklin singing with the Southern California Community Choir

‘So focused’

PA

JOE BOYD, a producer of the newly released film Amazing Grace, tells Philip Halcrow about witnessing Aretha Franklin make a gospel album

Joe Boyd

A

FILM showing Aretha Franklin recording a gospel album has finally seen the light of day. More than 35 years after cameras captured her performing the songs at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles, Amazing Grace is being shown around the world and was released in UK cinemas yesterday (Friday 10 May). Back in 1972, Aretha spent two nights performing the songs that would be released on the album titled Amazing Grace. A camera crew filmed the events. But technical problems meant that the sound was not synchronised with the picture. So the footage was abandoned for years until a team equipped with new technology put the film together. Joe Boyd says Amazing Grace is ‘a portrait of a great artist at the height of her powers’. In 1972 Joe – who was already known for his work as a record producer – was working for the music department at Warner Brothers Films in California. He says that, although he’d helped to set in motion the project to film Aretha recording her gospel album, he didn’t have any duties on the nights when the singer, her producer Jerry Wexler, the Southern California Community Choir led by Alexander Hamilton, and the film crew went to work. Nevertheless, he

says, ‘I wouldn’t have missed it for all the tea in China.’ At the beginning of the film, the Rev James Cleveland – Aretha’s mentor and collaborator – can be seen telling everyone assembled: ‘We’re here for a religious service.’

The nights at the church weren’t just a recording of a concert Joe remembers those nights of music-making in the church as being different from the usual ways of making an album. ‘Often live recordings are simply a recording of a concert, where you have an audience that have bought their tickets and are just there to see a show. The nights at the church weren’t like that. They were a hybrid. They were partly a recording session, so there were microphones and they could stop and start a song again to correct mistakes, which you wouldn’t do at a live concert. ‘At the same time, there was an audience, but it wasn’t an audience that had just bought a ticket to an

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