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New solo version of Aretha Franklin song about race, faith released

“Everyone should hear this record,” Clive Davis, Sony Music’s chief creative officer and Franklin’s close friend and collaborator, said. “It deserves to be an anthem.”
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
Aretha Franklin performs on "The Tonight Show" on April 29, 2011.Lloyd Bishop / NBCUniversal via Getty Images
/ Source: AP (Associated Press)

A never-before-heard solo version of the late Aretha Franklin’s riveting and powerful collaboration with Mary J. Blige about faith and race, 2006’s “Never Gonna Break My Faith,” has arrived on Juneteenth.

Sony’s RCA Records, RCA Inspiration and Legacy Recordings released the song Friday, aligning with the holiday celebrating the day in 1865 that all enslaved black people learned they had been freed from bondage.

This cover image released by RCA shows "Never Gonna Break My Faith," a never-before-heard solo version of Aretha Franklin's riveting and powerful collaboration with Mary J. Blige. Sony's RCA Records, RCA Inspiration and Legacy Records announced the release of the song Friday, which is Juneteenth, the holiday to commemorate the emancipation of slaves in the U.S.
This cover image released by RCA shows "Never Gonna Break My Faith," a never-before-heard solo version of Aretha Franklin's riveting and powerful collaboration with Mary J. Blige. Sony's RCA Records, RCA Inspiration and Legacy Records announced the release of the song Friday, which is Juneteenth, the holiday to commemorate the emancipation of slaves in the U.S.RCA / AP

“Never Gonna Break My Faith” resonates today, featuring lyrics like: “You can lie to a child with a smiling face/Tell me that color ain’t about a race.”

“The world is very different now. Change is everywhere and each of us, hopefully, is doing the best he or she can to move forward and make change as positive as possible,” Clive Davis, Sony Music’s chief creative officer and Franklin’s close friend and collaborator, said in a statement.

Dozens of artists have released new songs detailing the black experience amid the global protests sparked by the recent deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery and many others. Some performers have released covers of protest anthems or re-released older songs that resonate with the times, like “Never Gonna Break My Faith.”

Lyrics from the song include: “My Lord, won’t you help them to understand/That when someone takes the life of an innocent man/Well they’ve never really won, and all they’ve really done/Is set the soul free, where it’s supposed to be.”

Calling Franklin’s performance “chilling,” Davis said the song’s lyrics and relevance “will shake every fiber in your body.”

“Everyone should hear this record,” Davis said. “It deserves to be an anthem.”

Aretha Franklin
Franklin won 18 Grammy awards and scored 73 hit singles on the Billboard Hot 100 over the course of her storied six-decade career.Redferns

“Never Gonna Break My Faith” won best gospel performance at the 50th Grammy Awards in 2008, marking Franklin’s 18th and final Grammy win. She died in 2018 at age 76.

The song was originally featured in the film “Bobby,” about U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 assassination, and features background vocals from The Boys Choir of Harlem.

Aretha Franklin
Aretha Franklin performs at the swearing-in ceremony at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2009.Ron Edmonds / AP

“This solo version has been sitting on my computer for years, and when I heard Clive was making a film on Aretha’s life, I sent this version to him. The world hasn’t heard her full performance and it really needed to be heard,” Grammy-winning singer Bryan Adams, who co-wrote the song, said in a statement. “I’m so glad it’s being released, the world needs this right now.”