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After supervising the sessions that produced the Drifters' Money Honey, Big Joe Turner's original version of Shake, Rattle and Roll and LaVern Baker's Tweedlee Dee, Wexler hit the real big time with a 23-year-old singer and pianist from Florida named Ray Charles and a stream of hits that included It Should Have Been MeThis Little Girl of MineLonely AvenueI Got a Woman and What'd I Say. Wexler later stated the best thing he had done for Charles was to let him do as he pleased.

After Charles left Atlantic, in 1959, Wexler produced Solomon Burke, another singer coming from gospel music, resulting in Everybody Needs Somebody to Love and a magnificent version of He'll Have to Go

Sessions with Wilson Pickett and Percy Sledge produced Midnight Hour and When A Man Loves A Woman but Wexler’s greatest success came with Aretha Franklin, although the Muscle Shoals session that produced her first Atlantic single, I Never Loved a Man, ended in an almighty and near-catastrophic row between the session musicians and Aretha's manager-husband, Ted White. 

The decision to sign Aretha to Atlantic came after seven years at Columbia Records, where one of the great voices had been submerged in a sea of strings and show tunes. After I Never Loved a Man Wexler produced sixteen albums and numerous hit singles for Franklin, including Do Right Woman - Do Right ManRespectChain of Fools, and I Say a Little Prayer.

Thinking they’d reached as high as they were going to get, Wexler persuaded his partners to sell Atlantic to Warner Brothers for a $17.5 million in 1967. Although they stayed on to run the company, Ertegun and Wexler continued moving in different directions.

Ertegun, who’d started off resisting the takeover, eventually thrived in the corporate environment, thanks largely to his diplomatic pedigree. Wexler, freed from concerns with the company's bottom line, focused on the music he wanted to hear including Duane Allman, Dr. John, and Delaney & Bonnie. Some productions sold well. Others, including Dr. John's Gumbo and Doug Sahm and Band were among Atlantic's worst sellers.

Hughesy, on the other hand, loved them...

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B© Ian Hughes 2012