DETROIT--When Motown great Smokey Robinson saw his lifelong friend Aretha Franklin play music for the first time, he said he was struck by the talent of the young girl who would become the "Queen of Soul".
In an interview with Reuters TV, the former lead singer of hit group The Miracles recalled that first meeting 70 years ago with Franklin, who died on Thursday at age 76.
Franklin and her family moved to Detroit from Buffalo, New York. Robinson, now 78, described how he and a friend visited their home on the city's Boston Boulevard that same day.
"We were walking to the house, and I heard music coming from - a piano being played and a little voice singing from this room, and I peeked in and there was Aretha sitting at the piano, playing and singing," he said. "She was probably 5 or 6 years old, singing and playing almost like she did as an adult."
Robinson's admiration for her only grew over the decades.
"You know she had that voice and she was the original and she could sing anything," Robinson said. "They called her 'the Queen of Soul,' but Aretha could sing anything you put in front of her: opera, soul, gospel, jazz, whatever it was."
And she recognized how lucky she was, he said. "She knew that she was blessed to get the chance to live what she loved and live her dream," Robinson said.
Last year, Franklin surprised Robinson with an award from the Detroit City Council and described him at the time as her "oldest and dearest friend."
He said on Friday that he wanted the public to remember her not only as an artist, but also as an activist and an important figure in the African-American community.
"When all the civil rights movement things were going on, she was right there, hanging there. We all were, but she was very active," Robinson said of Franklin, adding that she was close with civil rights leaders including the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Rev. Ralph Abernathy.
"So she was an activist," he said. "And she was a great cook."
A funeral for the late recording star has been scheduled for Aug. 31 in Detroit, following a two-day public viewing of her casket, and her body will be entombed at a family gravesite, relatives announced on Friday through a publicist.
Franklin's body will be laid to rest at Woodlawn Cemetery in Detroit on Aug. 31 following a funeral that morning at the Greater Grace Temple nearby, but attendance at the service will be limited to family and friends, the announcement said.
Her coffin is to be "entombed" along with the remains of her father, the Reverend C.L. Franklin, and her brother, Cecil Franklin, and sisters Carolyn and Erma Franklin. Before the funeral there will be a public viewing of Franklin's body Aug. 28 and Aug. 29 at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, according to the schedule.
Gwendolyn Quinn, a spokeswoman for the family, said she believed that the viewing would be open-casket but that those arrangements had not yet been finalized.