Celebrity Celebrity Relationships Celebrity Friendships Smokey Robinson Recalls Growing Up with Aretha Franklin: 'She Was My Longest Friend on Earth' "We had a wonderful, wonderful friendship that lasted throughout her entire life," Robinson said of the late Aretha Franklin By Jordan Runtagh Jordan Runtagh Jordan Runtagh is an executive podcast producer at iHeartRadio, where he hosts a slate of pop culture shows including Too Much Information, Inside the Studio, Off the Record and Rivals: Music's Greatest Feuds. Previously, he served as a music editor at PEOPLE and VH1.com. He's written about art and entertainment for more than a decade, regularly contributing to outlets like Rolling Stone and Entertainment Weekly, and appearing as a guest on radio and television. Over the course of his career, he's profiled the surviving Beatles, Brian Wilson, Aretha Franklin, Roger Waters, David Byrne, Pete Townshend, Debbie Harry, Quincy Jones, Brian May, Jerry Lee Lewis, James Taylor and many more. A graduate of NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, he lives in Brooklyn, where he can be found DJing '60s soul records. People Editorial Guidelines Published on August 17, 2018 12:55PM EDT Aretha Franklin‘s death on Thursday at the age of 76 unleashed a torrent of tributes from across the cultural spectrum. Many were from artists who had known and worked with the legendary Queen of Soul, but few were as close as Motown icon Smokey Robinson. The pair grew up together in a Detroit neighborhood that fostered a host of future stars. “Diana Ross lived four doors down the street,” Robinson, 78, recalled during an interview on Good Morning America on Friday. “The 4 Tops lived two blocks over and the Temptations lived three blocks over.” He met Franklin at the age of 8 after her family — including her famous father, Baptist minister and civil rights activist C.L. Franklin — moved to the city from Buffalo, New York. The future Miracles frontman met her elder brother first, who invited him to the Franklin family home. “I hear music coming from a little room,” Robinson remembered of visiting their house. “I hear piano being played and I hear this little voice singing. I look in and there’s Aretha sitting at the piano singing and playing almost like she sang and played in her adult life. She was probably 5 years old or so and she just had it.” Remember Aretha Franklin with the Queen of Soul’s Top 10 Greatest Songs It was a beginning of a friendship that remained strong and vibrant right up until Aug. 16, 2018. “Aretha and I were tight. We had a wonderful, wonderful friendship that lasted throughout her entire life. She was my longest friend on earth. All of my other friends that we grew up with are gone.” Scott Suchman/WireImage Teen Motherhood, Losing Her Dad and Her Quiet Health Battle: Aretha Franklin’s Personal Struggles Fame and fortune are notorious for tarnishing personal relationship, but Robinson says that never factored into their friendship. In fact, they usually ignored the spotlight completely. “We always had a relationship that almost had nothing to do with show business,” he says. “There were a lot of us in that neighborhood, and those of us who were blessed enough to get our wish, or our dream, to be in show business — we just always had regular relationships. We very seldom, when we got together, even talked about show business.” As a result, he saw a side of the famous diva that few would ever glimpse, beyond the regal outfits and million-dollar voice. “Aretha had a great sense of humor. She was a very humorous woman,” he remembers. “She could throw down in the kitchen! She was just a great person. Great cook, great woman.”