He was drawn to poetry as a high-school student, especially the work of Theodore Roethke, and began singing and playing folk-rock during this period.
Franks' early idols included such jazz-cum-pop legends as Nat King Cole and Peggy Lee, as well as composers and lyricists such as Ira Gershwin, Irving Berlin, and Johnny Mercer.
His first instrument was the guitar, and he got the only formal instruction of his life -- a total of six private lessons that came with his first instrument -- at age 14.
Michael Franks occupied a uniquely popular niche in the world of soft jazz and pop music in the 1970s; he was one of those crossover artists who defied easy categorization on the radio (which made him ideal for FM radio of the period), and found an audience mostly among college students.
His parents weren't musicians, but they were music lovers and he was soon immersed in swing music and vocal jazz and pop.