Roberta Flack


roberta-flack
 

Roberta Flack, the four-time Grammy Award-winning artist has long been known as an unparalleled
musician who effortlessly inhabits the worlds of pop, soul, R&B, jazz and folk. From her very first
recording, “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” which hit #1 in the U.S across all charts, Flack has
created strong emotional bonds with her listeners through her poignant musicality and unerring
stylizations while also shining an uncompromising light onto the culture and politics of the times. Back
in the spotlight after performing a memorable duet with Maxwell at the 2010 Grammy Awards, Flack is
putting the finishing touches on her new album—her first in over 8 years. Newly signed to a
partnership of 429 Records, Sony ATV Music Publishing and Flack’s RAS Records, the album, which
was produced by Sherrod Barnes, who has also produced Beyonce and Angie Stone, with contributing
producers Jerry Barnes and Barry Miles, is slated for early February 2012 release worldwide (Sony
Music will release the album in Japan). A single from the collection – her interpretation of “We Can
Work It Out” was made available on itunes in September 2011.

Born in Asheville, North Carolina, and raised in Arlington, Virginia, Roberta Flack discovered her
earliest musical influences from the church. The local AME Zion Church gave everyone the opportunity
to get out of the house, but, as Roberta recalls, the music “didn’t have the raunchy, wide-open, free,
spontaneous, full-of-life thing that you could hear at the Baptist Church down the street.” Whenever
she could, she’d sneak over there to hear such gospel luminaries as Mahalia Jackson and Sam Cooke
with the Soul Stirrers. At home, Roberta’s father repaired an old upright piano, and she began to pick
out tunes while sitting on her mother’s lap. When she turned nine, she began taking piano lessons,
and also started to listen to a wide range of popular music, R&B, jazz, blues, and pop. .

 

As she moved into her teens, Roberta’s listening gravitated towards classical music, and her piano
playing developed rapidly. At 13, she won second place honors with her performance of a Scarlatti
sonata in a statewide contest for black students. At the same time, her scholastic excellence enabled
Roberta to regularly skip grades, to the point that she had to be “left back” for a year to allow her
physical and emotional development to catch up with her stellar academic advancement. Remarkably,
by the age of 15, she enrolled at Howard University on a full music scholarship, making her one of the
youngest students to ever enroll there. Within a year, she was conducting her sorority’s vocal quartet,
accompanying pop, jazz, and opera singers, and changed her major from piano to voice as she was
assisting the school’s choir conductor. To earn extra money, she also taught piano privately and
played the organ at her parents’ church – a job previously held by her mother.

Roberta next changed her major to music education, becoming the first black student teacher at an allwhite
school near Chevy Chase, Maryland. By the time she graduated, at 19, she’d already directed a
production of Aida, earning her a standing ovation from the faculty after her final exam recital. She
began graduate studies in music, but the sudden death of her father forced her to leave both school
and home to take a teaching job out of the necessity to support herself.

Teaching in Farmville, North Carolina, was an immense change from Chevy Chase, Maryland. In this
“very segregated, very backwards” town, Roberta was hired for $2,800 a year to teach English and
music. The frustration of teaching basic grammar to high school students, some of whom were older
than she, was barely outweighed by the small triumphs of exposing music to the school’s 1,300
students. When the year was over, Roberta returned to Washington where she held teaching posts at
several junior high schools over the next four years. At one school in particular, Banneker Junior High,
she taught seventh graders termed “basic a-typical” (at the lowest educational level in the school).
Roberta remembers, “I found myself unable to teach music…how was I supposed to teach them to
sing the National Anthem when they couldn’t read it?”

It was during this period that Roberta’s professional music career really began to take shape. At D.C.’s
posh Tivoli Club, she served as accompanist to the opera singers who strolled the room. During
intermissions, Roberta would sing and play blues and folk songs and pop standards on an old upright
piano in the back. One thing led to another, and she started working two to three nights a week at the
1520 Club, playing solo piano and singing. When her voice teacher told Roberta that he saw a brighter
future for her in pop music than the classics, she started reshaping her repertoire in her ensuing stints,
and her reputation spread. At one famous nightclub on Capitol Hill, Mr. Henry’s, the owners
constructed an upstairs performance area especially for her, with its unforgettable church pew seating.
People like Burt Bacharach, Al Hibbler, Carmen McRae, Kim Stanley, Eddie Harris, Woody Allen, Bill
Cosby, Ramsey Lewis, and Johnny Mathis were in regular attendance, to name but a few. She would
often share her stage and her piano stool with them, and even found herself playing with Liberace one
night!

By the summer of 1968, the word was out, and that word was “Roberta.” While the nation’s capital was
hosting Resurrection City, Roberta was doing a benefit for the Inner City Ghetto Children’s Library
Fund. In the packed crowd was famed musician, Les McCann, who was stunned by what he heard:
“Her voice touched, tapped, trapped, and kicked every emotion I’ve ever known. I laughed, cried, and
screamed for more…she alone had the voice!” Within days he had arranged an audition for Roberta
with Atlantic Records.

With a repertoire of more than 600 songs, Roberta played 42 of them for Atlantic producer, Joel Dorn,
in three hours. In November of 1968, she went into the studio and laid down some 39 song demos
over nine hours. Three months later, she recorded “FIRST TAKE,” her debut album, in a mere ten
hours at Atlantic Studios. Among the songs she cut was “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face.”
Roberta recalls those studio sessions, remembering it as a “very naive and beautiful approach…I was
comfortable with the music because I had worked on all these songs for all the years I had worked at
Mr. Henry’s.” “FIRST TAKE” was released in June 1969, followed by her first single, the Eugene
McDaniels’ composition, “Compared To What.”

A year later, she released her second album, “CHAPTER TWO,” produced by Joel Dorn and King
Curtis, arranged by future-collaborator Donny Hathaway, and with laudatory liner notes by Jerry Butler.
Another McDaniels’ composition, “Reverend Lee,” and Jimmy Webb’s “Do What You Gotta’ Do” both
became singles from the album, which included material as diverse as Bob Dylan’s “Just Like A
Woman,” a Buffy St. Marie composition, and the then-contemporary Broadway hit, “The Impossible
Dream.” Roberta confesses, “I didn’t know how well my first album had done; it was enough to get me
to do the second album, which was a continuation of the music I’d worked on and perfected.”

In 1971, encouraged by Jerry Wexler, Roberta and Donny Hathaway collaborated on “You’ve Got A
Friend.” Again, her peerless interpretation of the contemporary pop hits won her critical acclaim. Later
that year, she performed in Ghana as part of the star-laden Soul To Soul Festival. Her friend Les
McCann was there with Eddie Harris, as were Ike & Tina Turner, Wilson Pickett, The Staple Singers,
Carlos Santana, and The Voices of East Harlem. For this once-in-a-lifetime event, Roberta performed
“Freedom Song,” “Tryin’ Times,” and “Gone Away.” The album of the event was released on Atlantic
(as was the videotape of the concert, fifteen years later). Capping off this busy year, Roberta’s third
album, “QUIET FIRE,” was released, arranged by Roberta herself. It yielded the single, “Will You Still
Love Me Tomorrow.”

By 1972, Roberta’s dogged perseverance began to really pay off. Clint Eastwood personally decided
to include “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” in his thriller, “Play Misty For Me.” Atlantic rushed the
song, from her first album, out as a single, and in seven weeks it went to #1 on the charts. At the same
time, the singer’s fourth album, “ROBERTA FLACK & DONNY HATHAWAY,” was released. Two days
after it hit the stores, Washington, D.C. proclaimed April 22nd as Roberta Flack Day, kicking off a
weekend celebration encompassing receptions at the Kennedy Center and the Congressional Caucus
Room. At an evening banquet attended by more than 500 friends, admirers, and luminaries, Roberta
was presented with the Capital’s official proclamation, Down Beat’s award as Top Female Vocalist, a
D.C. youth award, and gold records from Atlantic for the “First Time Ever” single, and the “FIRST
TAKE” and “QUIET FIRE” albums. Roberta capped off the night with a 45-minute concert in front of
the Lincoln Memorial. Her place in history was secured!

Only a few weeks later, Atlantic released a new Hathaway/Flack single, “Where Is The Love.” The
album quickly went gold, as did the single, which remained in the Top 10 for two months straight.
At the subsequent Grammy Awards ceremony, in March 1973, “First Time Ever” won Record of the
Year and Song of the Year, while “Where Is The Love” won for Best Pop Vocal by a Duo.

Simultaneously, Roberta’s then-current single, “Killing Me Softly With His Song,” achieved certified,
gold sales status, having been both the #1 pop and R&B song in the country. “KILLING ME SOFTLY,”
the album, was released in August, certified gold within two weeks, and remained the best seller in
every musical category except Country for months thereafter. At the ’74 Grammys, “Killing Me Softly”
won as Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Pop Vocal by a Female. The follow-up single,
“Feel Like Makin’ Love,” went to #1 on the Pop, R&B, and Easy Listening charts. An out-of -the-box
gold single, it became Roberta’s eighth million-seller in less than two-and-a-half years. The “FEEL
LIKE MAKIN’ LOVE” album was released in 1975, the first produced by Roberta herself.

The following year, Roberta continued to work, tour, and record – with special emphasis on the craft of
producing. “No matter how many records I’d heard, ” she says, “I knew what I sounded like in my
head, and in my heart I knew what I wanted it to sound like…My voice is the record for me, and I don’t
ever want to lose that.” After taking the time and care to produce an album that would satisfy both her
own conscience and her vast public, in December 1977, she released “BLUE LIGHTS IN THE
BASEMENT,” her first album in nearly three years, and the one she still calls her “personal favorite.” It
was preceded by the timely single, “25th of Last December” (penned once again by Eugene
McDaniels). At the beginning of 1978, a second single was released, a new collaboration with Donny
Hathaway titled, “The Closer I Get To You.” Her umpteenth chart-topping single, it was certified gold,
as was the “BLUE LIGHTS” album, which had reached #1 on both the Pop and R&B charts.

She spent almost all of 1979 recording, and early in 1980 completed “ROBERTA FLACK FEATURING
DONNY HATHAWAY,” Before the album was released, in March, a Stevie Wonder/Eric Mercury
composition, “You Are My Heaven,” had already become a national R&B/pop crossover hit (Mercury
and Roberta co-produced the album). For the second time, Washington, DC declared “Roberta Flack
Day,” and in 1980, Atlantic released “LIVE AND MORE,” a collaboration and co-production with
talented crooner, Peabo Bryson.

The following year, Roberta worked on her first project outside of the direction of Atlantic Records,
when she composed and produced the soundtrack album for the Richard Pryor/Cicely Tyson film,
“Bustin’ Loose.” Singles from this album included “You Stopped Loving Me” and “Just When I Needed
You.” In 1982, Atlantic released “THE BEST OF ROBERTA FLACK,” a collection of eleven songs
which had redefined popular music in the preceding decade. At the same time, Roberta returned to the
studio to record the “I’M THE ONE” album with producers Ralph MacDonald and William Salter (who
together had penned “Where Is The Love”) and William Eaton. Singles culled from the record were
“Makin’ Love,” a Bacharach/Sager tune, and the title track.

Her second collaboration with Peabo Bryson, “BORN TO LOVE,” debuted in 1983 and produced
another huge smash, “Tonight I Celebrate My Love.” The following year, she appeared as a guest
artist on Japanese saxophone legend Sadao Watanabe’s album, “RENDEZVOUZ” (released on
Warner-Pioneer in Japan). Roberta sang on the tracks “If I’m Still Around Tomorrow” and “Here’s To
Love.” Later in 1984, she was asked to contribute to Yoko Ono’s tribute to her late husband John
Lennon, “EVERY MAN HAS A WOMAN WHO LOVES HIM. ” Her vocal on “Goodbye Sadness” was
praised by the critics as one of the most moving on the album. The year also saw Roberta undertake a
successful tour of England.

She returned to Atlantic in 1985 with the single “People On A String” from the “WHITE NIGHTS”
soundtrack. In 1986, she released a single version of “We Shall Overcome” on the label to
commemorate Martin Luther King’s birthday. She performed a number of live dates with symphony
orchestras, and toured Japan twice between 1986 and 1988: once with Miles Davis and the
Crusaders; the second with Tokyo’s Japanese Symphony. She played piano and sang as
they performed songs from a Portuguese Suite with Chinese drums. She performed with Miles again at
the Toronto Jazz Festival in June 1987, and on the Capitol grounds with the National Symphony and
Marvin Hamlisch in July, before 225,000 enthusiastic fans.

1988 saw the release of “OASIS,” which featured the work of Marcus Miller, Andy Goldmark, The
System’s David Frank, Henry Gaffney, Ashford & Simpson, Greg Phillinganes, Michael Omartian, Jerry
Hey, David Sanborn, George Duke, Marvin Hamlisch and Siedah Garrett, Quincy Jones, and others.
The title track became a #1 R&B single.

Between the release of “OASIS” and the recording of her new album, “SET THE NIGHT TO MUSIC, ”
Roberta toured California, Japan, and Hong Kong in 1989, headlining a series of dates with Patrice
Rushen and the Duke Ellington Orchestra. In 1994 Roberta released “ROBERTA”, an album of
popular jazz and blues standards. “ROBERTA” contains Roberta’s own arrangements of such classics
as B.B. King’s “The Thrill Is Gone,” “Sweet Georgia Brown,” and “Let’s Stay Together.” “ROBERTA”
earned a Grammy nomination in the company of Frank Sinatra, Willie Nelson, Barbra Streisand and
Tony Bennett.

From 1995 – 1998, Roberta hosted a weekly radio show, “Brunch with Roberta Flack”. The show
presented Roberta as a host with unique insights into the world of music in which she herself has been
such an integral part. “Brunch With Roberta Flack” aired nationwide in over 30 major metropolitan
radio markets. 1997 saw the release of Roberta’s first Christmas album, “THE CHRISTMAS ALBUM,”
as well as a new collaboration with Peabo Bryson for Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, Enchanted
Christmas movie soundtrack. Highlights of 1998 included a Roberta performance along with Madonna,
Elton John and Sting at Carnegie Hall for the Annual Rainforest Foundation Benefit Concert, a tour of
Japan, and a musical appearance with the Muppets on Sesame Street.

1999 proved to be a stellar year for Roberta Flack. On June 10, 1999, Roberta was selected to receive
a coveted “STAR” on Hollywood’s legendary Walk of Fame. In July, Roberta traveled to South Africa
for a sold out concert tour. Even President Nelson Mandela, a Roberta Flack fan, turned out to enjoy
the culminating concert.

While she was thrilling audiences in South Africa, Roberta’s accomplishments were being celebrated
in America, during the historical five-hour VH-1 program, “The 100 Greatest Women of Rock & Roll”.
She ranked highly, sharing the company of Tina Turner, Aretha Franklin, Madonna, Alanis Morissette
and several other trail-blazing female artists.

The turn of the millennium showed that Roberta had no intention of slowing down. With international
tour dates including Turkey, Argentina, Australia and Japan, she is constantly inspired by seeing first
hand that her music continues to be loved and enjoyed around the world. In 2002, “Roberta Flack In
Concert” was released on DVD. It was that year that she took a leadership role in response to the
aftermath of September 11th. She, along with other celebrities, participated in Nile Rogers’ “We Are
Family” movie and single (directed by Spike Lee), which set an example of unity among all Americans.
She also participated in the nationwide “Come Back to D.C.” television campaign, a joint collaboration
between the Federal Government and the DC Tourism Board.

Today, Roberta Flack remains a shining inspiration to her fans, peers and younger musicians in the
music industry. Roberta has appeared with soul artists like Alicia Keyes, India.Arie and Angie Stone,
all younger artists who have been heavily influenced by Roberta Flack’s earlier achievements.

Roberta is also an outspoken participant in the AEC (Artist Empowerment Coalition) whose primary
goal is advocacy for artists’ rights and control of their creative properties. Through it all, she always
comes back to the music, which is why it is not surprising that Roberta was asked by VH1 to
participate in its “100 Greatest Love Songs” and “100 Greatest Women of Rock & Roll” television
events. Roberta’s latest release was her 2003 Christmas album, “Holiday,” a timeless collection of
seasonal favorites, a Roberta classic or two, plus a few goodies thrown in for good cheer. Presently,
Ms. Flack is working in the studio completing a Beatles’ songs project for Sony ATV/SLG.


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