• SUBMIT MUSIC TO RADIO
  • SUBMIT ARTIST FEATURE
  • INDUSTRY VIP
    • Radio Tracking
    • Get Your Station Reporting
New Music Weekly
  • HOME
    • Advertise
      • Order Form
      • Media Kit
      • Video Advertising Samples
    • Article/Artist Submit
    • Radio Profile Form
    • PR Firm Submission Form
    • About NMW Magazine
      • Media Kit
      • Brand Assets
      • FAQ
    • Pay Invoice
    • Contact us
  • Features
    • Music Downloads
    • Editor’s Desk
    • Radio Speaks
    • Artist Spotlight
    • Country Thang
    • The Adams Files
    • Sound Check
  • Magazine
    • On The Cover
    • New Releases
    • Back Issues
    • Order Form
  • Industry Insight
    • Inside AC
    • Inside Country
    • Inside Top40
    • Inside College
  • News
    • AC News
    • Country News
    • Top40 News
    • College Music News
  • Formats
    • Account Login
    • New Releases
    • Music Downloads
    • AC/Hot AC Chart
      • New AC Releases
    • Country Chart
      • New Country Releases
    • Top40 Chart
      • New Top40 Releases
  • NMA
    • 2023 NMA Ballot
    • NMA Winners
      • Past NMA Winners
    • About New Music Awards
Benztown022425XL.png

Grammy-Winning Singer Roberta Flack Dies at 88

Tweet
Pin it

Roberta Flack, the legendary Pop and R&B vocalist whose soulful ballads defined an era of radio, died Monday morning at the age of 88, according to a statement from her representative. She was surrounded by family at the time of her passing.

Flack, a classically trained pianist and singer, rose to prominence in the early 1970s with a series of chart-topping hits, including “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” and “Killing Me Softly With His Song.” The former, originally released in 1969, became a breakthrough hit in 1971 after Clint Eastwood selected it for his directorial debut, “Play Misty for Me.” The song climbed to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, earning Flack the Grammy Award for Record of the Year. She repeated the feat in 1973 with “Killing Me Softly,” a rare back-to-back win unmatched until U2 achieved the same distinction in the early 2000s.

Flack’s success continued throughout the decade with collaborations such as “Where Is the Love,” a duet with Donny Hathaway that also reached No. 1 in 1974. She remained a presence on the charts into the 1980s, scoring a Top 5 R&B hit with Peabo Bryson on “Tonight, I Celebrate My Love” in 1983. Over the course of her career, Flack earned four Grammy Awards and 14 nominations, charting six Top 10 pop singles and 10 Top 10 R&B hits.

Born in Black Mountain, North Carolina, Flack’s early musical influences included gospel greats Mahalia Jackson and Sam Cooke. A prodigious talent, she began studying piano at age 9 and, by 15, had earned a full scholarship to Howard University. She later worked as a schoolteacher while performing in Washington, D.C., nightclubs, where she was discovered by jazz pianist Les McCann, leading to her signing with Atlantic Records in 1968.

In recognition of Flack’s legacy, Benztown has produced an audio tribute written and produced by Thomas Green and voiced by James MacDaniel. The tribute can be heard here.

Related Posts

[Aggregator] Downloaded image for imported item #473939

Radio News /

WRXS Launches ‘WRXS-mas’ with Classic Holiday Hits

[Aggregator] Downloaded image for imported item #474027

Radio News /

Magic 100.9 Flips to All-Christmas for 2025 Season

[Aggregator] Downloaded image for imported item #473930

Radio News /

Warm 98.5 Rings In Season With Christmas Music Flip

[Aggregator] Downloaded image for imported item #473429

Radio News /

Amazon, iHeart Expand Partnership With Programmatic Audio

‹ Chasing My Tail – Randy Miritello: Radio/Media Download › Kat Velasco Releases Wistful and Reminiscent Single “Paper Boy”

AVAILABLE NOW

Advertisement

Archives

Back to Top

EXPLORE NMW

  • Submit Music To Radio
  • Article/Feature Submission
  • Radio Tracking
  • PR -Submit News
  • Radio Music Access
  • Subscribe
  • Contact us

FOLLOW US

RSS RSS

  • Trey Calloway Brings Funky ’90s Country Flair to New Single “Make That Move” – Out Today December 4, 2025
  • Moe Bandy Marks 50 Years of His Iconic Hit Single “Hank Williams, You Wrote My Life” December 3, 2025

Search Now

Archives

© New Music Weekly 2025

Website design by: Backstage Entertainment Group, LLC