Roberta Flack, singer known for ‘Killing Me Softly,’ dies at 88

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Roberta Flack, singer known for 'Killing Me Softly,' dies at 88

Roberta Flack, singer known for 'Killing Me Softly,' dies at 88

1 of 5 | Roberta Flack arrives for the G&P Foundation 2007 Angel Ball in 2007. The music legend died Monday. File Photo by Laura Cavanaugh/UPI | License Photo

Grammy-winning singer Roberta Flack, known for iconic songs like “Killing Me Softly with His Song,” has died. She was 88 years old.

A representative confirmed her death Monday to NBC News. A formal cause of death was not shared, but the music artist had been navigating ALS since 2022, causing her to lose her ability to sing. Advertisement

Flack’s rep also shared the news with Variety.

“She died peacefully surrounded by her family,” the rep told the outlet. “Roberta broke boundaries and records. She was also a proud educator.”

Flack started playing piano as a girl and earned herself a Howard University scholarship at just 15 years old.

Eventually, she became a teacher, and sang in Washington D.C. clubs. One such performance was witnessed by musician Les McCann who said, “her voice touched, tapped, trapped and kicked every emotion I’ve ever known,” and helped her secure a record deal.

Her first album, First Take, was released in 1969.

It included the song “The First Time I Ever Saw Your Face,” which became popular after it appeared in Clint Eastwood’s Play Misty for Me, and earned the singer two Grammy awards. Advertisement

She is also well known for “Killing Me Softly with His song,” which appears on her 1973 album Killing Me Softly.

Flack was honored with a Hollywood Walk of Fame star in 1999, and she later developed the Roberta Flack School of Music for the Bronx’s Hyde Leadership Charter School.

Notable deaths of 2025

Roberta Flack, singer known for 'Killing Me Softly,' dies at 88

Garth HudsonMusician Garth Hudson of The Band arrives on the Yellow Carpet where he will be inducted into the 2014 Canada’s Walk of Fame during ceremonies at The Sony Centre for the Performing Arts in Toronto, Ontario, October 18, 2014. He died on January 21 at age 87. He was The Band’s last living member. Photo by Heinz Ruckemann/UPI | License Photo

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