FUGEES At #1 Seat In The UK With Their Cover Of ‘KILLING ME SOFTLY’ Today 30 Years Ago

Top singles from the past

9 June 2026

Hip-rap-hop trio FUGEES, fronted by masterful voice Lauryn Hill
were at the top seat of the American Singles Chart with their cover
of KILLING ME SOFTLY.

A song with a long history.

It was written by veteran songwriter Norman Gimbel upon indication
of an idea by 20-year-old singer Lori Lieberman after she witnessed a
Don McLean concert, performing a song named Empty Chairs.

Composer Charles Fox put the lyrics to music. The song was named
Killing Me Softly and Lieberman recorded and released it in 1972, but
it didn’t chart.

The following year, soul star Roberta Flack released her version.
It became a worldwide hit with the #1 seat in the US, Australia,
Canada and New Zealand, and #6 in the UK.

Then in 1996, Fugees covered the tender ballad and scored
their first #1 UK hit. It topped the charts in no less than
20 countries.

LORI LIEBERMAN

ROBERTA FLACK

FUGEES

Soul Songstress ROBERTA FLACK Passed Away, Aged 88

24 February 2025

Enchanting American soul voice ROBERTA FLACK passed
away today, aged 88. No cause of death has been revealed
so far.

She scored no less than three number hits in the US with her
gripping performances of songs written by other musicians.

The First Time I Saw Your Face (1969), Feel Like Makin’ Love (1975) and of course Killing Me Softly With This Song from 1973, composed by Charles Fox with lyrics by Norman Gimbel and Lori Lieberman.

Story – Discography

(Image on top: cover of her album ‘Chapter Two’)

ROBERTA FLACK No 1 In The US 50 Years Ago Today With ‘KILLING ME SOFTLY WITH HIS SONG’

Top singles from the past

15 March 2023

Supreme soul voice ROBERTA FLACK (born Roberta Cleopatra Flack, 86 years
ago in North Calorina) had a No 1 hit in the US (also in Australia and Canada),
50 years ago today, on 15 March 1973, with classic love ballad KILLING ME
SOFTLY WITH HIS SONG
.

The song was written by Charles Fox and Norman Gimbel with co-lyrics by
Lori Lieberman who recorded/released it herself, without success, in 1972.

A year later it was Roberta Flack‘s version that made a future classic out
of the song. A bit cheesy for my liking, but Flack‘s voice is just exquisite
(like on her other vocal pearl The First Time I Saw Your Face, which
I like better).

This live version is special.

Lieberman‘s version.

ROBERTA FLACK: Bio – Discography