![Roberta Flack vs. Fugees: Head 2 Head 🗣️ No. 22 [📷: Atlantic, Brent Faulkner, Columbia, GenderArts from Pixabay, The Musical Hype, Valentin Tikhonov from Pixabay]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
![Roberta Flack vs. Fugees: Head 2 Head 🗣️ No. 22 [📷: Atlantic, Brent Faulkner, Columbia, GenderArts from Pixabay, The Musical Hype, Valentin Tikhonov from Pixabay]](https://i0.wp.com/themusicalhype.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/roberta-flack-fugees-head-2-head-22.jpg?resize=400%2C400&ssl=1)
On the 22nd edition of Head 2 Head, Roberta Flack and Fugees face off on respective covers of the beloved classic, “Killing Me Softly With His Song.”
![Roberta Flack vs. Fugees: Head 2 Head 🗣️ No. 22 [📷: Atlantic, Brent Faulkner, Columbia, GenderArts from Pixabay, The Musical Hype, Valentin Tikhonov from Pixabay]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
![Roberta Flack vs. Fugees: Head 2 Head 🗣️ No. 22 [📷: Atlantic, Brent Faulkner, Columbia, GenderArts from Pixabay, The Musical Hype, Valentin Tikhonov from Pixabay]](https://i0.wp.com/themusicalhype.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/roberta-flack-fugees-head-2-head-22.jpg?resize=400%2C400&ssl=1)
W
elcome to Head 2 Head! On Head 2 Head, we pit at least two musicians singing the same song together, comparing and contrasting their performances. Then, after much deliberation, we deliver a verdict of which performance was the best, or at least, subjectively, which performance moved us more. For our 22nd head-to-head, 🎙 Roberta Flack and 🎙 Fugees face off on respective covers of the beloved classic, 🎵 “Killing Me Softly With His Song”. So, without further ado, let the Head 2 Head commence!1. Roberta Flack, “Killing Me Softly With His Song”
💿 Killing Me Softly • 🏷 Atlantic • 📅 1973
Why is the Roberta Flack version so good? First and foremost, her voice is angelic, radiant, and incredibly soothing. Flack has a way of ‘packing a punch’ without having to over-sing. She doesn’t need gospel histrionics to sell the pain that she sings about, even considering this isn’t an original by herself. It also helps that the songwriting by (🎼✍ Charles Fox and 🎼✍ Norman Gimbel) is impeccable. “I felt all flushed with fever / Embarrassed by the crowd,” she sings expressively, on the second verse, adding, “I felt he found my letters / And read each one out loud.” Throw in colorful production work (Joel Dorn) that plays well to both pop and soul crowds, and you have a 🏆 Grammy-winning, no. 1 hit. Hard to imagine anyone topping this ultra-successful version, right?
2. Fugees, “Killing Me Softly With His Song”
💿 The Score • 🏷 Columbia • 📅 1996
Being a millennial, I’m naturally more familiar with the 1996 cover by Fugees – blame on being an 80s baby! Essentially, Hill and 🎙 🎛 Wyclef Jean update the 1973 version for the 90s, which is R-A-D. The beat is indicative of the hip-hop soul sound prevalent at the time. It naturally infuses freshness – there’s a new swagger. Furthermore, add in a robust bass line, ad-libs (Hill and Jean), and “Killing Me Softly” has a new identity for a new generation. Of course, the person who ‘brings it on home’ for us 80s babies and 90s kids is Hill, period. Her voice is distinct – starkly different from Flack’s. She’d go on to make one of the greatest albums of all-time in the timeless 💿 The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Here, she prefaces the brilliance of her sole solo studio album, and it’s awesome. Her nuance, the runs – it’s glorious over that dusty beat. “Killing Me Softly With His Song” is in great hands with Fugees too. Like Flack, they won a Grammy specifically for this song.
The Verdict 👨🏿⚖️
Roberta Flack vs. Fugees: Head 2 Head 🗣️ No. 22 [📷: Atlantic, Brent Faulkner, Columbia, GenderArts from Pixabay, The Musical Hype, Valentin Tikhonov from Pixabay]
Leave a Comment