Picture of author.
38+ Works 233 Members 8 Reviews

Reviews

Showing 8 of 8
Singer Flack looks back on her childhood.

The titular piano, rescued from a junkyard for the 9-year-old prodigy, serves as a memorable central image, but the memoir the renowned singer and co-author Bolden weave around it is really about the joys of growing up in a musical family and turning musical dreams into reality through years of listening, practice, and study. Identifying her parents, siblings, and music teachers by name as she goes, Flack vivaciously recalls first her excitement as her father and mother painstakingly fixed up the “old, / ratty, beat-up, / weather-worn, / faded, / stained, / stinky” instrument (“I couldn’t wait, couldn’t wait, couldn’t WAIT for / the paint to dry!”), then the intense feeling of “notes flowing through my fingers / to my body, / to my soul,” on the way to a life in music: “Grown-up me lived this dream! Year after year after year!” Goodman follows along in equally lyrical measures, giving the brown-skinned narrator the same rhapsodic smile as she goes from a vision of playing hymns on a rickety-looking church piano at “age three, maybe four” to accompanying herself on a huge concert grand as an adult star. In a closing note, with photos, she offers further nods to people who helped her as she fills in the details of her stellar career. Family members and other figures in the pictures are African American. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A moving testimonial to the effects of instilling a love of live music in childhood. (timeline) (Picture-book biography. 6-8)

-Kirkus Review
 
Flagged
CDJLibrary | 3 other reviews | Aug 1, 2023 |
lovely story of music, and starting music early, at home, with family
 
Flagged
melodyreads | 3 other reviews | May 24, 2023 |
The charmingly-told story of what inspired Roberta Flack, a five-time grammy Award winner, begins:

"Little me, in my Blue Ridge Mountain town
of Asheville, North Carolina,
living on a street named Velvet,
then on one named Circle,
I didn’t have fancy-fine clothes,
high-priced toys, or other richy-rich
things.

But I had music.

My treasure.
My gold.”

During the time she was growing up, her father taught himself to play piano and harmonica, and her mother also played the piano as well as the organ at church. Roberta dreamed of having her own piano.

Then, “Older me, age six, started taking piano lessons…”

The family moved to Arlington, Virginia, close to D.C., to “a home where Mother, Daddy, neighbors, friends made music together.” Roberta still dreamed of having a piano of her own.

One day driving by a junkyard, her daddy spied a piano, “something he just knew would make nine-year-old me burst into a thousand smiles.”

It was a small upright piano. It was all beat up, but her daddy brought it home and put his all into fixing it up. He worked and worked on it, and then painted it a grassy green.

The minute the paint was dry, Roberta started playing. She practiced for hours and hours, teaching herself to play songs, and taking piano lessons again. Soon she started singing along to the music, and then got an even bigger dream - “of a life all wrapped up in the majesty, the magic of music - my treasure, my gold.” And “Grown-up me lived this dream! Year after year after year!”

An NPR story recounted:

“When she was just 15 years old, Flack received a full music scholarship to Howard University. In the early 1960s, she was teaching in public schools by day and moonlighting as a singer and pianist by night. But by the end of the decade, she had to quit the classroom. Her soulful, intimate recordings were selling millions of albums around the world. With international touring and recording, music became a full-time career.”

But along the way, she reports in this book, she never forgot:

“the joy,
the miracle,
the wonder,
the blessing
of
my
green piano.”

The book ends with an Author’s Note which includes fascinating biographical information, a delineation of career highlights, and a touching list of acknowledgments, including thanks to her mother for believing in her and to her father “for my first piano - for all that it took to get it, move it, paint it, tune it - the start of my true life in music.” Adult fans (has it really been 50 years since the release of her classic hit, “Killing Me Softly with His Song” ??!!) will especially enjoy these additional details of her journey.

Illustrations by Hayden Goodman are done in gouache paintings, with some finishing details rendered digitally. The artwork ably conveys the joy that infused little Roberta’s heart from music.

Evaluation: Readers aged 6 and up will no doubt love the way this story is told in the excited voice of a little girl, although written by a grown-up mega star who is now 85 years old. She has been diagnosed with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), a neurological disease that has rendered her unable to sing or even speak. But before that, she made sure her story got out for kids to read, along with her advice, as she says in her note, to “Find your own 'green piano' and practice relentlessly until you find your voice, and a way to put that beautiful music into the world."
 
Flagged
nbmars | 3 other reviews | Mar 2, 2023 |
First sentence: Little me, in my Blue Ridge Mountain town
of Asheville, North Carolina,
living on a street named Velvet,
then on one named Circle,
didn't have fancy-fine clothes,
high-priced toys,
or other richy-rich
things.
But I had music.
My treasure.
My gold.

Premise/plot: The Green Piano is a picture book autobiography of Roberta Flack--particularly her formative childhood years. The book focuses on Roberta Flack's love of music. It tells the story of how her father brought home a piano from a junkyard and painted it green. This gift of love was also a gift of music. (Though music was VERY important to Roberta, to the whole family, to the community, before this gift.)

The biography is written in free verse.

My thoughts: Some books are written in verse and you don't know exactly why. It makes a lot of sense that a book about music would be written in verse. On the surface, it makes perfect sense, like it would be a great fit. Lyrics often are poetry. (Though perhaps not all lyrics?) However, I found the verse to lack a little magic. To me the verses just lacked rhythm and that certain spark that makes verse work well. The text didn't "sing" to me. Prose can sing--and sometimes does sing--poetry is expected to sing more often than not.

I wanted to really love this one. Roberta Flack's music is something that I generally enjoy. (I do have favorites. I am familiar with her music.) The text is weaker than I would have expected. The illustrations, however, are more my cup of tea. There are spreads that I absolutely loved.
 
Flagged
blbooks | 3 other reviews | Jan 13, 2023 |
1 Killing Me Softly With His Song
Producer – Joel Dorn
Written-By – Charles Fox, Norman Gimbel
4:46
2 The Closer I Get To You
Producer – Eugene McDaniels, Joe Ferla, Rubina Flake
Written-By – James Mtume, Reggie Lucas
4:35
3 You've Got A Friend
Producer – Arif Mardin, Joel Dorn
Vocals – Donny Hathaway
Written-By – Carole King
3:23
4 Feel Like Makin' Love
Producer – Rubina Flake
Written-By – Eugene McDaniels
2:53
5 Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
Producer – Joel Dorn
Written-By – Goffin And King
4:01
6 Where Is The Love
Producer – Arif Mardin, Joel Dorn
Vocals – Donny Hathaway
Written-By – Ralph McDonald*, William Salter
2:41
7 The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
Producer – Joel Dorn
Written-By – Ewan MacColl
4:16
8 Back Together Again
Producer – Eric Mercury, Roberta Flack
Vocals – Donny Hathaway
Written-By – James Mtume, Reggie Lucas
4:43
9 You Are My Heaven
Producer – Eric Mercury, Roberta Flack
Vocals – Donny Hathaway
Written-By – Eric Mercury, Stevie Wonder
4:13
10 If I Ever See You Again
Producer, Written-By, Arranged By, Conductor – Joe Brooks*
3:30
11 Jesse
Producer – Joel Dorn
Written-By – Janis Ian
3:58
 
Flagged
carptrash | Mar 20, 2022 |
INFORMATION-This album contains the following tracks:
1 Let's Stay Together (Al Green / Al Jackson, Jr. / Willie Mitchell), 4:55
2 Sweet Georgia Brown (Ben Bernie / Kenneth Casey / Maceo Pinkard), 5:14
3 The Thrill Is Gone (Rick Darnell / Roy Hawkins), 5:44
4 It Might Be You (Alan Bergman / Marilyn Bergman / Dave Grusin), 10:02
5 In a Sentimental Mood (Duke Ellington / Manny Kurtz / Irving Mills), 3:08
6 Looking for Another Pure Love (Stevie Wonder), 4:51
7 I Don't Care Who Knows (Baby, I'm Yours) (B. Johnson / E. Johnson), 4:06
8 Prelude to a Kiss (Intro) (Duke Ellington), 0:43
9 Prelude to a Kiss (Duke Ellington / Irving Gordon / Irving Mills), 4:28
10 Angel Eyes (Earl Brent / Matt Dennis), 6:35
11 Tenderly (Walter Gross / Jack Lawrence), 3:48
12 Cottage for Sale (Larry Conley / Willard Robison), 4:37
13 Isn't It Romantic? (Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers), 3:43
14 My Romance (Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers), 5:39
15 You'll Never Know ('Til You Let Go) (Jerry Barnes / Katreese Barnes / Roberta Flack / Barry Miles), 5:22
 
Flagged
Lemeritus | Jan 25, 2014 |
INFORMATION-This album contains the following tracks:
1 Compared to What (Gene McDaniels), 5:16
2 Angelitos Negros (Andrés Eloy Blanco / Manuel Álvarez Maciste), 6:56
3 Our Ages or Our Hearts (Robert Ayers / Donny Hathaway), 6:09
4 I Told Jesus (Traditional), 6:09
5 Hey, That's No Way to Say Goodbye (Leonard Cohen), 4:08
6 The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face (Ewan MacColl), 5:22
7 Tryin' Times (Donny Hathaway / Leroy Hutson), 5:08
8 Ballad of the Sad Young Men (Fran Landesman / Thomas Wolf / Tommy Wolf), 7:00
 
Flagged
Lemeritus | 1 other review | Jan 5, 2014 |
Product Details

* Audio CD (September 19, 1995)
* Number of Discs: 1
* Format: Original recording remastered
* Label: Atlantic / Wea
* Catalog Number: 82792
* ASIN: B000002J5S
* Also Available in: Audio Cassette
* Average Customer Review: based on 12 reviews. (Write a review.)
* Amazon.com Sales Rank: #10,048 in Music (See Top Sellers in Music)
Yesterday: #9,187 in Music

Listen to Samples
To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that sample. Visit our audio help page for more information.
Windows Media RealOne Player
1. Compared To What Listen Listen
2. Angelitos Negros Listen Listen
3. Our Ages Or Our Hearts Listen Listen
4. I Told Jesus Listen Listen
5. Hey, That's No Way To Say Goodbye Listen Listen
6. The First Time EverI Saw Your Face Listen
7. Tryin' Times Listen
8. Ballad Of The Sad Young Men Listen
Tag this product (What's this?)

Your tags: Add your first tag
Spotlight Reviews
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Search Customer Reviews


20 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
Amazing, incredible, powerful voice., March 21, 2000
Reviewer: Eric V. Moye (New York, by way of Dallas) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
Like one other reviewer, Roberta Flack is my all time favorite vocalist. Her voice is nothing short of magical. It can be soft and gentle and powerful. On this album, she shows both ends of her spectrum.

I saw her in concert, now some twenty five years ago. It was like no other concert I have ever seen in life, before or since. She was magical, from the very first moment she came out onto the stage with one word: "Hello". From that moment, she had the audience in the palm of her hands.

Clint Eastwood may not have discovered her, but he sure gave her a wider audience by including her signature song "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face" in his dark movie, "Play Misty For Me". It was a classic, and propetic; the first time ever I heard her voice I knew that I was hearing something unlike anything I had ever heard before.

Along with that wonderful piece, this album includes "That's No Way To Say Goodbye", and "Tryin' Times". These works sure make this album worth having. Her voice is a gem, to be treasured.

The rumor was, back in the day, that Roberta Flack could make good music when she was happy, but could only make great music when she was unhappy. I am ashamed to say it, but if this is true, an awful lot of her fans sure got a lot of pleasure as a result of her pain. For her sacrifice, we owe her a great debt, and hopes for her happiness.

Was this review helpful to you? YesNo (Report this)

3 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
A VOICE AS RARE AS ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S DIAMOND!, July 9, 2002
Reviewer: J. Hoffman "soul lover" (dover, pa. United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
WHEN MISSROBERTA FLACK FIRST STARTED SINGING THE FIRST TIME EVER I SAW YOUR FACE, I KNOW THE ENTIRE PLANET HAD TO STOP!LOOK!&LISTEN!TO THIS FABULOUS VOICE, A VOICE THAT COULD BRING EVEN THE COLDEST & THE CRUELEST OF HEART TO THEIR KNEES! AMEN!IF THERE WOULD NOT BE A QUEEN OF SOUL ALREADY ESTABLISED, THIS WOMAN SHOULD REIGN THE QUEEN OF SOUL!I KNOW MISS ARETHA FRANKLIN EVEN HAD TO STOP! LOOK!&LISTEN!WHEN SHE BROUGHT THAT RECORD OUT.THEN LOOKOUT CHAPTER TWO SOON FOLLOWED WITH THE SOULSTIRRING DO WHAT YOU GOTTA DO, NOTHING SHORT FROM FABULOUS,& IF ONE NEEDED MORE CONVINCING, THERE CAME QUIET FIRE,KILLING ME SOFTLY,BORN TO LOVE,SET THE NIGHT TO MUSIC, MOVIE THEMES N ALL!SHE'S THE GREATEST!!NO RECORD COLLECTION IS COMPLETE WITHOUT HER!!JOEY HOFFMAN(THE SOUL PHILOSOPHER)
 
Flagged
pantufla | 1 other review | Feb 24, 2006 |
Showing 8 of 8