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Forever No. 1: Roberta Flack’s ‘Feel Like Makin’ Love’

Written by on February 27, 2025

Forever No. 1 is a Billboard series that pays special tribute to the recently deceased artists who achieved the highest honor our charts have to offer — a Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 single — by taking an extended look back at the chart-topping songs that made them part of this exclusive club. Here, we honor Roberta Flack, who died on Feb. 24 at age 88, by looking at the singer’s last of three No. 1 hits as a recording artist: the lilting paean to romance, “Feel Like Makin’ Love.”  (In case you missed it, here’s a look at her first No. 1, “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” and at her second No. 1, “Killing Me Softly With His Song.”

The year was 1974. President Richard Nixon had resigned and Gerald Ford stepped up to fill the vacancy. Muhammad Ali and George Foreman punched their way through the Rumble in the Jungle in Zaire. Stephen King published his debut novel Carrie, while the year also witnessed the birth of future Academy Award winner Leonardo DiCaprio. And alongside various musical moments such as David Bowie launching his Diamond Dogs tour and Dolly Parton releasing the Jolene album, Roberta Flack set a record as the first female solo artist to reign at No. 1 on the Hot 100 within three consecutive years, 1972-1974, with “Feel Like Makin’ Love.”

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Flack first donned the Hot 100 crown with breakthrough hit “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” featured on her now platinum-certified 1969 debut album for Atlantic, First Take, and in the 1971 Clint Eastwood film Play Misty for Me. Coming off the top five pop and R&B chart success of the iconic duets album Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway, Flack captured the singles throne once again in 1973 with her career-cementing ballad “Killing Me Softly With His Song” from her multiplatinum, similarly titled fourth solo album, Killing Me Softly. Then in 1974 Flack completed the No. 1 trifecta with “Feel Like Makin’ Love,” the first single from the same-titled fifth solo album released a year later.

As has been the case with various songs-turned-classics over the years, “Feel Like Makin’ Love” stemmed from a casual comment that immediately sparked the writer’s imagination. In this instance, veteran singer-songwriter Eugene McDaniels (best known for his 1961 top five Hot 100 hit “A Hundred Pounds of Clay,” as well as the jazz standard “Compared to What”) had invited his assistant Morgan Ames  to join him and his family for a mini-vacation at his in-laws’ cabin in Lake Arrowhead, Calif. But after only one day, Ames decided to leave. As relayed in 1993’s The Billboard Book of Number One Rhythm & Blues Hits, when McDaniels asked why she was departing, Ames told him, “Gotta get back to town. I feel like makin’ love.” To which McDaniels replied, “’See ya!’ And [I] wrote the song. It took me 25 minutes.”

McDaniels and Flack had already collaborated before he brought “Feel” to her attention. She’d covered her mentor Les McCann’s aforementioned McDaniels-penned protest classic “Compared to What” on First Take as well as other McDaniels compositions such as “Reverend Lee” from second album Chapter Two. After McDaniels called her about “Feel,” Flack flew to Los Angeles and rode with him to Lake Arrowhead, where they worked on the song for a few days. Then Flack met up with McDaniels a couple of weeks later at Bell Sound Studios in New York. Hired for the three-hour recording session were noted musicians Bob James (piano), Idris Muhammad (drums), Gary King (bass) and Richie Resnicoff and Hugh McCracken (guitars).

Atlantic’s Joel Dorn, who had produced Flack’s earlier albums, did a remix of “Feel” before the single’s actual release. However, according to The Billboard Book, Flack rejected it. Instead, under the pseudonym Rubina Flake, she created another mix. It’s this version — also marking Flack’s debut as a producer — that was ultimately released.

Right from its opening strains, “Feel Like Makin’ Love” immediately captures the euphoria of being romanced and loved. The track’s mellow, cha-cha vibe subtly underscores the give-and-take inherent in that interplay, while Flack’s ethereal yet measured vocals indelibly outline the simple little moments that can relight Cupid’s flame. As with the song’s second verse, which begins: “When you talk to me/ When you’re moanin’ sweet and low …” then followed by the infectious, sing-along chorus: “That’s the time/ I feel like makin’ love to you/ That’s the time/ I feel like makin’ dreams come true.” Looking back, it’s also interesting to note that “Feel Like Makin’ Love” was released a year after Marvin Gaye’s similarly seductive (and also Hot 100-topping) “Let’s Get It On” signaled a societal shift, as it upended long-held taboos about blatant references to sex in music.

“Feel Like Makin’ Love” replaced John Denver’s “Annie’s Song” atop the Hot 100 on the chart dated August 10, 1974, before being pushed out the next week by Paper Lace’s “The Night Chicago Died.” addition to topping the Hot 100, “Feel Like Makin’ Love” spent five weeks and two weeks at No. 1, respectively, on Billboard’s R&B and Adult Contemporary charts. Nominated for three Grammy Awards — record of the year, song of the year and best female pop vocal performance — the song has since would go on to be covered by a who’s who of R&B and jazz artists over the decades, including D’Angelo, George Benson, Johnny Mathis and Gladys Knight & the Pips. (It also preceded Bad Company’s identically titled power ballad “Feel Like Makin’ Love,” which would become a Hot 100 top 10 hit and signature song for the classic rockers the following year.)

Hot 100

Hot 100

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“Feel” doubled as the title track of Flack’s fifth studio album. Released in 1975, the self-produced nine-track project also featured the Stevie Wonder-penned “I Can See the Sun in Late December.” And while the album reached No. 6 on Billboard’s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and No. 11 on Top Jazz Albums, it peaked at only No. 24 on the Billboard 200. Also of note: by the year of the album’s release, the only other women who had achieved three No. 1s on the Hot 100 were Cher, Connie Francis and Helen Reddy. But their No. 1s were not in consecutive years.

Flack went on to release another seminal album, 1977’s Blue Lights in the Basement. The set included the Grammy-nominated crossover hit “The Closer I Get to You” with Hathaway. That was followed three years later by her ninth studio album, Roberta Flack featuring Donny Hathaway. Originally intended as a second duets album by the pair, the project only features the posthumous vocals of Hathaway, who had died a year earlier.

By the mid-‘80s, however, Flack’s chart prominence was waning. Her last studio release was a Beatles cover album, 2012’s Let It Be Roberta. And while she had begun touring again in 2008, a stroke in early 2016 ended her performing career. Six years later, a spokesperson confirmed the singer had been diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). She died peacefully at 88 on Feb. 24, with no official cause of death disclosed.

Over the course of her innovative, multi-genre career, Flack scored a total of 18 Hot 100 hits and landed four albums in the top 10 on the Billboard 200 album charts, as well as more than two dozen charting hits on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. A four-time Grammy winner, she received the lifetime achievement awards from the Recording Academy in 2020 and the Jazz Foundation of America in 2018. Her additional accolades include a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Flack also never forgot her early beginnings as a teacher: She established the Roberta Flack Foundation in 2010 to help young people fulfill their dreams through education/mentorship and wrote the 2023 children’s book, The Green Piano: How Little Me Found Music.

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