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Search resuls for: "Melanie’s"


3 mentions found


CNN —Melanie Safka, the singer who went by the mononym Melanie famous for songs including “Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)” and “Brand New Key,” has died. The news was shared with CNN by Billy James of Glass Onyon PR, who said Melanie died on Tuesday. Originally from New York City and the daughter of a jazz singer, Melanie released two singles and an album in the late 1960s, but it was her appearance at the Woodstock Festival in 1969 that cemented her breakthrough. She wrote a song about that experience, 1970’s “Candles in The Rain,” which became Melanie’s first US hit. She published her memoir ”Lake Days” last year, and her final tour, in late 2022, took her to the Netherlands.
Persons: Melanie Safka, Melanie, , , Billy James of Glass, Cleopatra, Glass, Paul Thomas Anderson’s, ” Melanie, Morrissey, Leilah, Beau Jarred Organizations: CNN, Facebook, Woodstock Festival, Neighborhood Records, Cleopatra Records, UNICEF, Los Locations: New York City, Netherlands, Los Angeles
How Did These Strange Songs Hit No. 1?
  + stars: | 2024-01-24 | by ( Lola Fadulu | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
When Melanie’s “Brand New Key” debuted in 1971, some people were confused. What did the singer, who died on Tuesday at 76, mean when she sang about having a brand-new pair of roller skates and someone else having a brand-new key? Melanie told interviewers that she wrote the song in 15 minutes, after ending a 27-day fast, and that it was intended to be cute. It sounded strange, like a song out of time — Melanie said she intended it to hearken to the 1930s — sung with what could now be called a warbling “indie girl voice.” And it somehow hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Persons: Melanie’s, , Melanie, “ Don’t, — Melanie
A French Thriller About a Kidfluencer Gone Missing
  + stars: | 2023-11-28 | by ( Madeleine Feeny | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
A somewhat didactic early chapter describes the explosive (and real-life) arrival in 2001 of the French reality show “Loft Story,” in which everyday contestants spend 70 days trapped in a surveilled house together before being released back into reality, fresh prey for their newfound fans. In de Vigan’s novel, both Clara Roussel and Mélanie Claux were schoolgirls when they watched its finale. “They’d believed that Big Brother would be incarnated in an outside power, authoritarian and totalitarian,” de Vigan writes of Clara’s family. “But Big Brother hadn’t needed to use force. Their paths cross when Mélanie’s daughter, Kimmy, disappears outside her home in November 2019.
Persons: Delphine de Vigan, Alison Anderson, , , Delphine de Vigan’s, Clara Roussel, Mélanie, “ They’d, Vigan, hadn’t, Big Brother, Clara Organizations: YouTube, Paris Locations: Delphine, Vigan, French
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