The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face

The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face

Roberta Flack

From the album

First Take (1969)

Written by

Ewan MacColl

Key:Db major
Duration:4:20

Listen to the Song

Summary

Originally written in 1957 by Ewan MacColl for Peggy Seeger, this folk ballad was transformed by Roberta Flack into a spare, hypnotic soul masterpiece on her 1969 debut album First Take. A sleeper hit propelled by Clint Eastwood's film Play Misty for Me, it topped the Billboard Hot 100 and swept the 1973 Grammy Awards for Record and Song of the Year.

soul ballad1970s classicGrammy winnerfolk originlove song

Musical Analysis

The harmony blends folk song simplicity with jazz-influenced voicings and orchestral lushness. The core progressions are diatonic and accessible, but the use of major seventh chords, the borrowed iv minor, and the spacious rubato phrasing give the song a harmo…

Chords

verse:Db - Dbmaj7 - Gb - Gbm - Db/Ab - Ab7 - Db
chorus:Bbm - Gb - Ab7 - Db

History

Ewan MacColl wrote the song after Peggy Seeger, who was working for a radio show in Los Angeles, told him the producers wanted a 'hopeful love song' because her folk repertoire was mostly sad. MacColl composed it quickly and sang it to Seeger over the telephon…

“Ron Carter, one of jazz's most recorded bassists, played on the session”

Full Musical Analysis

The harmony blends folk song simplicity with jazz-influenced voicings and orchestral lushness. The core progressions are diatonic and accessible, but the use of major seventh chords, the borrowed iv minor, and the spacious rubato phrasing give the song a harmonic sophistication that elevates it beyond a standard folk ballad. The slow tempo allows each chord change to resonate deeply, making the harmony feel inevitable rather than predictable.

Ewan MacColl wrote the song after Peggy Seeger, who was working for a radio show in Los Angeles, told him the producers wanted a 'hopeful love song' because her folk repertoire was mostly sad. MacColl composed it quickly and sang it to Seeger over the telephone from England. Although written about their relationship, Seeger said she did not interpret it as a love song at the time because she was not yet in love with him, and she performed it from his perspective.

Originally written in 1957 by Ewan MacColl for Peggy Seeger, this folk ballad was transformed by Roberta Flack into a spare, hypnotic soul masterpiece on her 1969 debut album First Take. A sleeper hit propelled by Clint Eastwood's film Play Misty for Me, it topped the Billboard Hot 100 and swept the 1973 Grammy Awards for Record and Song of the Year.

Deep Analysis Available

Detailed analysis of this section is not yet available for this song.

Song DNA

Genre

R&B

Era

70s

Mood

Peaceful

Tempo

Ballad

Key

Major

Texture

Orchestral

Sound

Piano-led

Feel

Straight

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Listen & Learn

Statistics

839K

Plays

209K

Listeners

245K

Genius Views

2

Annotations

100%

Popularity

4:20

Duration

4/4

Time

Credits

Written by

Ewan MacColl

Produced by

Joel Dorn

From the album First Take