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NY Post
New York Post
24 Jan 2024


NextImg:Melanie Safka, Woodstock performer and ‘Brand New Key’ singer, dead at 76

Singer Melanie Safka, known as “The First Lady of Woodstock” for playing the 1969 festival at just 22 years also, and had hits in the 1970s including “Brand New Key” and “Lay Down (Candles in the Rain),” has died. She was 76.

Melanie’s kids, Leilah, Jeordie, and Beau Jarred, confirmed her death Wednesday in a Facebook post, writing, “This is the hardest post for us to write, and there are so many things we want to say, first, and there’s no easy way except to say it… Mom passed, peacefully, out of this world and into the next on January, 23rd, 2024.”

Her cause of death was not given in the Facebook post.

The Post has contacted a rep for Melanie for comment.

Her children asked fans to remember their mom by lighting a candle at 10 p.m. CT on Wednesday.

“She was one of the most talented, strong and passionate women of the era and every word she wrote, every note she sang reflected that,” they wrote. “Our world is much dimmer, the colors of a dreary, rainy Tennessee pale with her absence today, but we know that she is still here, smiling down on all of us, on all of you, from the stars.

American singer-songwriter Melanie, born Melanie Anne Safka, UK, 18th October 1972. Getty Images
Singer Melanie, Woodstock performer and 'Brand New Key' artist dead at 76
Melanie was 76. MediaPunch / BACKGRID

In 2019, Melanie reflected on playing Woodstock in an interview with AP.

“I had an out-of-body experience and I wasn’t altered by drugs,” she claimed, recalling the anticipation of her getting on the stage building all day as she watched acts like Jimi Hendrix, the Grateful Dead, and Joan Baez take the stage.

“The terror kept building in me. The thought of me performing in front of all of those people and that huge stage — I was all by myself,” she said. “Then it started to rain and I truly believed that everyone was going to get up and go home. It’s raining, I’m free, I’ll go back to life as it was. Maybe I will be an archaeologist; maybe I will join the Peace Corps. That’s when they said, ‘You’re next.’”

More to come…