With guitar in hand
and a talent that combined amazing vocal
equipment, disarming humor, and a
vibrant engagement with life, she was
booked as the first solo pop/rock artist
ever to appear at Carnegie Hall, the
Metropolitan Opera House, the Sydney
Opera House, and in the General Assembly
of the United Nations, where delegates
greeted her performances with standing
ovations. The top television hosts of
the time — Ed Sullivan, Johnny Carson,
Dick Cavett — battled to book her.
(After her stunning performance on his
show, Sullivan goggled that he had not
seen such a “dedicated and responsive
audience since Elvis Presley.”)
Accolades rolled
in, from critics (“Melanie's cult has
long been famous, but it's a cult that's
responding to something genuine and
powerful — which is maybe another way of
saying that this writer counts himself
as part of the cult too,” wrote John
Rockwell in The New York Times) as well
as peers (“Melanie,” insisted jazz piano
virtuoso Roger Kellaway, “is
extraordinary to the point that she
could be sitting in front of us in this
room and sing something like ‘Momma
Momma’ right to us, and it would just go
right through your entire being.”)
In
the years that followed Melanie
continued to record, continued to tour.
UNICEF made her its spokesperson; Jimi
Hendrix's father introduced her to the
multitude assembled for the twentieth
anniversary of Woodstock. Her records
continued to sell — more than eighty
million to date. She's had her songs
covered by singers as diverse as Cher,
Dolly Parton, and Macy Gray. She's
raised a family, won an Emmy, opened a
restaurant, written a musical about Wild
Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane…
She has, in
short, lived a rare life. But all of it
was just a prelude to what's about to
come.