I've read little in blogland on the passing of Pete Seeger
late last month. I did read the complete transcript of his appearance before
the House Committee on Un-American Activities. He was certainly as relentless
as his questioners.
Pete Seeger was my gateway to both folk music and activism.
I stumbled into the music easily enough, in the first weeks of my freshman year
at college. Soon there was a group of us, sitting around a big record player,
listening to each other’s records.
The group was so diverse; Ernesto, whose family escaped
Hungary just before their revolution. He had incredible Italian and Hungarian
albums. Mim, an English girl, with Weavers
albums. Two German fellows, Hans (red hair!), and the other an American, Alan.
Me, Irish. And more, listening to the music, analyzing, criticizing.
I've mentioned once or twice, I’m tone deaf. Cannot carry
any tune. If I sing in the car, my sister turns on the radio. So little appreciation! Even I know, belting
out a song, alone in my car, I am an awful singer. But, it’s the words that
matter.
The words were about ideas, issues, history. I didn't learn
Irish history from The Clancy Brothers, but I learned concepts, events, times
to look up. I didn't learn activism from Pete Seeger or Woody Gutherie, I
learned where to look in the library for the history of the labor movement and
social activism. Young Bob Dylan carried Woody Guthrie’s torch for us; remember
Deportees, together with Joan Baez?
Wow.
I didn't get on a bus to protest, but I marched to protest
the bombing of Cambodia. I didn't go to the March on Washington, but I did
stand with locked arms in front of bulldozers intending to demolish a street of
trees to widen a boulevard in Cleveland. Almost fifty years ago, and trees
still line the old boulevard.
It took a Pete Seeger and his magnificent voice to help the
country to integration. Deep in my heart
I do believe, we shall overcome some day, his voice soaring to the heavens
to lift the movement along. Hollering to us to join in.
The generation moved along into their thirties; we got
responsibilities. The war and the urgency ended, save for the new environmental
activists like Pete Seeger and the Hudson River he set out to save, single
handedly if need be.
I got tickets round for some friends when Pete Seeger and
Arlo Guthrie were in Cleveland. Old friends, but newer than my college days.
They were up for a night out. Pete warmed us up a bit, then demanded to know
how many were drug there! Laughter. He demanded a show of hands, and a sea of
hands went up. Another round of laughter. “You having a good time?” A
resounding “Yes!”
I almost met him once, at a folk festival. He was talking to
my sister, behind me. I heard him say, “This has been nice. Now I need to find
Mother.”
“Who was that,” I asked when I could turn around. “I think
his name is Pete Seeger,” my sister replied.
LUCAS JACKSON /
REUTERS/LANDOV
Click on the picture, make it big, read the banjo head:
This machine surrounds hate and forces it to surrender.
Woody Guthrie's banjo surrounded fascism, to force it to surrender.
Leadbelly's 12 string guitar didn't say anything, but spoke just as loud.
This machine surrounds hate and forces it to surrender.
Woody Guthrie's banjo surrounded fascism, to force it to surrender.
Leadbelly's 12 string guitar didn't say anything, but spoke just as loud.
Hari OM
ReplyDeleteFabulous memories used to honour a great. Bravo. YAM xx
Fascinating reminiscences.
ReplyDeleteThe public radio station I listen to did a good job memorializing Pete Seeger. For almost a week every programmer had a tribute. Each show only lasts two or three hours, so that was a lot of Pete!
The shows are archived online for two weeks. If you'd like to listen to one(from February 2) that concentrated on Pete Seeger and his contemporaries, go to http://kdhx.org/play/radio-shows/no-time-to-tarry-here.
Our PRI carried a lot of Pete, too. Good listening.
DeleteThe music spoke so much of "our" times. I often wonder what happened to all of those young people who hoped to change the world for the better. I do think our generation did make big strides into equality, but a woman still makes only $.77 for every dollar a man makes and minorities are still discriminated against. Progress is slow, but I still have hope that this next generation will do better.
ReplyDeleteI think the next change will not be activism, it is "being." My grandson will be an engineer; so will his sister be an engineer. When feet being on a broader path, the horizon expands, too.
DeleteThe good old days.
ReplyDeleteVery nice tribute... to a man and a time
ReplyDeleteHis music will live on in all of our hearts. He was a tremendous talent. "I think his name is Pete Seeger." Did you smack her? Your sister?
ReplyDeleteReminds me of a story - my ex-husband's sister was working as a waitress in an Irish bar in Ontario and she told her brother, a few months later, that she waited on some guy named Van Morrison.
Only ten years younger, but an entire generation!
DeleteThe beer fairy has a few Pete Seeger records and I have a few Bob Dylan records sometimes we play them and drift back into the past.
ReplyDeleteMerle.............
I remember those college days of us all sitting around listening to the newest albums except our's were mostly Stones, Doors, The Band, but they all had great meaningful lyrics. And coffee houses before Starbucks. And the Washington march. Very different days from today.
ReplyDeleteI am curious what you mean by today is more about being than activism and would like to hear more from you on that idea. It sounds intriguing.
You're not tone deaf, and I do not dislike Pete Seeger.
ReplyDeleteA wonderful man who stood up for what he believed all his life. I respect him far more than other contemporary heroes like Bob Dylan.
ReplyDeleteGreat tribute to him. I don't remember the actual quote but in an interview he said you can get away with saying things in a song that you can't in other ways. I think that was true then but it seems FB and other social sites lets people be as extreme as they like today. Maybe what I'm trying to say is he was right for his time and promoted many good causes.
ReplyDeleteI'm tone deaf too, married to a musician; go figure.
ReplyDeleteI wasn't too much into Pete Seeger, but did enjoy a lot of Bob Dylan's songs. Funny to see Bob Dylan on a commercial during Super Bowl.
betty
"...listening to the music, analyzing, criticizing."
ReplyDeleteI've never done that. I listen and enjoy, sometimes get up and dance around the room.
Music has never inspired me to search libraries for histories or other meanings.
Pete Seeger was a treasure to Duchess County. We lived there for over twenty three years and people saw him cleaning the streets of Beacon.
ReplyDeleteMusic is one art I cannot do without. I listen to music, lyrics and notes and all. Love it. Indian or American.
I liked Peter Paul and Mary, too. Remember their music?
ReplyDeletean era is passing
ReplyDeleteI'm about 10 years behind you, like your sister, and never knew much of this music - interesting piece! I was more into rock and roll :) And I'm like River, above - never inspired to research music, just dance to it!
ReplyDeletePete Seeger was one of my all time heros. I have wonderful memories of him, Arlo Guthrie, Harry Belafonte, Peter, Paul and Mary. They were so significant in helping me to develop my social conscience when times 'they were a changin' '!
ReplyDeleteI'm from the same era as you and appreciate the music that went hand in hand with our broadening thoughts during that tumultuous time. It was like pulling a cork on a bottle of champagne -- ideas of change were spewing everywhere. Some folks liked this -- some not. What happened to those fresh ideas -- did the "some not" tamper us down? -- barbara
ReplyDelete