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MAY 1, 2009 11:59AM

Pete Seeger Turns 90

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I was 15 years old the day I met Pete Seeger. 
4,000 or so people at the grand old Auditorium Theater in Chicago. Mesmerized by the rail thin guy, sleeves rolled up in his flannel shirt singing at the center of a bare stage.
Just him and a guitar or banjo. 
I have rolled up the sleeves of my flannel shirt ever since.  
No one else up there but him. 
After the concert; clutching a piece of paper signed by the advisor to the Radio Club at my high school, standing at the stage door; somehow someone actually let me follow a line of journalists up on to the stage of the emptying theater. 
Standing with a crowd of about 20; surrounding Pete Seeger who was politely answering questions. Looking out on to the oceans of empty seats, all the house lights up; it was finally my turn.
High School Radio Reporter ready for his moment. Sticking out my gangly arm to shake hands with the great man; and drawn in by the kindly eyes of time, he said; "And what can I do for you, young man?" 
Open mouth, eyes wide and forgetting every imagined, written out and approved by my the radio club teacher; I stammered: "Ah. . .um. . . thank you sir." 
He smiled and said "Why, you're welcome." And then here's what happened. I have never forgotten this sight. And I never will.
Pete Seeger, who had just sang by himself to thousands, and sang about what really mattered, picked up his guitar case in one hand, his banjo case in another, hopped down the steps on the side of the stage, came back to he center aisle; and proceeded to walk up the center aisle towards the back of the theater. 
Then, all of us real and would be reporters following him; watched him walk out the front door of the Auditorium Theater, out into the horns blaring, bright light Chicago night, hold up his guitar case to hail a cab; get in to the first one that stopped and drive away into the darkness. 
He will sing forever. About what's important. 
But what's really amazing is that when you listen to him sing; you'll sing too.

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Can we get this man a Nobel Prize before it's too late?

Pete and Toshi are still alive, still married.

I was nine when Pete Seeger's sister Peggy, who was married to Scottish folksinger Ewan McColl, encouraged him to listen to my Uncle Matt (McGinn's) recordings. He not only listened, he met Uncle Matt, and brought him to the US to join a concert tour. I first met Pete when I was nine; he was awfully tall, awfully kind, awfully good with kids. I liked him right away.

BTW, as a result of Pete's interest, my Uncle Matt's American debut was at Carnegie Hall. A young Bob Dylan was one of the opening acts. He asked my uncle, backstage, if he could borrow a nailclipper. This was not an article Glasgow men generally carried, so my uncle missed an opportunity to get some of Bob Dylan's DNA!

Thanks for your post; I love Pete Seeger.

Here's the link for the Nobel Prize movement: http://nobelprize4pete.org/
Excellent! The ex uses his music as a teaching tool for history. On records, of course.
Beautiful. Thanks. I never met Seeger. I do love his lyrics etc. I met Peter Paul and Mary. Paul said to me after a question post-war @ the Merrweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Maryland. It was 1972 or 3? He said:`Look into ancient literature and the writing called:`Sacred Scriptures.
I will be grateful forever.
~
The You Tube You chose?
inch by inch brings tears,
and I once sang it in NYC.

I sang like wet wool alpaca?
I sung in a commode bucket?
I was so low-key folk moaned.

Seeger sings:`People need to give a little shit.
Adults have screwed this beautiful land up bad.
He told this to children:`Give a little shit shit shit!
~
Please.
I'll listen and re-listen to Seeger. The rain is coming a- tumbling down now.
I'll go play
on a seesaws
Plant Ya roes
short or long.
tears yield love
a prayer and songs.
Oh soliloquy Yes!
Hamlet's soliloquy
To Be Or Not To Be.
A thief's are `round.
~
The www.HuffingtonPost.com has:`A Winnie The Pooh piece on Swine Flue.
Tim Meadows has a piece on Torture. Susan Bs sex. Ay, Whoopee.

Yea, the heehaws.
I gonna heehaws.
I gotta go get fed.
~
rain inch by inch
breath by breath
and the seeds grow.
I love real people. What a great story :)
Seeger is a treasure. I have lived in his neighborhood, northern Westchester County, for over 30 years. He's majorly responsible for cleaning up the Hudson River, and gave concerts through the years to make money for the cause, many of which my family attended. He's just a great piece of Americana.
Roger, this is wonderful; thank you, sir. I wish I could be there on Sunday for his 90th birthday celebration in NYC. I really enjoyed the sight of him performing at Obama's inauguration with that other (former) folk singer from New Jersey by his side. We need more Pete Seegers in the world today, now more than ever. Paul
Hi, again! I'm LOVING your post; I did a post of my own on the Get Pete Seeger a Nobel Prize movment, and I referenced your site, but was in such a hurry to get it up on the site that I didn't link to it: I apologize! (Hhhm. I'm doing a lot of that this morning!)

Here's the link to my site for my comments, which credits yours: http://open.salon.com/blog/helen_oreilly/2009/05/01/somebody_get_pete_seeger_a_nobel_price_stat_hes_90
The only time I saw Pete Seeger was at a School of Americas protest about 10 years ago. He sang Where Have All the Flowers Gone? Later, a friend pointed him out as he briskly walked not 10 yards from us.

I don't consider myself a star-struck kind of person. But it was one of my only star-struck moments.

What a man Pete Seeger is. I love looking at the transcripts of him being hauled before the House Un-American Activities Committee. A brave, principled voice.
It's too bad Pete didn't enjoy the commercial success that so many other "protest singers" did going back to the 60's. He managed to get a hit song with "Little Boxes" but for some reason faded from the Top 40 scene. Glad he's still around!
My brother still talks about the time he was in New York City about 30 years ago, and Pete was out playing like an anonymous troubador in Greenwich Village. Just out playing on the corner. Of course a big crowd gathered around eventually, but still...
Even WRITING about Pete Seeger prompts joy and moments of treasured history: stories of watching him sing on a streetcorner, the testimony from the 1950;s, the Nobel prize moment.

And Arthur---I am honored to draw a response from you---my first time! Thank you!

I am GUESSING Pete's commercial success was quite large (imagine the residuals on "If I Had a Hammer" alone. . .but of course I'm also imagining he doesn't care."

The last time I saw him was at the People's Church on Lawrence in Uptown.

His voice was gone---but it didn't matter.

We all sang extra loud.

(PS---my aplogies for the formatting---I tried 1/2 a dozen times to put paragraphs in this but it never took---oh well---listen to the song. That's the point! So on Sunday May 3rd---Happy Birthday to Wendy my sister---and to Pete!)
The first vinyl album 33 rpm record I ever bought was by the Weavers with Pete Seeger. I now have that on CD and play it often. What a great human being. A great talent, of course. But what humanity.

Monte
Great story CGuy. I don't know if I would have been able to say "ah, um" let alone thank you.

Like Procopius's brother, I stumbled upon Seeger playing in NYC, no pretenses, on a corner just making people smile and allowing us to sing along.

I wish I could be at that show on Sunday but I guess I'll have to settle for watching the PBS broadcast later this year.

Rated for reminding us to sing along!
Thank you for reminding me of this amazing man!
Pete Seeger lives in Beacon, NY, not far from where I live and work. The first time I saw him he played a couple of union songs at a gathering of our newspaper local, about a dozen years ago. It was a thrill.

The last time I spoke to him was on the eve of his departure from Beacon to sing at the Inaugural. The news peg was that this iconic figure had been invited to sing at the event by Bruce Springsteen. Pete doesn't know me from Adam. But we had a 20-minute conversation anyway that I found to be very revealing.

Yes, he was honored to be asked to sing by Bruce. But you know, he said, these big rallies don't work very well musically. By the time you've sung the words, they haven't reached half the audience.

He said it had only really worked for him once, in 1969, at an anti-war rally. "And you know what song we sang?" he said.

"All we are saying, is give peace a chance. . . ."

Only he didn't just say the words. He sang them. The entire first verse.

Yeah, he was excited enough about Washington. But what he said he was REALLY excited about was Monday. What was Monday, I asked. "Martin Luther King's birthday," he said kindly. He went on to explain, in a voice that betrayed his excitement, that he'd be singing at a black church in Beacon, surrounded by the church choir and kids from a nearby school.

Anyone else in the world? They'd have been yammering about themselves and The Boss. But Pete Seeger's not like anyone else in the world.

You can often find him on Sunday afternoon in Beacon, doing what people call his Sidewalk Sessions. Here's a link. http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=beacon+ny+and+pete+seeger&oe=utf-8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&um=1&ie=UTF-8&ei=BK78SciaBaHItgf3xI2jDQ&sa=X&oi=video_result_group&resnum=4&ct=title#

May we all be as involved in our communities and generous with our time as Pete Seeger has always been. The guy is unbelievable.

Thanks for the reminder, Chicago.