The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

LEGEND ROLLS IN

Peggy Seeger began singing aged two, had met blues and folk legends by 22, and formed an influentia­l partnershi­p with Ewan MacColl. Now she’s set for Braemar, writes Rob Adams

-

It is often said of people who reach their 80s that they have lived full lives. In the case of Peggy Seeger, who appears at the inaugural Braemar Folk Festival with her son Calum on Friday October 1, make that three or four full lives. By the time she was 22, Peggy had met blues legend Lead Belly and folk music icon Woody Guthrie. She’d also met the composer of the East German national anthem (and much else besides), Hanns Eisler, and the writer of folk classic Freight Train, the redoubtabl­e Elizabeth Cotten, to name just a few visitors to the Seeger household.

Her eyes had been described by one admirer as being “the colour of time” and had become the inspiratio­n for the infinitely more long-lasting compliment, Ewan MacColl’s The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face.

The Seegers’ home was filled with music. Peggy’s mother, Ruth Crawford Seeger, was the first woman to be awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship Award for Music. She composed modernist music during the 1920s and 1930s before becoming interested in folk music.

Peggy’s father, Charles Seeger, was a musicologi­st, composer, teacher, and folklorist. One brother, Pete, actually a halfbrothe­r, was one of the defining characters in American folk music. The other, Mike, devoted his life to keeping American folk music, particular­ly from the Southern States, alive. Peggy herself began singing aged two and gave her first public performanc­e when, as she remembers, she was taken into hospital with strep throat only to catch whooping cough and be placed in an isolation ward.

“My parents were apparently able to locate the ward by hearing me singing Barbara Allen from down the hall,” she says.

Her recollecti­ons of the various visitors to the family home vary. Elizabeth Cotten came to a very young Peggy’s rescue when she got lost in a department store, and ended up working as the Seeger’s domestic help. She was a priceless fund of music and lore (and a huge influence on brother Mike’s subsequent career).

Woody Guthrie, on the other hand, says Peggy, “was a bit too rough for my mother. He’d put his guitar on the floor, pull it around by the strap and pretend it was a dog.”

Having taken piano lessons with her mother from the age of six, Peggy was studying music at Radcliffe College in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts when she began singing folk songs profession­ally, accompanyi­ng herself on guitar and banjo. She dropped out of Radcliffe, went hitch-hiking in Europe and was in a youth hostel in Copenhagen when family friend, song collector Alan Lomax tracked her down and invited her to London to play banjo on a TV programme.

It was on this trip that Peggy met Ewan MacColl and a partnershi­p was born. The impact MacColl and Seeger made on the British – and wider – folk scene can’t be overstated. Even just the radio ballads series they worked on with BBC producer Charles Parker, telling stories in songs and the words of real-life working participan­ts, produced

the likes of The Moving On Song and Shoals of Herring, whose significan­ce has only increased.

Following MacColl’s death in 1989 Peggy continued performing traditiona­l songs and writing her own, including I’m Gonna Be an Engineer, which she wrote for the Festival of Fools shows that “featured eight women wearing mini-skirts”. It wasn’t conceived as

a feminist anthem but it was taken up by the feminist movement. When she was invited to sing it at radical meetings, she would invariably be asked if she had any more where that came from.

“That’s why I started writing women’s songs because I only had that one,” she says.

The songs she’ll sing in Braemar are likely to be drawn from across her 80-plus years of singing. Her job as a songwriter, she says, is to convey a message that, were it in nonhummabl­e form, might not be so easily remembered.

“It’s enjoyable to write songs,” she says. “And it’s rewarding to hear other people

singing a song you’ve written, even though, as has happened a number of times, they

attribute it to another songwriter!”

Braemar Folk Festival runs at St Margaret’s from October 1 to 3.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? A FULL LIFE: Peggy Seeger has had a long and successful music career. She will be appearing at the inaugural Braemar Folk Festival with her son Calum (top) on October 1.
A FULL LIFE: Peggy Seeger has had a long and successful music career. She will be appearing at the inaugural Braemar Folk Festival with her son Calum (top) on October 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom