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tribute
March 15-16, 2007, Library of Congress, Washington, DC
About the Event
The Library of Congress pays tribute to one of America's most enduring
musical legacies in a two-day celebration entitled How
Can I Keep From Singing? A Seeger Family Tribute, from
March 15-16, 2007. Events will include a symposium, concert,
and a special screening of archival films over the course of the
two days.
| PLEASE NOTE:
Due to very high demand, tickets to the Seeger Family concert
have already sold out. We
will have overflow rooms equipped with closed-circuit televisions
to broadcast the event. We are also exploring other avenues
to see that symposium registrants who were unable to obtain
tickets for the concert will be able to hear the Seegers perform.
Please understand that we cannot guarantee symposium registrants
without tickets a seat in the auditorium or the overflow room.
We very much hope that you will still plan to attend the symposium. |
The Library's American Folklife Center and the Music Division are
home to multiple collections documenting the family's extraordinary
musical accomplishments: those of composer-musicologist Charles
Seeger; his wife Ruth Crawford Seeger, a pathbreaking modernist
composer; their children, Mike (both a collector and a celebrated
performer of old-time music) and Peggy (a singer-songwriter important
to the genre of women's music); and Charles's son, Pete, one of
the central figures in the American folksong revival. The symposium
will bring together leading scholars, cultural figures, and musicians
who have been carrying the legacy of the Seegers forward in both
performance and scholarship. It will include ethnomusicologist Tony
Seeger, grandson of Charles Seeger and nephew to Pete, Mike and
Peggy.
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(l-r) Mike, Peggy and Pete Seeger
in concert in 2005. |
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The March 16 evening concert will feature Pete, Mike and Peggy,
along with other family members and friends. The film screening,
to be held the evening of March 15, will present rarely-seen footage
of folk music from around the world, documented in the 1960s by
Pete Seeger, his wife Toshi and their children.
The program is also available for review here: Seeger
Symposium Program. The symposium is an initiative
of the American Folklife Center and the Music
Division of the Library of Congress.
About the Seeger Family
The Seeger family has been at
the forefront of American creativity for nearly a century. Ancestors
of the Seegers sailed to America on the Mayflower, and fought in
both the Revolutionary War and the Civil War. In recent times, the
Seeger family has been known primarily for its contributions to
music. As scholars, composers, performers, and musicians, Seegers
have enriched American life, music, and scholarship. They have also
been fiercely principled, following in the footsteps of their abolitionist forebears.
Charles Seeger (1886-1979) was
a pioneering composer and musicologist, teaching at Berkeley, Juilliard, and other leading universities and conservatories. Seeger's ideas
about music and musicology were instrumental in founding the discipline
of ethnomusicology. He also developed an enthusiasm for American
folk music, which he passed on to many of his descendants.
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Ruth Crawford Seeger,
ca. 1938 |
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Ruth Crawford Seeger (1901-1953),
Charles's second wife, is considered by many to be the most significant
American female composer of the twentieth century. She composed
modernist works throughout the later 1920s and early 1930s, her
most celebrated work being String Quartet 1931. In 1932,
Crawford married Charles Seeger, taking on responsibilities for
his three children, including Pete. With Seeger, she had several
children of her own, including Mike and Peggy Seeger. During the
1930s and 40s, her work turned to transcribing and arranging folksongs;
she worked with her husband and with Alan Lomax on several books,
and published her own book, the influential American Folksongs
for Children, in 1948. She returned to composing in the early
1950s, but her resurgence as a composer was cut short by cancer,
and she died in 1953.
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Pete Seeger at home, 2006
Photo by Peggy Bulger. |
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Pete Seeger (b.1919), son of
Charles Seeger and elder brother of Mike and Peggy, is known as
America's most important living folksinger. He has authored or
co-authored a number of important songs, including "Where Have
All the Flowers Gone," "If I Had a Hammer," and "Turn, Turn, Turn." He
became entranced with the banjo as a teenager attending the Folk
Song and Dance Festival in Asheville, North Carolina. In 1939,
Pete's friend Alan Lomax invited him to come to Washington to work
at the Archive of American Folk Song, then part of the Library
of Congress's Music Division. The following year, Seeger met folksinger
Woody Guthrie at a concert in New York, and set out to travel west
with him. On his return from several cross-country trips, Seeger
formed the political group The Almanac Singers, who continued
to perform until Pete enlisted to serve in WWII, sometimes featuring
Guthrie as a member. On his return home, Pete formed the folk
quartet,
The Weavers, whose string of hits included a version
of Leadbelly's "Goodnight
Irene" that topped the charts for 13 weeks
in 1950. Due to his political beliefs and statements, Seeger was
blacklisted, and the Weavers disbanded. Seeger later toured primarily
as a soloist, singing mostly traditional American songs, including
ballads, blues and spirituals, and playing the five-string banjo.
Pete and his wife Toshi have also shot extraordinary ethnographic
films of music-making in cultures around the world, which they
have donated to the American Folklife Center's Archive.
Mike Seeger, Charles and Ruth's
son, has devoted his life to singing and playing folk music of the
American south on banjo, fiddle, guitar, trump (jaw harp), mouth
harp (harmonica), quills (panpipes), lap dulcimer, mandolin and
autoharp. Mike first learned folk songs from his parents and then
from their collection of early documentary recordings. He learned
to play from masters such as guitarists Elizabeth Cotten and Maybelle
Carter, banjoists Dock Boggs and Cousin Emmy, and autoharpist Kilby
Snow. As a founding member of the New Lost City Ramblers, Mike helped
revive interest in traditional folk music. He has recorded almost
forty albums, both solo and with others, and has been honored with
three Grammy nominations.
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Peggy Seeger
Photo by Irene Young |
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Peggy Seeger is the daughter of
Charles and Ruth Crawford Seeger, sister of Mike Seeger, and half-sister
of Pete Seeger. A singer of traditional Anglo-American songs and
an activist songmaker, she plays six instruments: piano, guitar,
5-string banjo, Appalachian dulcimer, autoharp and English concertina.
She has recorded 21 solo albums and participated directly in more
than a hundred others. She lived in England for 35 years with singer/songmaker
Ewan MacColl and has three children and seven grandchildren. She
now lives in Boston, tours regularly worldwide and puts out a new
CD every 18 months.
Anthony Seeger, nephew of Pete,
Mike and Peggy Seeger and grandson of Charles Seeger, is a leading
ethnomusicologist, currently teaching at UCLA. His numerous publications
include articles and books on issues of land and human rights for
Brazilian Indians, issues of archiving and intellectual property,
and ethnomusicological theory and method. He is the author of Why
Suyá Sing: A Musical Anthropology of an Amazonian People (Cambridge
University Press, 1987). The monograph was recognized as the most
distinguished book in musicology for the year with the 1988 Otto
Kinkeldey Award from the American Musicological Society. He also
wrote five half-hour shows on American Folk Music that were broadcast
on the BBC in 1998. Anthony Seeger served as Director of Smithsonian
Folkways Recordings at the Smithsonian Institution from 1988 to
2000.
Attendance and Registration
Admission to the symposium and related
events is free. However, registration in advance is
strictly required for the symposium and film
screenings only due to limited seating. Register
using this online form.
Limit: one seat per person.
The Seeger Family concert will begin at
8 pm on March 16 in the Coolidge
Auditorium, located on the ground floor of the Thomas Jefferson
Building, 10 First Street S.E. It is presented free to the
public but requires tickets for admission. As
noted above, tickets for the concert have sold out. |
Our guests may find the following link to information about accommodations,
area restaurants, and other amenities helpful in planning their
visit to the Library: http://www.loc.gov/loc/visit/travel.html
Staff Contacts
Registration: Thea Austen - taus@loc.gov
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