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Sunday 3 May 2020

Pete Seeger

Pete Seeger, byname of Peter Seeger, (born May 3, 1919, New York City, New York, U.S.—died January 27, 2014, New York City), the singer who sustained the folk music tradition and who was one of the principal inspirations for younger performers in the folk revival of the 1960s.

Seeger was born to a musically gifted family. His father was the influential musicologist Charles Seeger, and his mother, Constance, was a violin instructor at Juilliard. But it was perhaps the introspective poems of his uncle, Alan Seeger, that most inspired Pete’s songwriting. Leaving Harvard after two years in 1938, Seeger hitchhiked and rode freight trains around the country, gathering country ballads, work songs, and hymns and developing a remarkable virtuosity on the five-string banjo. In 1940 he organized the Almanac Singers, a quartet that also featured the folksinger and composer Woody Guthrie, and appeared at union halls, farm meetings, and wherever his populist political sentiments were welcome. The group disbanded soon after World War II
https://www.britannica.com/

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