| Singing
Together for Social Change:
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an
interview with Pete Seeger
by Anita Krajnc and Michael Greenspoon
Pete Seeger, the consummate protest singer, has combined
folk music and progressive politics since he began singing
professionally in 1939 at the age of 20. This February,
at the Folk Dream Gala Concert in Toronto, he
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encouraged the whole audience to join in on variations of "Oh
Freedom." "When I give an evening of songs, I'm
circling around. I may sing a union song, I may sing a peace
song, I may sing a children's song. The most important thing
I try to get out of my concerts is a sense of participation,"
he said in an interview following the concert.
Seeger has long maintained that folk music should be sung
by everybody. He has helped popularize folk music in his travels
across America with Woodie Guthrie in 1940, and with the Almanacs
and then the Weavers in the '40s and '50s. Following his appearance
before McCarthy's infamous House on Unamerican Activities
Committee, he was blacklisted on mainstream television and
radio for a third time in 1955. He subsequently helped invent
the "campus circuit" and through his travels across
America, Seeger "taught most of America's younger folk
performers. At a single 1954 concert in Palo Alto, for instance,
Seeger inspired the career of both Joan Baez and Dave Guard
(of the Kingston Trio)."
The remarkable thing about Seeger's life is that for almost
six decades he has been at the forefront of almost every progressive
social movement from labor to anti-apartheid, to civil rights,
to peace and the environment.
SINGING ON THE PICKET LINE
We asked him about his musical and political influences.
Seeger attended a good prep school and Harvard University,
but said he received most of his education outside the classroom.
"I was a teenager and I suddenly realized that there
was a whole lot of history, world history, that I'd never
learned in school...The fact that there was such a thing as
a labor movement got a little footnote somewhere. I didn't
know about the eight-hour day struggle and the women's rights
struggle and the fight against child labor were only mentioned
in passing. But it was clear that education had been planned
not to encourage people to cause trouble. So I became a radical
and joined the Young Communist League in college."
His father, Charles Seeger, was an important influence on
both Pete Seeger's music and his politics, topics that both
men thought should not be separated. At Berkeley in the 1910s,
Charles was interested in how music could shape society and
later was the first to instruct a course in ethnomusicology.
Pete's father joined the Industrial Workers of the World --
or the Wobblies, a great singing labor movement -- prior to
World War I after witnessing the deplorable working conditions
of the fruit pickers in California. Said Seeger, "later,
in the 1930s my father, a musicologist, became convinced that
great new music would not arise out of a few experts theorizing;
it would rise out of rank and file musicians and poets making
music based on the vernacular."
His main influence was meeting some of the greatest American
labor song writers. "I'd say my big education came from
meeting the family of Jim Garland and his younger sister Sara
Ogen and older half sister Aunt Molly Jackson. They were from
a singing Scots- Irish family. They loved to tell stories.
They loved to play jokes and they knew all sorts of songs
-- old, old ballads -- and when the union came through they
were struck with the heroism of a young communist, Harry Sims,
who knew that he might get killed but said 'this has gotta
be done. We can't change this country around unless someone
is brave enough to do it.' And he did get murdered [in Kentucky].
For sixty years now I have sung the song that Jim and Aunt
Molly wrote about the death of Harry Sims."
Seeger noted that the strike wasn't a complete failure since
it help convince John L. Lewis "that the whole country
could be unionized if he would quit fighting the Communists.
And in 1935 John Lewis spoke to the communists and said 'Look
let's quit fighting each other. Let's go out and organize
and unionize' and they shook hands and in three years they
signed up seven million workers into the CIO (Committee on
Industrial Organizations)."
"Anyway, Jim Garland also wrote 'I Don't Want Your Millions
Mister.' Great song. Came up to New York and lived in the
Lower East Side with his family and little children and Sara
with her little children and she got a new husband. Her coal
miner husband [had] died of TB and one of her children had
died of a lack of milk. And her mother had died. She was bitter
and she wrote [Seeger sings]:
I hate the Capitalist System,
I'll tell you the reason why
It's caused me so much suffering,
And my dearest friends to die.
"They were in their twenties, Aunt Molly was fifty.
Their father had been a leader in the Knights of Labor in
the 1880s. He was a preacher of the gospel. He was a radical
Christian...Aunt Molly said [Seeger sings]:
I'm a union woman
As brave as I can be
I do not like the bosses
And the bosses don't like me.
"They had a neighbor of theirs write the song 'Which
Side Are You On?' Out of that one strike came three or four
of the best union songs ever written."
THE GREATEST SINGING MOVEMENT
In the 1950s, with postwar prosperity and the chill of McCarthyism
and the Cold War, labor turned inward, away from radicalism
and the picket lines. So Pete Seeger set his sights on one
of the greatest singing movements -- the civil rights movement.
He helped adapt and popularize "We Shall Overcome."
The song became the anthem of the civil rights movement, but
was originally a religious hymn-turned-labor song sung in
1946 by 300 women, mostly black, on strike at the American
Tobacco Company in Charleston, South Carolina.
Pete Seeger tells the story:
"And one woman, her name was Lucy O'Simmons, she loved
a gospel song which had always been known as 'I Will Overcome'...There
is a tradition in the southern black churches that any hymn
can be sung slow or fast depending where in the service it
is...And on the picket line they'd say 'Oh here comes Lucille
now we're going to hear that sung slower than anybody ever
heard it.' The nice thing about singing slowly is you can
weave in and out the harmony. The black tradition is just
wonderful about improvising harmony reaching the high notes,
reaching the low notes, and you get dissonances blending into
consonances and then more. It's a lovely style of singing...
"Well some of the strikers taught Lucille's version
to Zilphia Horton, Miles Horton's wife [founder of Highlander
Folk School, Tennessee]. She also had a beautiful alto voice
and it became her favorite song. In 1946 or 1947, on a visit
to New York to raise some money for Highlander, she taught
it to me and I published it in a little newsletter, People's
Songs [a folk song newsletter Seeger founded in the postwar
period, predecessor to Sing Out! ].
"I started singing 'We Will Overcome' all over the country.
I'd go to California or Chicago and I'd lead it but I didn't
have that good a voice. I just gave it a banjo accompaniment.
Chica ump chica ump...That's probably the way I sang it to
Martin Luther King just six months after he won the bus boycott
in 1957...I sang it for the crowd. The next day, driving back
to Kentucky for a speaking engagement, King said, 'We Will
Overcome'. That song really sticks with you, doesn't it?"
"We Shall Overcome" has since been sung widely by
social activists around the world. Seeger toured India last
November, and told us, "I went to a little village with
houses made of mud. A man took a look at me and says 'Pete
Seeger' -- he'd seen my picture. He goes over to get his daughter,
and with his little daughter in his arms, they sing 'We Shall
Overcome' in Bengali. Then right after that they begin to
sing 'What Did You Learn In School Today?' India knows a lot
more about the rest of the world than we [do]. I must say
they don't get the rhythm right, they sing it like an English
march."
THE ROLE OF PROTEST SONGS
Protest music has often played a significant role in social
change movements. The labor and civil rights movements were
great singing movements. Protest music has served to draw
in new participants into movements and strengthen the commitment
of existing members. It has helped to form a new identity
(for example of blacks in the Civil Rights movement), and
has educated the public about social justice issues.
But its role changes over time. The labor movement was a
great singing movement in the nineteenth century and early
twentieth century with the Wobblies and then again on the
picket lines and in the fights to establish unions and collective
bargaining rights in the '30s and early 1940. But later labor
leaders lost interest. In his biography of Pete Seeger, David
Dunaway notes that "unions had different needs then:
to garner publicity and to persuade members to join a labor
organization for the first time. This was what the Almanacs
had done; but after the war, when unions had a good foothold
in the plants, picket lines largely disappeared in favor of
contract bargaining -- and picket singers vanished as well,
industrial workers wanted refrigerators and washers, not armed
conflict."
We asked Seeger whether the environmental movement might
one day become a singing movement like the civil rights movement.
He said, "You can never tell. I am not sure. I am hoping
that some singers learn from Woody Guthrie's songs, and make
their songs as simple. Who could think that 'This Land is
Your Land' would be so well known! It was never plugged on
the airwaves. It just went from one kid to another, school
to summer camp to church -- though, admittedly, it took twenty
years."
A FOLK MUSIC REVIVAL
We asked about the universal and enduring appeal of folk
music and Seeger responded, "Where did it come from?
I thought it was dead." Nonetheless, there seems to be
a folk revival. Bruce Springsteen recently released "The
Ghost of Tom Joad" based on Woody Guthrie songs. Appleseed
recording is releasing a three-volume tribute this summer,
entitled The Songs of Pete Seeger featuring Billy Bragg, Bruce
Cockburn, Bob Dylan, Ani Difranco, Ralph Nader, Tom Paxton,
and Peter, Paul and Mary.
Seeger hopes to persuade others to work at home and abroad.
"Two things you got to do is sing in your local community
and communicate to the rest of the world."
Anita Kranjc is a PhD candidate in Political Science at the
University of Toronto. Michael Greenspoon is the former executive
director of the Mariposa Folk Foundation.
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