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Pete Seeger - Singalong Sanders Theater, 1980

Pete Seeger

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Album Review

This is not simply a live recording. It is a carefully planned project to document a life's work. Seeger describes it in his own words: "Before my voice, memory and sense of rhythm and pitch were too far gone I decided, at age sixty, to document one of my two-hour 'concerts' such as I have given for over twenty-five years, usually at colleges....In January, my wife Toshi once again put aside her own work to help me drive to Cambridge, Massachusetts....Sanders Theatre, on the Harvard University campus, is one of our best small auditoriums. Built a century ago, it holds 800 seats in semicircular rows. Lots of wood panelling, with wonderful 'live' acoustics for singing....The audience, mostly youthful, included parents, grandparents, and pre-schoolers. They all sang like angels." (from Seeger's extensive liner notes). This sixtieth-birthday singalong combines old Pete Seeger favorites ("If I Had a Hammer," "The Water Is Wide," "Twelve Gates to the City," and "Abiyoyo") with more recent topical songs ("Young Lady Who Swallowed a Lie," and "Christo ja Nacio"), and moving renditions of "Amazing Grace" and "Jacob's Ladder." Throughout it all, Pete weaves a magical thread of narrative — introducing the songs, talking about the history, about the present, and about human aspirations around the world on a recording 117 minutes long. His extensive liner notes, written shortly after the concert, provide yet another perspective on what he was trying to do, and are filled with suggestions for how future performers might do the same. For over fifty years, Pete Seeger has addressed contemporary social issues in an exciting combination of political, historical and topical songs. No other recording so brilliantly captures the communal experience of a Pete Seeger concert. This concert is brought to you just as it was originally performed, as a testimony to the skill and dedication of a master performer at the height of his powers.

Customer Reviews

This was a great time- well done

I was at this concert and years ago, lost my copy of this album. Pete reminded us about our obligation to society and sets an example that no one should go along quietly.. a triumphant return for his first concert at Harvard since he was black listed.

One of a kind

I like Pete songlead, meaning that I lead people generally kids in song. Hearing Pete have an audience of hundreds singing with him in harmony absolutely blows my mind. This album is one of a kind just like the man who made it. A must listen to for everyone. The Water is Wide track from this album brings tears to my eyes.

Biography

Born: May 3, 1919 in New York, NY

Genre: Singer/Songwriter

Years Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

Pete Seeger had broad influence on the development of contemporary folk music in a career that stretched from before World War II to after the turn of the 21st century. He could claim major responsibility for the folk music revival of the late '50s and early ‘60s; he wrote a handful of songs, including "If I Had a Hammer (The Hammer Song)," "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," and "Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)," that became major hits; he single-handedly popularized the five-string...
Full Bio

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