WHEN the remaining giants of American folk music and their graying audience gather, the weight of history hangs heavy in the room. Memories of shared civil rights marches and antiwar rallies come flooding back, as do the inevitable questions about how the language of dissent they forged together can remain relevant. But those questions may recede...
At Pete Seeger's 90th birthday celebration last year at Madison Square Garden, Bruce Springsteen called him America's granddad, but with ''a steely toughness that belies that grandfatherly facade.'' Now 91, he has just written a new song addressing the Gulf oil spill and, in July, released a new album, ''Tomorrow's Children,'' on Appleseed...
AMONG the many events commemorating Henry Hudson's 1609 voyage up the river that now bears his name is one that has never needed a reason to celebrate the river or educate people about its importance. The Great Hudson River Revival -- better known as the Clearwater Festival -- will mark not only Hudson's historic voyage but also the 90th birthday...
Peter Seeger (født 3. maj 1919 i New York) er en amerikansk sangskriver, folkesanger, forfatter og fredsaktivist. Han er af tysk, engelsk, fransk, hollandsk og irsk afstamning. I 1947 var han elev på Highlander Highschool i Tennessee, oprettet 1932 af Myles Horton, der i 1931 havde cyklet rundt mellem forskellige danske folkehøjskoler for at lade sig inspirere af højskoletanken. Highlander Highschools slagsang var "We Shall Overcome", som senere blev nært knyttet til Pete Seegers navn.
Hans viser og indspilninger var særlig populære i 1950'erne og 1960'erne og påvirkede en lang række protestsangere. Hans indspilninger er blevet populære igen, efter at han i 2008 blev foreslået til Nobels Fredspris. Hans far er komponisten Charles Seeger, og en onkel er forfatteren Alan Seeger.