Where
Have All The Flowers Gone- With Legendary Folk-Singer Pete Seeger In Mind
A while back, a few months ago now I
think I mentioned in a sketch about how I came to learn about the music of
Woody Guthrie I noted that it was hard to pin just exactly when I first heard
his music since it pre-dated my coming to the folk minute of the 1960s. After
some thought I pinpointed the first time to a seventh grade music class (Mr.
Dasher’s class whom we innocently then called Dasher the Flasher just for
rhyming purposes but which with today’s sensibilities about the young would not
play very well) when he in an effort to have us appreciate various genre of
music made us learn Woody’s This Land Is Your Land.
In thinking about when I first heard
Pete Seeger sign I came up against that same quandary since I know I didn’t
associate him with the first time I heard the emerging folk minute. That folk
minute start which I do clearly remember the details of got going one Sunday
night when tired of the vanilla rock and roll music that was being play in the
fall of 1962 on the Boston stations I began flipping the small dial on my
transistor radio settling in on this startling gravelly voice which sounded
like some old-time mountain man singing Come All You Fair And Tender Ladies.
I listened to a few more songs on what turned out to be a folk music
program put on every Sunday evening between seven and nine at the request of
some college kids in the area who were going crazy for roots music according to
the DJ.
After thinking about it for a while I
realized that I had heard Pete not in solo performance but when he was with The
Weavers and they made a hit out of the old Lead Belly tune, Good Night,
Irene. In those days, the early 1950s I think, The Weavers were trying to
break into the popular music sphere and were proceeding very well until the
Cold War night descended upon them and they, or individual members including
Pete were tarred with the red scare brush. Still you cannot keep a good man
down, a man with a flame-throwing banjo, with folk music DNA in his blood since
he was the son of the well-known folk musicologist Charles Seeger, and with
something to say to those who were interested in looking back into the roots of
American music before it got commercialized. Interested in going back to the
time when old cowboys would sing themselves to sleep around the camp fire out
in the prairies, when sweat hard-working black share-croppers and plantation
workers down South would get out a Saturday jug and head to the juke joint to
chase the blues away, and when the people of the hills and hollows down in
Appalachia would Saturday night get out the jug and run over to Bill Preston’s
old seen better days red-painted barn and dance that last dance waltz to that
weeping mountain fiddle. Stuff like that, lots of stuff like that to fill out
the American songbook.
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