(Editor’s note: For this episode, we invited our friend Dawn Landes to interview Peggy Seeger, the perfect choice to interview this feminist folk icon. Landes also recently joined us on a special episode with Aoife O’Donovan to discuss their new feminist-themed albums. We’re thrilled to welcome Dawn back as guest host!)
I canât believe it took me 40 years to come across Peggy Seegerâs music. Iâm a little mad about this honestly, and have been trying to make up for lost time by diving deep into her songs and her story. Iâve been a fan of her older brother, Pete Seeger, since I was a kid, but didnât realize the depth of talent and reach in the Seeger family. They are truly folk royalty! Peggy Seeger is the daughter of a celebrated modernist composer and a musicologist who grew up with people like Alan Lomax and Elizabeth Cotten hanging out in her family home. At 89 years old, sheâs released 24 solo recordings and been a part of over 100 more. Sheâs built her career on wit, incredible musicianship, and unflappable activism.
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On this episode of Basic Folk, I am honored to talk with Seeger about her beginnings in feminism, her decades-long partnership with Scottish singer Ewan MacColl, the creation of the BBC Radio Ballads, the importance of hope, and her dream tattoos! She even sang us a song from memory that I doubt she had sung in many years. Peggy is a repository of traditional songs and continues to tour and play music with her family, as sheâs done throughout her whole life. Although she claims that she doesnât write anthems, Seegerâs songs have become synonymous with womenâs rights and environmental activism. Coming from a woman who once sang her defense in a courtroom, we should all take Peggyâs advice: âSomething wrong? Make a song!â â Dawn Landes
Photo Credit: Laura Page