P e t e ...S e e g e r |
Pete Seeger & Friends (2-CD set, 2003)
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track listing disc 1: Pete & Friends disc 2: Friends of Pete |
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In 2003, Appleseed Recordings issued the double-CD Seeds: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Volume 3, the final set in its trilogy of releases celebrating Seeger’s music and its globally warming effects. Appleseed’s previous multi-artist Seeger celebrations – 1998’s 2-CD Where Have All the Flowers Gone: The Songs of Pete Seeger, and If I Had a Song: The Songs of Pete Seeger, Vol. 2, released in 2001 – have been acclaimed as modern folk classics and reaffirmed Seeger’s lasting impact as songwriter, artist, activist, and inspiration to fellow musicians and listeners alike. “No other living musician has been at the forefront of more social, political and history changing events,” says Appleseed founder Jim Musselman, who initiated the series and served as its executive producer. “It took a trilogy encompassing five CDs to even begin to touch the depth and breadth of the effect of his music around the world.” Overall, nearly 450 musicians participated in Appleseed’s Seeger series, for which 85 songs were exclusively recorded and produced. Disc one of Seeds, “Pete & Friends,” contains 14 recent recordings by Pete of songs that he penned, adapted or performed, including some recent songs not previously recorded (“Trouble at the Bottom,” “Visions of Children,” “Sower of Seeds,” and “Take It from Dr. King”). On Pete’s first new release since 1996’s Grammy-winning Pete, he performs solo, with family (grandson and frequent concert accompanist Tao Rodriguez-Seeger and half-sister Peggy Seeger), and musical friends (including solo artists Arlo Guthrie, Anne Hills, and Tom Pacheco). The second disc presents exclusive recordings of Seeger’s songs by a diverse roster of highly respected folk artists. Janis Ian, Tom Paxton, Natalie Merchant, Holly Near, Pete’s fellow ex-Weaver Ronnie Gilbert, Dick Gaughan (“the Scottish Woody Guthrie”), Peggy Seeger, and others explore some of the lesser-known entries in the Seeger repertoire. The double-CD’s packaging includes a 28-page booklet with extensive liner notes by Pete on the inspiration and history of each song and by Musselman, who has spent countless hours with Seeger in creating the entire three-volume collection. Perhaps the most controversial composition on Seeds is “Bring Them Home (If You Love Your Uncle Sam),” an update of one of Seeger’s anti-Vietnam songs that he now applies to the invasion of Iraq. Some new lyrics were added by Appleseed’s Musselman, and Bruce Springsteen inserted some words of his own when performing the song on his 2006 and 2007 “Seeger Sessions” tours. Joined by guest vocalists and fellow activists Billy Bragg, Ani DiFranco and Steve Earle, Pete decries blind jingoistic patriotism while rejoicing in America’s freedom of speech and thought. Ironically, Seeger’s own personal freedoms were challenged during the McCarthy era of the early ’50s, when his refusal to testify about his political affiliations before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) led to a contempt of Congress citation, trial, conviction, and year-long jail term (never served and eventually thrown out of court). “Bring Them Home” was one of anti-war three songs Pete recorded this spring as American bombs were falling on Baghdad; “The Dove” and “Flowers of Peace” are also included on the “Pete & Friends” disc. News of the modernized version of “Bring Them Home” triggered a wave of hate mail attacking Seeger’s “disloyalty” to the current administration’s foreign policies, although the song has been released in solidarity with the U.S. troops stationed in Iraq and their families, who have made it clear that it’s time to come home. “We feel that the song and what Pete says in it have an important message during this time of backlash against entertainers like Tim Robbins and the Dixie Chicks who have simply expressed their views, which is what is needed in a democracy,” Musselman explains. “Pete is someone who has always stood up for the First Amendment.” Although peace and understanding are the underlying themes of many of Seeger’s songs on Seeds, its preceding volumes and throughout his repertoire, his subject matter here also ranges from the seasonal (“Maple Syrup Time”), to the somber (a version of the martyred Chilean musician Victor Jara’s “Estadio Chile”) to the wonderfully silly (“English is Cuh-ray-zee”). Seeds contains a live version of Pete and his audience singing “Over the Rainbow,” as well as a collaboration between the song’s lyricist, E.Y. “Yip” Harburg, and Seeger on “Odds On Favorite.” Disc one closes with the tranquil “Sailing Down My Golden River,” in which Pete’s vocal is backed by an orchestra arranged by noted film-scorer Michael Kamen with creative input from Pink Floyd’s leader/guitarist David Gilmour. Sprinkled throughout Seeds are several brief spoken comments by Pete that emphasize his philosophy of life: everyone can make a difference in the world and has the right and the duty to do so. As with Appleseed’s first two Seeger celebrations, many of the proceeds from Seeds will be distributed among various social justice and environmental charities.
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