The first time ever I was struck by Peggy Seeger’s music was when I saw a video of her performing “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” the song her husband Ewan MacColl wrote for her in 1957. In the video, Peggy is probably in her late 40s, wearing a pink t-shirt and jeans, her hair cut short in a curly pixie cut. She’s seated alone on a stage, picking arpeggios on a small parlor guitar. Her voice, like her presentation, is unadorned aside from her natural vibratro, ringing out with incredible clarity out into the dark auditorium. It’s stunning. While that performance is what initially piqued my interest in Seeger, Jean R. Freedman’s new biography, Peggy Seeger: A Life of Music, Love, and Politics, is what indulged and sustained my curiosity. The book, of interest to folk song scholars and fans of Seeger alike, offers an intimate and considered portrait, fully contextualized by Freedman’s background as an academic folklorist and informed by her thirty-year friendship with the folk singer, activist, and member of the legendary Seeger family.
Read on in the Journal of the Society for American Music