Mike
Seeger (August 15, 1933 – August 7, 2009) was an American folk musician and
folklorist. He was a distinctive singer and an accomplished musician who played
autoharp, banjo, fiddle, dulcimer, guitar, mouth harp, mandolin, dobro, jaw
harp, and pan pipes. Seeger, a half-brother of Pete Seeger, produced more than
30 documentary recordings, and performed in more than 40 other recordings. He
desired to make known the caretakers of culture that inspired and taught him.
Seeger
was born in New York and grew up in Maryland and Washington D.C. His father,
Charles Louis Seeger Jr., was a composer and pioneering ethnomusicologist,
investigating both American folk and non-Western music. His mother, Ruth
Crawford Seeger, was a composer. His eldest half-brother, Charles Seeger III,
was a radio astronomer, and his next older half-brother, John Seeger, taught
for years at the Dalton School in Manhattan. His next older half brother was
Pete Seeger. His uncle, Alan Seeger, a poet, was killed during the First World
War. His sister Peggy Seeger, also a well-known folk performer, was married for
many years to British folk singer Ewan MacColl. His sister, singer Penny
Seeger, married John Cohen, a member of Mike's musical group, New Lost City
Ramblers. Seeger was a self-taught musician who began playing stringed instruments
at the age of 18. He also sang Sacred Harp with Ewan and Calum MacColl.
The
family moved to Washington D.C. in 1936 after his father's appointment to the
music division of the Resettlement Administration. While in Washington D.C.,
Ruth Seeger worked closely with John and Alan Lomax at the Archive of American
Folk Song at the Library of Congress to preserve and teach American folk music.
Ruth Seeger's arrangements and interpretations of American Traditional folk
songs in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s are well regarded.
At
about the age of 20, Mike Seeger began collecting songs by traditional
musicians on a tape recorder. Folk musicians such as Lead Belly, Woody Guthrie,
John Jacob Niles, and others were frequent guests in the Seeger home.
In 1958 he co-founded the New Lost City
Ramblers, an old-time string band in New York City, during the Folk Revival.
The other founding members included John Cohen and Tom Paley. Paley later left
the group in 1962 and was replaced by Tracy Schwarz. The New Lost City Ramblers
directly influenced countless musicians in subsequent years. The Ramblers
distinguished themselves by focusing on the traditional playing styles they
heard on old 78rpm records of musicians recorded during the 1920s and 1930s.
Tracy was also in Mike's other band, Strange Creek Singers. So was Mike's
former wife, Alice Gerrard. She was Alice Seeger in that band and sang and
played guitar in it. The other people in Strange Creek Singers were bass player
and singer Hazel Dickens and banjo player Lamar Grier who didn't sing at all.
Mike sang and played guitar, banjo, fiddle, mandolin, autoharp, and harmonica
in the band.
Seeger
received six Grammy nominations and was the recipient of four grants from the
National Endowment for the Arts. His influence on the folk scene was described
by Bob Dylan in his autobiography, Chronicles: Volume One. He was a popular
presenter and performer at traditional music gatherings such as Breakin' Up
Winter.
Eight
days before his 76th birthday, Mike Seeger died at his home
in Lexington,
Virginia on August 7, 2009, after stopping cancer treatment. (Info Wikipedia)
For Mike Seeger – Music From True Vine go here:
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