"Freedman succeeds through prose as approachable and entertaining as Seeger's lyrics and informal, intimate performance style. . . . Freedman skillfully connects and contrasts Seeger's development as an artist with the practices of her parents and siblings, and also with a wide array of political and cultural movements."Journal of Folklore Research
"Freedman illuminates Seeger's life and career, creating a powerful, in-depth portrait of the woman, artist, activist, and champion of the folk music genre. . . . A must."Library Journal
"Jean R. Freedman's thoroughly researched book is the definitive biographya masterpiece."FolkWorks
"An elaborately detailed investigation of Seeger's enduring musical legacy."Booklist
"This biography is at its best in evoking what it must have felt like to be Peggy Seeger, developing a political, feminist, consciousness while realizing her own loving and artistic self within a formidable family and political community. Recommended."Choice
"Her account will be welcomed by Seeger's perennial fan base while providing a fair, thoughtful introduction to new admirers."Bookreporter
"A welcome biography of an important musician and songwriter."Folk Music Journal
"Peggy Seeger has lived her life at the sharp end of folk music. Jean Freedman tells the story of this free-spirited artist and agitator."Billy Bragg "Freedman, a professional folklorist, is the perfect biographer for the incomparable Peggy Seeger. She skillfully weaves together insights from the many interviews she conducted with family, friends, and Peggy herself, with her own expert observations about the musical gifts and accomplishments of the folk music icon. Those of us for whom Peggy Seeger and Ewan MacColl were living legends will especially savor this book, but everyone will be fascinated and moved by the life of a uniquely talented musician who bridged so many divides: classical and folk music, the British and American folk scenes, and her roots in one of America’s great musical families to the several lives she created in the UK and the US."Deborah Tannen, author of You Just Don't Understand and You're Wearing THAT? "O, how I love this book! It gives me everything I wanted to know about my friend, the salty and sweet Peggy Seeger and her unique and prolific family. All the pain is there, but so are the achievements and the joys. This book goes on my shelf next to The Mayor of MacDougal Street, and I can offer no higher praise than that."Tom Paxton "The greatest challenge for a biographer is to go beyond a chronology of dates and events, however detailed, and to capture fully the subject’s warmth, wit, courage, character, soul, spirit. In the best biographies, those readers who know the subject will feel that she’s actually in the room with them, absolutely present and political, laughing and singingand those who have not yet met her in person will hope fervently the day comes soon when they meet her face to face, voice to voice. Jean R. Freedman has wrought a true miracle, making Peggy almost as alive on the page as she is on the stage, with all of her wonderful complexity, passion, and depth. Don’t just read this booklisten to it, with open ears and heart."Si Kahn, civil rights, union, and community organizer and musician "Jean Freedman's biography stands front and center in the tradition of the Seeger family's long history of active engagement in music and musical life. Peggy Seeger's father Charles wrote about 'tradition and innovation' in modern music. Her mother, the composer Ruth Crawford, made her project to 'strike a just balance' in her folk song arrangements to reach across lines of race and class. And their daughter’s transformation and reinvention of the family legacy to fuel her own prodigious gifts represent yet another stage of evolution in this remarkable family. Spanning crucial decades of change in the Anglo-American folk music revivals and renewals of creativity, Peggy Seeger's passionate involvement in music, family, and politics has been well served in Jean Freedman's excellent survey of the artist, the activist, and the woman."Judith Tick, author of Ruth Crawford Seeger: A Composer's Search for American Music
★ 02/01/2017
Peggy Seeger's (b. 1935) contributions to folk music and its popular revival in the United States and Britain have long been recognized. Drawing on personal interviews, letters, diaries, and archival sources, Freedman (Whistling in the Dark: Memory and Culture in Wartime London) illuminates Seeger's life and career, creating a powerful, in-depth portrait of the woman, artist, activist, and champion of the folk music genre. The thoughtful examination of Seeger's parents, who provided her (as well as brothers Pete and Mike) with solid musical and cultural foundations, leads naturally into Seeger's story of lifelong discovery—seeking her own way as an instrumental virtuoso and folk singer, traveling (sometimes controversial politically), recording, composing, teaching/mentoring, and partnering personally and professionally with British folk singer/songwriter Ewan MacColl. Freedman is honest yet respectful as she explores the highs and lows of Seeger's complex journey, which continues into her ninth decade. This consummately researched and engagingly readable biography, with comprehensive material about the folk music revival and its historical framework skillfully woven in, deserves more than one reading and should be accompanied by listening to selections from the generous list of recordings cited. VERDICT A must, not only for fans of Peggy Seeger and the folk music genre, but also for academic and public music/folklore collections.—Carol J. Binkowski, Bloomfield, NJ