Peggy Seeger
- Music Department
- Composer
- Writer
Peggy, born Margaret Seeger, is the child of American musicians Charles
and Ruth Crawford Seeger. Her brother is the country musician,
Mike Seeger, and her half-brother, the legendary folk performer, Pete Seeger.
Peggy enjoyed a comfortable upbringing in New York and was well-versed
in traditional music by her parents, later accompanying the folk-song
collector Alan Lomax on tours around America. In her late teens, Peggy
and fellow folk singer Guy Carawan performed around the world, ending
up in England, where Peggy had a short-lived marriage to the Scottish
folk musician Alex Campbell. However, around this time, she also met
another Scottish folk singer, Ewan MacColl,
with whom she shared a long-lasting personal and professional
partnership. Along with radio producer Charles Parker, they created the
BBC radio 'ballads', documentaries which incorporated actual interviews
with folk-based songs. The famous song "The First Time Ever I Saw Your
Your Face" was sung to Peggy over the telephone though they did not
marry until the 1970s. In the 1960s, they set up home in Beckenham,
Kent, and established the Singers' Club, a folk singing club in London
which encouraged young singers such as Sandra Kerr, Frankie Armstrong
and John Faulkner, under the collective umbrella of the Critics' Group,
and with whom they recorded many folk song albums, these were on
Decca's Argo label for which Peggy and Ewan also recorded a ten-volume
set called "The Long Harvest", a meticulously researched series of folk
songs in British and American variants. Following a disagreement with
Argo, they established their own label, Blackthorn, still encouraging
other young artists such as the Kent-based group, Fiddler's Dram. Their
self-financed publication, The New City Songster, also published songs
by new young performers. Peggy is the mother of the musician
Neil MacColl and the step-mother of
musician Hamish MacColl and the iconic
performer Kirsty MacColl. Following
Ewan's death, Peggy commenced a professional - and rather to her
surprise, a personal - relationship with the singer, Irene Scott, under
the witty name of "No Spring Chickens", Peggy's ironic description of
their agent's opinion of them at the time. Latterly, she has felt
secure that her own children (Neil, Callum and Kitty) have found their
own way in the world and has returned to America, where she is still
one mean 5-string banjo-player, in addition to her prowess on guitar,
auto-harp, Appalachian dulcimer, English concertina and the instrument
her parents first taught her to play, the piano. In the mid-2000s she
returned to England, living in Oxford.