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Weather | Traffic | Contact Us Delivery/Newstand FAQs Classifieds Obituaries Special Publications Calendars Contests Best Of e-Letters Blogs Wednesday, March 12, 2014 Share E-mail Comment Print More News Two arrested in altercation at House Office Building Kentlands Day limits politicking Montgomery Democratic executive candidates debate budget issues at Silver Spring forum Legislators approve budget deal that allows more in film tax credits Legislature passes minimum wage hike ADVERTISEMENT Folksinger, activist Peggy Seeger visits her old neighborhood by Virginia Terhune Peggy Seeger in Conversation with Mary Cliff When: 4 p.m. Saturday Where: Chevy Chase Village Hall, 5906 Connecticut Ave., Chevy Chase Tickets: Free; first come, first served For information: 301-656-6141, chevychasehistory.org Peggy Seeger concert When: 8 p.m. Saturday Where: Washington Ethical Society, 7750 16th Street, N.W., Washington Tickets: $15; free for FSGW members For information: 703-981-2217, fsgw.org, peggyseeger.com ADVERTISEMENT GAZETTE BEST OF 2013 Readers voted for their favorite businesses in more than 50 categories. Meet the winners! Click here to view our winners ADVERTISEMENT BlackRock Center for the Arts Upcoming shows: Tiempo Libre, 4/5; Peter Mayer, 4/10; United in Anger (film), 4/10; Treehouse Shakers, Hatched, 4/12; Grace Kelly, 4/12; The Stray Birds, 5/2. Click here for all 2014 season performances ADVERTISEMENT Gazette Special Publications Covering important topics ranging from health, senior living, education and more. Click here to read our latest special publications See all> RECENTLY POSTED JOBS TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER PRIVATE - Upper Marlboro LET YOUR PERSONALITY LINE YOUR MARYLAND INDEPENDENT/HOUSE ACCT. - Waldorf USED CAR SALES ASSOCIATES WALDORF HONDA - Waldorf Montgomery | Prince George's | Sports | Business | Politics | Entertainment | Opinions | JOBS | CARS | HOMES | e-Edition COMMENTS (0) Anglo-American folk legend Peggy Seeger stops by Chevy Chase on Saturday Photo by Ursy Potter Folk singer, songw riter and activist Peggy Seeger w ill visit Chevy Chase Village Hall on Saturday for a discussion before performing that evening in Washington, D.C. Sister of Michael Seeger and half-sister of the late Pete Seeger, Seeger lived in Chevy Chase as a teenager and played a major role in the folk revival in England during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.

Anglo-American folk legend Peggy Seeger stops by Chevy Chase on Saturday -- Gazette

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Weather | Traffic | Contact UsDelivery/Newstand FAQs

Classifieds Obituaries Special Publications Calendars Contests Best Of e-Letters Blogs

Wednesday, March 12, 2014 Share E-mail Comment Print

More News

Two arrested in altercation at House OfficeBuilding

Kentlands Day limits politicking

Montgomery Democratic executive candidatesdebate budget issues at Silver Spring forum

Legislators approve budget deal that allows morein film tax credits

Legislature passes minimum wage hike

ADVERTISEMENT

Folksinger, activist Peggy Seeger visits her old

neighborhood

by Virginia Terhune

Peggy Seeger in Conversation with Mary Cliff

When: 4 p.m. Saturday

Where: Chevy Chase Village Hall, 5906 Connecticut

Ave., Chevy Chase

Tickets: Free; first come, first served

For information: 301-656-6141,

chevychasehistory.org

Peggy Seeger concert

When: 8 p.m. Saturday

Where: Washington Ethical Society, 7750 16th

Street, N.W., Washington

Tickets: $15; free for FSGW members

For information: 703-981-2217, fsgw.org,

peggyseeger.com

ADVERTISEMENT

GAZETTE BEST OF 2013Readers voted for their favoritebusinesses in more than 50categories. Meet the winners!

Click here to view our winners

ADVERTISEMENT

BlackRock Center for the Arts

Upcoming shows: Tiempo Libre,4/5; Peter Mayer, 4/10; United inAnger (film), 4/10; TreehouseShakers, Hatched, 4/12; GraceKelly, 4/12; The Stray Birds, 5/2.

Click here for all 2014 seasonperformances

ADVERTISEMENT

Gazette Special PublicationsCovering important topicsranging from health, senior living,education and more.

Click here to read our latest specialpublications

See all>RECENTLY POSTED JOBS

TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVER

PRIVATE - Upper Marlboro

LET YOUR PERSONALITY LINE YOUR

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Anglo-American folk legend Peggy Seeger stops by ChevyChase on Saturday

Photo by Ursy Potter

Folk singer, songw riter and activist Peggy Seeger w ill visit

Chevy Chase Village Hall on Saturday for a discussion

before performing that evening in Washington, D.C. Sister of

Michael Seeger and half-sister of the late Pete Seeger,

Seeger lived in Chevy Chase as a teenager and played a

major role in the folk revival in England during the 1960s,

1970s and 1980s.

Staff Writer

Flying back and forth across the pond is nothing new for longtime folk singer, songwriter and activist Margaret “Peggy”

Seeger, who lived in Chevy Chase as a teenager before marrying and raising her family in England.

Half-sister of the late Pete Seeger, Peggy Seeger is back in the states for her two-week “I Just Can’t Stay Away” tour of

concerts and lectures at venues on the East Coast and in the Chicago area.

One of her first stops is Chevy Chase, where she will chat in-person with radio host Mary Cliff on Saturday afternoon at

the Chevy Chase Village Town Hall, near the house on Kirke Street where she once lived.

Cliff hosts the “Traditions” radio show, which previously aired on American University’s WAMU 88.5 and is now heard

on Saturday nights on Bluegrass Country at 105.5 FM.

Sponsored by the Chevy Chase Historical Society, the late afternoon talk is free and open to the public on a first-come,

first-served basis.

Later in the day, Seeger will perform at the Washington Ethical Society on 16th Street in Washington, D.C., not far from

the Silver Spring MARC station. The concert is sponsored by the Folklore Society of Greater Washington based in

Cabin John.

“I’ll be singing half traditional and half new songs,” said Seeger, who has recorded 23 solo CDs and plans to release

her next CD, “Everything Changes,” in August.

Still to come in the pipeline is “Love Unbidden,” an album of love songs and poetry.

Traveling with her on the tour will be one of her nine grandchildren, Alex MacColl, 23.

“My grandson will be driving me around — he’s my roadie and companion, and he’ll be singing one or two songs,”

Seeger said.

“He’ll [also] be lifting everything,” joked Seeger, who turns 79 in June.

Sister of the late Michael Seeger and half-sister of the late Pete Seeger, Peggy Seeger and her late husband, Ewan

MacColl, helped drive the folk revival in England in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. They preserved traditional songs and

worked with Charles Parker on their groundbreaking BBC show, “Radio Ballads,” a series of radio documentaries

featuring music and the recorded voices of working people.

Two of Seeger’s most best-known songs are the feminist classic, “I’m Gonna Be an Engineer” and “The Ballad of

Springhill” about a 1958 mining disaster in Nova Scotia.

Music in the making

Seeger grew up in a musical household. Her father was folklorist and musicologist Charles Seeger, and her mother

was his second wife, Ruth Porter Crawford, a modernist composer.

Seeger went to Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School and spent two years in Radcliffe College in the early 1950s before

moving to Holland and then to England where she met MacColl.

Seeger was the inspiration for MacColl’s song, “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” recorded in 1973 by Roberta

Flack.

She and MacColl also performed at venues around Great Britain for 30 years.

“We had a little van and could go anywhere in two to three hours,” she said.

Following her husband’s death in 1989, Seeger moved to North Carolina in 1994 and continued to perform, driving to

venues in the eastern U.S. in a small motor home, until she returned to England in 2010 to be closer to family.

Steeped in traditional folk music and still politically active, Seeger continues to write new songs about global issues,

including the ongoing — and in her view, possibly irreversible — degradation of the natural environment.

“It’s an ecological disaster,” she said. “What we do affects everything — all human beings need to be all working at the

same issue, or we’re sunk.”

Related for her is the issue of population growth.

“It has tripled in my lifetime,” she said. “There’s so much space in the U.S., but in Europe you really notice it.”

Also a committed feminist, Seeger said one organization that helps women around the world is Women for Women

International, a nonprofit with offices in Washington, D.C., and London.

By contributing, individuals can directly support one woman, enabling her to learn to read, write and become financially

independent.

“It can take women out of abusive situations,” she said.

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Seeger said she’s glad to be returning for a visit to Chevy Chase and its familiar neighborhoods, which she said

haven’t changed much since she knew them as a teenager.

“I’m looking forward to seeing old friends that might turn up,” she Pete said.

[email protected]

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