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First Time Ever: A Memoir (2017)

par Peggy Seeger

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
5112504,116 (3.73)8
"Peggy Seeger is one of folk music's most influential artists and songwriters. Born in New York City in 1935, she enjoyed a childhood steeped in music and left-wing politics - they remain her lifeblood. After college, she traveled to Russia and China - against US advice - before arriving in London, where she met the man with whom she would raise three children and share the next thirty-three years: Ewan MacColl. Together, they helped lay the foundations of the British folk revival, through the influential Critics Group and the landmark BBC Radio Ballads series. And as Ewan's muse, she inspired one of the twentieth century's most popular love songs, "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face". With a clear eye and generous spirit, Peggy writes of a roller-coaster life - of birth and abortion, sex and infidelity, devotion and betrayal - in a luminous, beautifully realized account."--Amazon.com.… (plus d'informations)
  1. 00
    Peggy Seeger: A Life of Music, Love, and Politics (Music in American Life) par Jean R. Freedman (waltzmn)
    waltzmn: One is the biography. The other is the autobiography. They really do illuminate the story of one of the people who did the most to link British and American "pop folk" music, and the last of the great Seeger siblings.
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Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Peggy Seeger saw a lot of life, and made a lot of music. Her family (including much older half-brother, Pete Seeger) were musicians, and friends of musicians. She spent time in some mighty heady company, and contributed her own talents to the "scene". I will forever be grateful to her for inspiring one of my all-time favorite love songs---"The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face". This autobiography reads like a ramble through her memories, and at times I got the feeling she was sliding over some of the tough bits. It also could have used a bit more editing in some places, and possibly less in others (assuming some of the things that got short shrift may have been due to the editor's discretion?). In any case, if you lived through the 1960's, or just love the music and mythos of that turbulent time, you may find this an interesting, if somewhat unsatisfying read.
Review written in March 2018 ( )
  laytonwoman3rd | Oct 21, 2019 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
This autobiographical memoir of folk singer Peggy Seeger offers a view of the American and British folk music world of the 1960s and later.
She led an interesting life, although many will wonder at some of her decisions, it seems to have worked out. The writing is authentic and personal if a bit choppy. There is surprisingly little about music,but lots about family (including older half-brothe Pete), other musicians and making do on little money and lots of love and energy. High marks for good stories, a bit lower for organization. Worth a read if you are at all into life stories or classic British folk music. ( )
  Helenoel | Sep 25, 2018 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
First Time Ever is the autobiography of folk musician Peggy Seeger, who acted as singer, songwriter, and pioneer of the British folk revival, along with her husband, Ewan MacColl. It’s a chatty, somewhat impressionistic and disjointed but honest and revealing account that begins with her colorful family (father was a musicologist, mother was “the most significant American female composer of the twentieth century” per the Library of Congress, brothers Mike and Pete were also musicians). Her life with MacColl and their children (as well as stepdaughter Kirsty MacColl) as well as their work together are documented, as well as the subsequent years after his death, when Peggy continued as a musician on her own. I didn’t know a lot about the folk music scene of the 1960s so I enjoyed this account, particularly the musical politics, the logistics of gigs and touring, and specifics related to particular songs (MacColl wrote their biggest hit, “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” for her to sing; at that time he was married to someone else). Seeger also includes domestic details like the difficulty of making ends meet and the near-constant presence of her mother-in-law. I also enjoyed her account of making the Radio Ballads, described by the BBC as “masterpieces of radio, weaving the voices of rarely-heard communities with songs written from and about the recorded experiences of the interviewees.” At the end of the book, you feel you’ve been on the journey with her (even the harrowing parts). Those interested in Seeger and her life and music may be interested in the double CD set she released in tandem with this book, which includes 38 songs in the order they are mentioned in the memoir, available on Bandcamp. ( )
  annez | Feb 3, 2018 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
I received a free Early Reviewers copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Peggy Seever is an engaging author, and I learned a lot about folk music and performance from this book. Seever and her family and friends are interesting characters, even beyond their importance to folk music. At some points, I thought the book dragged a bit, with lots of detail, especially in the early years. For a person who grew up in that time period, though, reading those chapters would probably be quite nostalgic. I came away from the book with a new appreciation of folk music, and of the people who preserve the traditional songs and and create music within that tradition. ( )
  MissPrudence | Jan 9, 2018 |
This book first showed up on LibraryThing Early Reviewers, and I signed up. After all, I'm a logical reviewer -- I'm a folk music scholar. I have many MacColl/Seeger records, and I've seen them perform. I have never met any of their family, but I've known people who know them. And I know much of the background of both the Seeger family and the Miller family (Ewan MacColl's proper name). And -- like many in the folk music community -- I have many questions about the background of their music.

So, naturally, I didn't get the book. I've gotten lots of far less interesting volumes from the Early Reviewers program, but not the one I was meant to get.

Which, obviously, meant that I had to get it just to give a proper review. And was very surprised at what I found.

First, the trigger warnings. If you know Peggy Seeger (or any Seeger, really) and Ewan MacColl, you probably know that they are from the far left. But this is an utterly frank, open memoir. If you aren't up for mentions of extra-marital sex, lesbianism, abortion, and other hot button issues, stay away. You have been warned.

But you will also get an insight into America's first family of folk music that you won't get anywhere else. Yes, Pete Seeger wrote more -- but he's a generation older, and more reserved about his own life. Peggy doesn't hide who she is.

It's not a perfect book. She says at the beginning that the manuscript was heavily cut by the editor, and the chopping is much more evident in the second half. The first half flows smoothly, although you'll often have questions as to why Peggy did this or that crazy thing. And, sometimes, you'll lose track of who a particular person is. (An index would really help.) In the second half, the chronology gets hard to follow; events race along, then slow down. It's like a traditional ballad, "leaping and lingering," on some things such as MacColl's death -- but sometimes the leaps are too far.

Oddly, one of the things that is most absent seems to be her music. All the Seegers have tremendous innate musical talent -- almost a savant skill. Yet Peggy tells us almost nothing about how she learned most of her instruments. She tells us nothing at all about her relationships with her instruments. (If you don't know what I mean by a relationship with an instrument, all I can say is, you've never really gotten to know one.) She quotes snippets of traditional songs, and songs she wrote, but often without much context. She talks a lot about touring, and its problems, and even about performing, but only occasionally about getting into a song. Her emotional language is... curious. Which may be why it's so much easier to understand some of the things she did than others.

There is a pattern here. The special skills -- not just in music, though those are the most extreme. The perfectionism and black-and-white thinking that, even as a child, caused her to run off-stage when she made a misstep in a school play, and then refused to go to school the next day because it was so painful. The wild decision to, in effect, run off to Europe -- where she fell in love with and got pregnant by a man twenty years her senior who was already married to someone else! The passion for organizing things in a particular way. The slight hints of gender fluidity. Signs of problems establishing her identity, particularly after MacColl died. It all adds up. And it makes Seeger a very interesting, very unusual person.

She may not be your sort of person, especially if you are culturally conservative. But, by reading her words, you will definitely get a chance to see the world in a different way.

[CORRECTIONS and CHANGES:

11/20 - Changed "gender dysphoria" to "gender fluidity" and removed explanation of the term; "gender dysphoria" is an explicit diagnosis which requires distress, and Seeger does not suffer distress; the term was misleading. Added reference to identity.] ( )
2 voter waltzmn | Nov 19, 2017 |
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"Peggy Seeger is one of folk music's most influential artists and songwriters. Born in New York City in 1935, she enjoyed a childhood steeped in music and left-wing politics - they remain her lifeblood. After college, she traveled to Russia and China - against US advice - before arriving in London, where she met the man with whom she would raise three children and share the next thirty-three years: Ewan MacColl. Together, they helped lay the foundations of the British folk revival, through the influential Critics Group and the landmark BBC Radio Ballads series. And as Ewan's muse, she inspired one of the twentieth century's most popular love songs, "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face". With a clear eye and generous spirit, Peggy writes of a roller-coaster life - of birth and abortion, sex and infidelity, devotion and betrayal - in a luminous, beautifully realized account."--Amazon.com.

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