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anti war songs  arlo guthrie pete seeger  baez  folk music  pete seeger  

Pete Seeger: The Power of Song

Pete Seeger: The Power of Song

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Director: Jim Brown
Actors: Joan Baez, Ronnie Gilbert, Tom Paxton, Bonnie Raitt, Tom Smothers
Studio: Genius Products (Ingram)
Category: DVD

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $16.84
You Save: $8.11 (33%)



New (36) Used (6) from $16.84

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 12 reviews
Sales Rank: 760

Format: Color, Ntsc, Subtitled, Widescreen
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Region: 1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 93 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: 81411
UPC: 796019814119
EAN: 0796019814119
ASIN: B0018PH3OC

Theatrical Release Date: 2007
Release Date: August 5, 2008  (New: Last 30 Days)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
PETE SEEGER: THE POWER OF SONG (DVD MOVIE)

Amazon.com
Pete Seeger reads The Wall Street Journal! That's perhaps the most startling revelation in Jim Brown's (The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time) wonderful documentary that etches an indelible portrait of an American icon and a global treasure. As a solo performer and as a member of the Weavers, Seeger introduced America to its musical heritage and was instrumental in ushering in the folk music revival in the 1960s. Branded as an "evil Commie" for his leftist beliefs, he is hailed here as an "absolute patriot" and "a living testament to the First Amendment." Seeger didn't call out politicians or presidents. He called out backward policies, unjust laws, and divisive attitudes. Songs that he popularized, or were covered by others, such as "We Shall Overcome," "The Hammer Song," "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," and "Turn, Turn, Turn," became Civil Rights and anti-war anthems. Music, he eloquently states in The Power of Song, should not be used just to forget one's troubles, but to also help to understand and to do something about your troubles. Whether singing work songs at union rallies or Woody Guthrie's "This Land Is Your Land" to schoolchildren, Seeger used folk music as a uniter. The Power of Song is a profile in courage. In dramatic archival footage, he is seen defying the House Un-American Activities Committee. Seeger, never in it for the money, recalls how he quit the phenomenally popular Weavers when the other members agreed to do a cigarette commercial. Seeger was green before green was cool. At 88, he lives in the log cabin that he built and continues to work the land; chopping wood and hauling water. This film also chronicles his successful campaign to clean up the polluted Hudson River.

The Power of Song" is more than a great life story. It's also a great love story. Toshi, his wife of more than 60 years, emerges as an extraordinary woman who has greatly sacrificed to allow Seeger to take his music and message around the world (at one point she jokes that she wished her husband chased women instead of causes so she could leave him). Seeger says his singing voice is gone, but his spirit is undimmed (one clip captures him standing on the roadside with a handful of war protesters). Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Bonnie Raitt, Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks, Mary Travers, and family members are among those who pay tribute, but Seeger's own plain-spoken words and the concert footage and performance clips--by turns joyous and profoundly moving--take full measure of the man as a musicologist, iconoclast, and "social artist." One admirer says of Seeger that he stood for justice and had powerful enemies. That makes him sound like a superhero. In his own gentle way, perhaps he was. --Donald Liebenson


Customer Reviews:   Read 7 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Pete Seeger: the power of we   August 17, 2008
Mark Gregory (Katoomba, NSW Australia)
I've seen Pete Seeger on a number of different stages, in Australia at the aptly named Union Theatre at Sydney University, in St Kilda in Melbourne and in London at the Albert Hall. His ability to get an audience to form itself into a veritable choir was evident each time. For over 45 years I've listened to his records, and some I still play like his American Industrial Songs, or an LP he made in London during the Miners Strike in Britain. I learned from his book and record to play the banjo. Seeger is part folklorist, part entertainer, as well as an extraordinary song writer. Where Have all the Flowers Gone? Turn Turn Turn! Big Muddy. He was influential in the US folk revival of course, but his influence spread across the seas to other folk revivals in Britain, in Australia and elsewhere. He always warned young singers not to regard him as a tradition singer, but as someone who learnt from traditional singers, telling them to learn from the people he learnt from.

Finally to get to the film, I saw it a couple of months ago at the Sydney Film Festival. I found myself joining in his choruses again (quietly enough I hope!) a thing I've rarely been roused to do in a cinema. I wanted to write something about the film but found it hard to know where to start. It's a fascinating story of folk revivals, of people using songs and making songs in their desire for a better, more peaceful world. Folk music is not always regarded as political, but what is more powerful than the vernacular voices of those excluded from fundamental decision making in their world? The voices of we the people? Especially in a world where culture itself tends to be marketed as if it were a product of some global factory system.

Now the film is out on DVD I'm sure it will have another life, but if possible go and see it with a crowd in a cinema, demand that your local cinemas show it! It's what the film needs.



5 out of 5 stars An Excellent Music Documentary   August 15, 2008
Amos Lassen (Little Rock, Arkansas)
"Pete Seeger: The Power of Song"

An Excellent Music Documentary

Amos Lassen

What a jewel we have in Pete Seeger. He is a true gentleman, an American patriot, an original who seems to be here to lift our spirits. Director Jim Brown gives us a wonderful look at Seeger in "Pete Seeger: The Power of Song". Seeger is one of the finest American singer/songwriter of modern times. Because of him, we had the folk revival of the 60's and 70's and he wrote some of America's most loved songs including "The Hammer Song", "Where Have All the Flowers Gone" and "Turn, Turn, Turn.
The movie has interviews with the big names of folk music--Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, Tom Paxton, and Arlo Guthrie. Most of the film is archival footage from the various stages of the singer's career and is infused with song. It gives a full picture of Seeger's life and spends time on the long period that he was blacklisted because of his political views and we see how he refused to yield to the demands of the House Un-American Activities Committee to take a loyalty oath to the American nation. In the film he tells us that he was a card carrying member of the Communist Party until 1948.
The film has scenes of Seeger (now 80 years old) in the home he built himself and we see his wife, Toshi, and his children. There is footage of performances of the octogenarian with Leadbelly, Woody Guthrie, Peter, Paul and Mary and Joan Baez. Seeger also sings with the groups he formed, The Weavers and the Almanac Singers.
Seeger's singing is, of course, the highlight but is his politics that are fascinating. He is a true humanist but, above everything is his music and I found myself singing along with Seeger's reedy voice. His is the voice that influenced a generation and this movie shows how. Perhaps it will influence yet another generation. Seeger is not at all "ticky tacky" and not at all "just the same".



5 out of 5 stars Fabulous documentary on the "Great Communicator" of Folk Music   July 25, 2008
Steven I Ramm (Phila, PA USA)
Last Spring the new documentary Pete Seeger: The Power of Song opened a limited run around the country. It was great and I recommended it to friends. Now it's coming out on video and even more folks will get the chance to see it. Plus there's some neat bonus features.

The 90-minute film features not only interviews with Pete but his son and daughters and one of his brothers as well as his well-known sister Peggy. There's great archival footage from the 1950s that I've never seen elsewhere and quite a few full performances as well. Director Jim Brown did his research well and Pete's lifelong wife Toshi is Executive Producer, which helped access some family archival materials.

Ronnie Gilbert makes some brief comments but Fred Hellerman (still living in CT) is surprisingly missing.

You'll learn new things about Pete (he subscribes to The Wall St. Journal!) as well.

There are one or two "celebrity" folks interviewed like Bonnie Raitt. But the strangest is Bruce Springsteen. There are three sections where Bruce expounds on Pete (never mentioning the "Seeger Sessions" at all). And every time he refers to Pete in the past tense! Speingsteen says: "He had.....", "He was....". It's like Pete is gone!

Sadly Pete was not a choice for the Nobel Peace prize this year. (I agree with Al Gore as a choice but this should have been Pete's year!) If there ever was a way to communicate to the Nobel Committee that Pete deserves the award, this film would certain make the strongest case. I wonder if they've seen it? Anyway, you should.

When I saw the film upon it's release I hoped that the DVD would include as bonus features full performances of the brief excerpts included in the film. Sadly, none of these made it to the DVD but in it's place are five "Seeger Family Home Movies" - about 5 minutes each - which Pete and Toshi made for the Moe Asch's Folkways label in the early 1950s

This DVD is a wonderful tribute to Seeger and is highly recommended!

Steve Ramm
"Anything Phonographic"



5 out of 5 stars Freedom, Justice, and Independence   June 1, 2008
I'm Serious (Galt, CA USA)
14 out of 15 found this review helpful

If you ask anyone to make a list of five American Ideals, most likely Freedom, Justice, and Independence will be there.
It seems the fight to preserve those Ideals and make sure American Ideals can apply to all Americans has always been a struggle.
Watching Pete Seeger/The Power of Song, I learned what a difference we can make when we band together, walk together, and sing together.
We all want our freedom, we all want our independence, and we desire justice.
The ironic thing is, sometimes we have to band together with our neighbors (whom we may not even know) to collectively voice our concerns and causes to preserve our liberties, freedoms, and independence.
Pete Seeger has helped people sing together all of his life. When he helped people sing for Unions, he helped the struggle for personal economic independence through better wages and benefits for workers.
When Pete Seeger helped people sing together during the Civil Rights Movement, he helped in the struggle against racial discrimination, and the struggle to gain personal freedom, justice, and independence for all Americans.
When Pete Seeger helped people sing together and band together for the common good, the Hudson River was made clean again.
Pete Seeger was blacklisted from commercial television for 17 years. In those 17 years, our own freedoms and justice were comprimised. Thank you, Tom and Dick Smothers, for helping to set things right.
There are some great clips of Seeger being honored at the Kennedy Center for his Lifetime Achiement Award, in 1994.

This is an excellent program. We may appreciate, not underestimate, the power of song.



5 out of 5 stars An American Classic   May 31, 2008
Brian D. (Washington DC)
9 out of 9 found this review helpful

Marvelous documentary about Pete that aired on PBS not so long ago and now is available on DVD for anyone who didn't obtain a copy as a Public Television "donation premium." One part I liked best is when Pete says what he didn't like much about the film is that it didn't show "all the stupid things I've done," or words to that effect. Pete Seeger is an American treasure, one everybody (on the left and even over on the right) can rightly cherish. May he be with us forever.

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