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Mike
Seeger has devoted his life to singing and playing Music
from True Vine - the home music made by American southerners before
the media age. Music from True Vine grows out of hundreds of years
of British traditions that blended in our country with equally ancient
African traditions to produce songs and sounds which are unique
to the United States. For the peoples of the rural South, their
great variety of music, song, and story provided their Shakespeare,
their dance music, their news, and the fabric of their daily lives.
This music in time became the roots of today's country, bluegrass,
and popular music and remains as ever, enduring and refreshing listening.
Fidelity to traditional sounds has set
Mike Seeger apart from other performers since he began touring the
United States and abroad in 1960. Mike's music conveys all the depth
of feeling, the sheer energy, and the infinite variety and texture
of true traditional rural music. Like earlier traditional musicians,
Mike seeks out his own vision of the music by creating within its
traditions, making his music uniquely his own.
As he sings the old songs, he plays
in a wide variety of traditional styles, accompanying himself on
an array of instruments, including banjo, fiddle, guitar, trump
(jaw harp), mouth harp (harmonica), quills, lap dulcimer, mandolin,
and autoharp.
The Seegers sang with
their children most Saturday nights. Mike learned the old ballad
Barbara Allen at age five from the singing of his musicologist/composer
parents. Soon he graduated to listening and learning from their
collection of early documentary recordings. He began playing instruments
in his late teens, learning first from nearby musicians such as
his close friend Elizabeth Cotten, and
later seeking out other master stylists like guitarist Maybelle
Carter, banjoists Dock Boggs, Cousin Emmy, and autoharpist Kilby
Snow. Eventually Mike's love for traditional music led him to produce
documentaries - more than twenty five field
recordings and videos - and to organize countless tours and
concerts featuring traditional musicians and dancers.
As a founding member of the pioneering
traditional music group, The New Lost City Ramblers, Mike played
an integral role in helping to revive interest in a variety of traditional
musics, now played by thousands of young musicians across the country.
Since his first recordings with the Ramblers, in the late nineteen
fifties, Mike has gone on to record more than forty albums, both
solo and with others.
". . . To see him perform is to experience the
richness of our traditions."
Mike Seeger has been honored with six
Grammy nominations, recently for Southern Banjo Sounds in
1998 and Solo: Oldtime Country Music in 1991. In 1995 Mike
received the Rex
Foundation's Ralph J. Gleason Lifetime Achievement Award, established
by the Grateful Dead to recognize "those who exemplify the qualities
of talent, vision, innovation that Ralph so tirelessly supported."
In the words of the award citation, Mike Seeger ". .  . remains
one of our great musical and cultural resources. To see him perform
is to experience the richness of our traditions."
Art Credit: Stefan Martin
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