Pete Seeger was a working-class advocate who delivered the news in songs that could be sung by everyone, in four-part harmony. “I’ll sing out danger, I’ll sing out warning,” he sang, “I’ll sing out love between my brothers and my sisters, all over this land.”
Seeger’s “If I had a Hammer” is one of those songs that seems to be known by everyone. But what is it, exactly? Is it a children’s song? A call to revolution? A melody handed down by word of mouth through the ages? It always seems to have been with us, but it was written only in 1949 by Seeger and his collaborator in the Weavers, Lee Hays. The song was a marvel of simplicity and directness with a melody that was instantly memorable.
It was also deemed dangerous enough to contribute to Seeger’s reputation as a radical who eventually found himself blacklisted and indicted for contempt by Congress during the McCarthy era. Words like “freedom” and “peace” were seen as subversive and potentially seditious in certain quarters of the federal government, especially coming from a popular singer.
It’s as good a way as any of summing up the contributions of a complicated folk musician and political activist. Seeger, who died Monday at 94 of natural causes at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, went from studying journalism in Harvard classrooms to hoboing across the country singing folk songs to anyone who wanted to hear them. He left behind a complex legacy: a beloved yet prickly figure who nonetheless openly detested many aspects of capitalism, openly embraced communism and was condemned for it, and never wavered in his belief that equality should extend not only across lines of race and religion, but of economic class and privilege.