After the events of A Complete Unknown, Pete Seeger went on to a long and successful career in both music and activism.
Pete Seeger didn't like singing by himself. It wasn't just that he contributed his tenor (and banjo picking) to two seminal folk groups — the Almanac Singers (with Woody Guthrie) and The Weavers ...
Even though A Complete Unknown glosses over Pete Seeger's trial, the true story of the FBI investigation and Congress hearing ...
TheWrap magazine: Director James Mangold said, “Go out and mine Pete Seeger and bring me back a bunch of gold,” says the actor ...
Film director James Mangold also tells Esther McCarthy why he focused on that crucial early period in Dylan's career ...
Wilkes-Barre-based folk musician and songwriter Don Shappelle can recall an early, formative moment in his musical journey.
The folk singer, who died in 2014, was famous for his songs about working people, unions and social justice. In this 1984 interview, Seeger cited Woody Guthrie as one his most important influences.
Husock is hardly alone in observing that Seeger was the master creator, subliminally getting out his message in homespun sounds and lyrics. Peter Stone writes that Wald himself “details how what ...
Peter Yarrow, namesake folk singer of the legendary trio Peter ... Including now-iconic covers of Pete Seeger’s “If I Had a Hammer (Hammer Song)” and “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?,” ...
The real-life people who show up in the movie A Complete Unknown, about young Bob Dylan, inspired a look at Pete Seeger's appearance on CBC-TV in 1965.