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About Peggy Atwood
An appearance by Peggy Atwood is always a kaleidoscopic and stimulating
experience. Atwood draws an audience culled from many cultures and walks
of life, every bit as colorful as she.
In her Greenwich Village days, one favorite audience member was the
mounted traffic officer who, without fail, would tie his horse up to a
parking meter in front of the Speakeasy and saunter into her show, laying
his helmet and gloves on the bar. Naturally, from then on, the rest of
the audience was on its best behavior.
What they came to hear was fresh, spontaneous, cutting edge. Atwood
was
never a follower, always out in front with her bold, unconventional
artistry. Her music is a mirror of the independence and risk-taking she
acquired from years of nomadic living. Traveling the world as a military
brat, she grew up speaking five languages, the daughter of a diplomat,
living all around Europe and the Middle East, as well as Virginia and New
England. Peggy started out at the age of five singing in church and
kindergarten choirs, and was often chosen to sing with the adults as a
featured soloist. Piano was her first instrument, but due to the
traveling life, she took up guitar and soon excelled at that, performing
in every school and theater function she could. Everywhere she went,
she became the token performer and was in demand at high school and
college functions. In high school in Beirut, Lebanon, she produced and
performed in numerous variety shows and theatrical productions, as well
as taking the lead in Bertolt Brecht's "The Caucasian Chalk Circle". At
the University of Vermont, she ran the Watertower Coffee House, booking
performers and running an information center for the evolution of
fledgling social consciousness and environmental awareness called "Total
Involvement". She was also a DJ and host of the "Peggy Atwood Folk
Show", where unusual and eclectic writers and performers were featured
that might otherwise have had little or no airplay. But her activities
were more extra-curricular than academic, and she soon set out for the
open road.
Out on her own, she won first prize as Best New Artist in the New
England Folk Festival, and soon was playing other festivals and working
with such varied musicians as Rod MacDonald (folk) to Skye (disco) and
former members of Blue Oyster Cult (rock). Atwood has graced the stage
as opening act for John Hall, Eric Andersen, Livingston Taylor, Tom
Paxton, Odetta, Pete Seeger, John Stewart and Ronnie Blakeley, and has
been on the bill with many other folk legends such as Joan Baez, Tom Rush
and Don McLean. Variety called Peggy Atwood "an exceptional singer of
folk, often country-flavored material; the total effect is excellent".
The Village Voice termed Atwood ". . . one of the Lower East side's best
voices, her low notes like Bessie Smith, high notes like Joni Mitchell".
Peggy would be the first to tell you, she is only somewhat domesticated,
a free-spirit, proudly untamed in the purest sense of the word; nature is
central to her being, the heart of her work. Peggy has acted on her
passion for nature and the great outdoors, from teaching mountaineering
and cross-country skiing during the day and singing at night, to serving
on the Executive Committee of the New York City Sierra Club; she has also
played countless benefit concerts in support of environmental causes and
animal rights. She had a long-standing association with the Hudson River
Sloop Singers, co-producing their "Broad Old River" album and working
closely with Pete Seeger's Clearwater project.
A few years ago, Atwood landed in Nashville to check out the new and
more contemporary scene for singer/songwriters. Publisher Bob Berg
called her ". . . one of the top five women singers in Nashville, and
one the very few women who can really play the guitar". While there,
she performed at many local clubs and organized the Sunday writer's night
called "Something Different" at the historic Tootsie's Orchid Lounge Backroom, to get
attention for and promote the alternative country scene, with such
performers as Kamie Lyle, Neil Fagan, Josie Kuhn, Claire Davidson, Will
Rambeaux, and Celinda Pink. She also participated in co-founding a group
to help Native Americans, H.O.N.A.R., and assisted in the collection and
delivery of clothing and construction materials to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. However, Atwood's sense of survival caused her to move back
to upstate New York, and it was just in time, as the tornadoes came
through and nearly demolished her Nashville house.
Back in the saddle and currently residing high in the Catskills, she has
produced two CD's of her own, titled "Northern Country" and "Renegade of the Light Brigade".
She has also recently produced a benefit concert for
The Catskill Animal Sanctuary,
with an accompanying CD
(featuring
John Herald,
Tom Pacheco,
Bar Scott,
Kurt Henry,
Danielle Woerner
Barbara Speer and performance artist
Nancy Ostrovsky),
and has been featured on the
Hudson Valley Music website
as well as developing her own website.
So come hitch your horse outside a Peggy Atwood gig and have a listen.
The wild places in your heart might be stirred as she seeks them out with
her haunting and dynamic music, taking you to places real and imagined,
if only for a moment in your dreams.
-Roger Deitz
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