A few weeks ago I was so blessed to see Judy Collins perform live in a beautiful theater in my town. She is 84 now! And sounded wonderful and told great stories from her early years in Greenwich Village etc. I love Turn, Turn, Turn. Putting Scripture to current music to help us connect with it is powerful. Blessings, friends!
in the seventies all of my friends and of course me too had a pete seeger greatest hits album.... "little boxes", "if i had a hammer", "where have all the flowers gone" and all these wonderful songs were part of our identity as "freaks". and all these freaks would meet practically daily in a little egyptian joint that was called "teehaus" ("teahouse"). you could choose from many sorts of tea there, no alcohol. only for your first cup of tea you had to pay a minimal amount, all following cups were for free. they also served cheese/spinach pies there and milk rice, everything ridiculously cheap. "teehaus" opened daily at 5 pm and closed when all the young guests had gone, open end. there was a wonderful piano player there, johnny "manhattan" taylor and on the weekends poets and writers would read their poetry. i had my first own poetry reading there, the place was packed. these are wonderful memories for me. i miss these fantastic times very much. regards and best wishes from austria ! ☮
1966 was when the Vietnam War was really starting to ramp up. I know Pete Seeger wrote this song in 1959 but this was the perfect song for 1966. Beautiful Harmony
I discovered Judy Collins in HS in the early 70s. Such a beautiful voice...she remains one of my favorite folk singers. Thanks for the trip down memory lane !!
The performance is truly sublime, but what strikes me is the expression in Judy Collins’ eyes as she looks at Pete Seeger. It is an expression we see less and less these days given the increasing egocentricity of our age. It is a mature look of love, kindness and compassion for someone other than herself. I miss that look in people's eyes.
I just celebrated sixty years of watching Judy Collins in concert. My first time was in 1959, in Denver and my wife and I got to go see Judy up in the Rocky Mountains earlier this month. What a treasure she still is!
To everything (Turn, turn, turn) There is a season (Turn, turn, turn) And a time for every purpose under heaven A time to be born, a time to die A time to plant, a time to reap A time to kill, a time to heal A time to laugh, a time to weep To everything (Turn, turn, turn) There is a season (Turn, turn, turn) And a time to every purpose under heaven A time to build up, a time to break down A time to dance, a time to mourn A time to cast away stones A time to gather stones together To everything (Turn, turn, turn) There is a season (Turn, turn, turn) And a time to every purpose under heaven A time of love, a time of hate A time of war, a time of peace A time you may embrace A time to refrain from embracing To everything (Turn, turn, turn) There is a season (Turn, turn, turn) And a time to every purpose under heaven A time to gain, a time to lose A time to rend, a time to sew A time to love, a time to hate A time of peace, I swear it's not too late To everything (Turn, turn, turn) There is a season (Turn, turn, turn) And a time to every purpose under heaven And a time to every purpose under heaven
This is the most beautiful and touching rendition of this tune I’m aware of. Pete Seeger”s gentle harmonies against Judy Collin”s clear and loving voice tug at my heart strings. I hope this post doesn’t get removed by a resentful, avaricious rights holder like all the previous ones. If it does, it will pop up again somewhere. This tune embodies the sort of unquenchable freedom that refuses to be silenced. Long live folk music!
I doubt anyone can remove this sublime song. Pete wrote the music and the words are from the Bible (Ecclesiastes 3 v1-8). God doesn't have a copyright lawyer.
I remember listening to Pete Seeger in December 1967 outside the New York Public Library when he sang at the end of a demonstration against the Greek hunta who had taken power in Greece. Melina Mercouri participated in the rally as well as Jules Dassin, director and her husband. I had just come from Sweden to New York.
@@Blinknone Actually I know many extraordinary gifted and talented musicians performing on single instruments and even multi instruments today. It is just that they are not in the forefront of the public realm. Music like all the other arts needs to have a voice in these multimedia times. Popular music today is an art fom and performances need to have a tremendous visual appeal to get the attention of the consumer. There are multiple delivery forms of music today to the consumer, some very, very personal and personalized. Then there is the synthetic music, sometimes called house music and/or electronic music where arrangements are so key to the performance. We cannot forget style and voice, how much of a generational thing that is. Finally there is comparing like with like. Would either Pete Seeger or Judy Collins be regarded as popular music when they produced that version of "Turn, Turn, Turn" was televised. I am not sure, but I don't think so.
It's a treat to see and hear Judy in her youth. I never even knew she existed when this video was recorded. In 1966 I was fighting for my life in Vietnam. Her politics and my own wouldn't agree.
Judy Collins was born in Seattle, Washington on May 1st, 1939. She is a Grammy Award-winning American singer and songwriter with a career spanning over 60 years. She is known for her eclectic tastes in the material she records (which has included folk music, show tunes, pop music, rock and roll and standards) for her social activism, and for the clarity of her voice. Collins has released 28 studio albums, 4 live albums, numerous compilation albums and 4 holiday albums. Today, May 1st, 2021, she is celebrating her 82nd birthday.
Heavenly! What emotions of peace and love they express! What a terrific song and sung by 2 very talented folk singers! I love this version of the song!
Wonderful performance...... the full program is somewhere here on RUclips and well worth the search. Rainbow Quest, Judy Collins... happy birthday, judy!
way off topic----but-- 2005 i walked away from a 25 year marriage--ended up the world AA conference in Toronto Canada-Judy Collins comes out singing Amazing Grace---CHILLS!!!!!
Same here. I tuned in to their fundraising program and they were promoting their “Folk Rewind” CD set. This was the footage I was met with. I’ve always been into vintage music and footage, but I’m not really familiar with the folk genre. Nevertheless, this really resonated with me. Her voice and Seeger’s harmony, layered with the guitars... it’s chilling. And that gaze of hers too... geez. I’m convinced that art is a sign of the times, and this footage/song really testifies to that. I knew the popular version of this song, but had never heard this version (or much less knew about it)... this is the one I’ll go to from now on!
You ever have one of those moments where you get caught so completely off guard by something that tears start flowing because of how beautiful it is? Yeah, I just had one of those moments.
I just finished a reading assignment for history about Pete Seeger and i thoroughly enjoyed learning about this mans life. It is nice to put a voice to a story. It's a shame i am only now learning about him.
I hope your studies brought his friend Woody Guthrie to your attention. Those guys understood that not everyone could read, and newspapers were not always available or honest. I hope the music of the folk singers becomes a part of your life. Happy days and keep learning forever 🤗
I'm in a senior choir (virtual at this moment), and this is one of the songs we are rehearsing. The arrangement can't begin to match this beautiful performance by two of folk music's giants. Nor will our singing - not by a long shot.
She is 81 noq -- a year older than my husband AND she is still singing. Her voice has not failed nor her performance. This is probably the best version of this I've seen.
Remembering Peter Seeger born on May 3, 1919. He was an American folk singer and social activist. A fixture on nationwide radio in the 1940s, Seeger also had a string of hits during the early 1950s as a member of The Weavers. - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pete_Seeger
@@lucreziawalker952 Lucrezia, you are correct. I've loved this song since 1965, when I was 10 years old. It is from Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. KJV. However, in the Bible, these passages were written by Solomon, to stress that we must put our eternal destiny/home, ahead of material experiences, things; that are fleeting in this mortal life. Keep your "faithful eye" on your eternal life; with our Creator in Heaven. There; is the ultimate "season". BLESSINGS.
@@debishelton9647 thank you debi. Like you, I’ve loved this song a long time. Was just putting in a word for those who thought Pete Seeger had penned the words. Bit too far back to know if the words are those of Solomon! Ecclesiastes terms the speaker as: the preacher. But good words all the same!
This clip, like all the others that survive on RUclips, omits the touching conversation between Collins and Seeger when she praises him for 'your beautiful song'. I miss that. I do hope it pops up again one day.
The words are taken from the book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible. I was never comfortable with the statement that there was 'a time for hate'. Six days ago, a man who lived not five miles from me went into two mosques in a city 200 miles away, and shot dead 49 innocent people as they prayed. Now, finally, I know what those words mean, and I am comforted by them.
@@peggydwyer1932 Thanks for your link to Karl Popper on "Paradox". I'm using it tonight for a lecture on the relationship between Folk Music and Judeo-Christian thought.
Some of the words were taking from the Bible but Pete Seeger added quite a few of his own and wrote a beautiful song. That wasn't King Solomon that did that.
I know there are talented people today. But where has the soul and artistry gone? I feel like we're living in a soulless era. Watching this performance heals my soul which no modern artists can come up with.
I always love Judy call ins the music is great if you really listen to turn turn turn it means something listen to the words God bless Judy that's all I have to say
Oh ok now that makes sense , Pete Seeger was a 1960’s celebrity . I always wondered where he came from , and couldn’t imagine he was actually on tv at some point
I think Pete would not have regarded himself as a 'celebrity.' He was not just a great singer, writer and musician but an activist who couldn't be bullied by the fascist goons, politicians or HUAC. He literally put his life on the line at Peekskill, NY. He stood shoulder to shoulder with the civil rights movement and union activists. There is a documentary about Pete, well worth watching, 'The Power Of Song.' Don't just watch Pete, join in with the songs, which is what Pete wanted, but also do what Pete tried, making the world a better place with justice for all.
We did not realize just how lucky we were back then... Now that I am 83 , do not regret anything...
A few weeks ago I was so blessed to see Judy Collins perform live in a beautiful theater in my town. She is 84 now! And sounded wonderful and told great stories from her early years in Greenwich Village etc. I love Turn, Turn, Turn. Putting Scripture to current music to help us connect with it is powerful. Blessings, friends!
in the seventies all of my friends and of course me too had a pete seeger greatest hits album.... "little boxes", "if i had a hammer", "where have all the flowers gone" and all these wonderful songs were part of our identity as "freaks". and all these freaks would meet practically daily in a little egyptian joint that was called "teehaus" ("teahouse"). you could choose from many sorts of tea there, no alcohol. only for your first cup of tea you had to pay a minimal amount, all following cups were for free. they also served cheese/spinach pies there and milk rice, everything ridiculously cheap. "teehaus" opened daily at 5 pm and closed when all the young guests had gone, open end. there was a wonderful piano player there, johnny "manhattan" taylor and on the weekends poets and writers would read their poetry. i had my first own poetry reading there, the place was packed. these are wonderful memories for me. i miss these fantastic times very much. regards and best wishes from austria ! ☮
Thank you for sharing this memory. Lovely days.
I cannot praise this angelic version of this tune enough!!! Splendid .......
I saw judy live in nyc. Was great. I'm 70. Wish I saw pete as well😊
Two legends perform a masterpiece
This is the very first time I've posted a comment on RUclips. OMG what a beautiful duet. So deeply moved. Love from Japan.
Thank you 💪🏡🙎
I feel exactly the same. Many Greetings top Japan from Germany ❤️
愛 😉 ✌️ 🪕
I'll be 57 soon. Beautiful guitar
I'm glad I listened to these sounds as a child.
Every version of this song is beautiful
1966 was when the Vietnam War was really starting to ramp up. I know Pete Seeger wrote this song in 1959 but this was the perfect song for 1966. Beautiful Harmony
What a soulful voice for this song! Pete Seeger you are so great and People never forget of your contribution for such kind of song😁👍🙏
Pete knew it was a special moment..how proud he was to hear one of his songs done by Judy Blue Eyes..don't get no better
Still missing Pete. He was such a kind man.
I discovered Judy Collins in HS in the early 70s. Such a beautiful voice...she remains one of my favorite folk singers. Thanks for the trip down memory lane !!
His lovely counterpoint humming - he was just a wonder.
Hello Claudia, How are you doing?
Before Bob Dylan, there was Pete Seeger, and Judy Collins was truly a voice of the 1960s folk movement. Thanks for posting.
it saddens to think this music could not be a hit today.
The performance is truly sublime, but what strikes me is the expression in Judy Collins’ eyes as she looks at Pete Seeger. It is an expression we see less and less these days given the increasing egocentricity of our age. It is a mature look of love, kindness and compassion for someone other than herself. I miss that look in people's eyes.
Right on brother...I was mesmerized by Judy’s eyes too!
So well noticed & stated💞
@@mjc63 Thank you for your kind comment. Best wishes to you.
@@jvt6 Thank you for your kind comment. I had given up leaving comments due to the occasional unpleasant reply. Yours has brightened up the day.
Great comment Robert. I could not have said it better. Old hippy Cape Town.
One of the best thing I ever watch on youtube..
So beautiful...
Love from India...
Me too.Love your comment. I am also from kolkata, India.
I just celebrated sixty years of watching Judy Collins in concert. My first time was in 1959, in Denver and my wife and I got to go see Judy up in the Rocky Mountains earlier this month. What a treasure she still is!
To everything (Turn, turn, turn)
There is a season (Turn, turn, turn)
And a time for every purpose under heaven
A time to be born, a time to die
A time to plant, a time to reap
A time to kill, a time to heal
A time to laugh, a time to weep
To everything (Turn, turn, turn)
There is a season (Turn, turn, turn)
And a time to every purpose under heaven
A time to build up, a time to break down
A time to dance, a time to mourn
A time to cast away stones
A time to gather stones together
To everything (Turn, turn, turn)
There is a season (Turn, turn, turn)
And a time to every purpose under heaven
A time of love, a time of hate
A time of war, a time of peace
A time you may embrace
A time to refrain from embracing
To everything (Turn, turn, turn)
There is a season (Turn, turn, turn)
And a time to every purpose under heaven
A time to gain, a time to lose
A time to rend, a time to sew
A time to love, a time to hate
A time of peace, I swear it's not too late
To everything (Turn, turn, turn)
There is a season (Turn, turn, turn)
And a time to every purpose under heaven
And a time to every purpose under heaven
This is the most beautiful and touching rendition of this tune I’m aware of. Pete Seeger”s gentle harmonies against Judy Collin”s clear and loving voice tug at my heart strings. I hope this post doesn’t get removed by a resentful, avaricious rights holder like all the previous ones. If it does, it will pop up again somewhere. This tune embodies the sort of unquenchable freedom that refuses to be silenced. Long live folk music!
I doubt anyone can remove this sublime song. Pete wrote the music and the words are from the Bible (Ecclesiastes 3 v1-8). God doesn't have a copyright lawyer.
I remember listening to Pete Seeger in December 1967 outside the New York Public Library when he sang at the end of a demonstration against the Greek hunta who had taken power in Greece. Melina Mercouri participated in the rally as well as Jules Dassin, director and her husband. I had just come from Sweden to New York.
Reaffirmed: The 60s were the greatest decade in american popular music.
This has been an incredible comfort to me with the death of my friend....
Ecclesiastes 3:8/ KJV BLESSINGS~on you. You didn't lose your friend~you gained an angel.
best wishes to you Linda. an old friend of mine passed awhile ago. 💚 green for healing us all. ✌️🙂
Wow. There was a time when music was great.
Kevin Egan , agree!!
And when "musicians" actually knew how to play an instrument.
@@Blinknone Actually I know many extraordinary gifted and talented musicians performing on single instruments and even multi instruments today. It is just that they are not in the forefront of the public realm.
Music like all the other arts needs to have a voice in these multimedia times. Popular music today is an art fom and performances need to have a tremendous visual appeal to get the attention of the consumer. There are multiple delivery forms of music today to the consumer, some very, very personal and personalized. Then there is the synthetic music, sometimes called house music and/or electronic music where arrangements are so key to the performance. We cannot forget style and voice, how much of a generational thing that is. Finally there is comparing like with like. Would either Pete Seeger or Judy Collins be regarded as popular music when they produced that version of "Turn, Turn, Turn" was televised. I am not sure, but I don't think so.
That's how I learned American English in the early sixties during my early stay in the USA , Very touched !
It's a treat to see and hear Judy in her youth. I never even knew she existed when this video was recorded. In 1966 I was fighting for my life in Vietnam. Her politics and my own wouldn't agree.
Yes, still listening April, 2021. Wonderful duet.
This calms my restless soul. I've heard of Judy when I was young. What a heavenly voice.
I am going to have this played at my funeral. It's the most beautiful song ever. Judy and Pete two great great people.
This song is actually based on a verse from the bible that is said at funerals.
I never knew what "A time to refrain from embracing" meant till 2020. Somehow they knew.
Judy Collins was born in Seattle, Washington on May 1st, 1939. She is a Grammy Award-winning American singer and songwriter with a career spanning over 60 years. She is known for her eclectic tastes in the material she records (which has included folk music, show tunes, pop music, rock and roll and standards) for her social activism, and for the clarity of her voice. Collins has released 28 studio albums, 4 live albums, numerous compilation albums and 4 holiday albums. Today, May 1st, 2021, she is celebrating her 82nd birthday.
Seeger's harmony at 2:20 is like heaven on Earth.
Incredible piece of art
God Bless us all.
Just spellbound! Awesome!
I saw Judy in Concert. 1990s. .I cried 7 times. .Sweet Sounds. .Graces included...
Heavenly! What emotions of peace and love they express! What a terrific song and sung by 2 very talented folk singers! I love this version of the song!
From SBSK... thank you Chris.
💞
Wonderful. What a beautiful voice!
Beautiful song and such a gorgeous voice!
Hello Carolyn, How are you doing?
It was a program on New Jersey network. Amazing that is so good.
I forgot how beautiful her voice is.
That's possible?
Beautiful
A timeless message, but one that is particularly relevant in these times
gah... something in my eye.... why's my shirt so wet? we will surely be lost when god takes that beautiful voice from us.
Sublime! As beautiful as a new mornings orangelit dew ! Pete Seeger is the original composer!
Well sorta. 95% is a direct quote from the Bible but Pete was the one who first set it to music.
Wonderful performance...... the full program is somewhere here on RUclips and well worth the search. Rainbow Quest, Judy Collins... happy birthday, judy!
Love this performance and the performers.
way off topic----but--
2005 i walked away from a 25 year marriage--ended up the world AA conference in Toronto Canada-Judy Collins comes out singing Amazing Grace---CHILLS!!!!!
One of the most beautiful versions of this song; probably one of the most beautiful written. Too bad no one makes music like this any longer.
Unless the music needs to be screamed.
I watch this over and over.
Pete and Judy. Thank you for your gifts of music. Love and peace.
Simple and severe. It sounds like a warning. Its message is unmistakable.
Wether it be sung or spoken, the words are so powerfull, they reach out to us & tell us to 'seize the moment, for no one knows the hour!
Beautful duet!
I was really moved 😪 as a child listening to this song.
Playing this video at my Dad's celebration of life.
Just seen this on PBS and just loved it. There is a season...Live life to the fullest while you can, for before you know it it might be gone
Same here. I tuned in to their fundraising program and they were promoting their “Folk Rewind” CD set. This was the footage I was met with. I’ve always been into vintage music and footage, but I’m not really familiar with the folk genre. Nevertheless, this really resonated with me. Her voice and Seeger’s harmony, layered with the guitars... it’s chilling. And that gaze of hers too... geez. I’m convinced that art is a sign of the times, and this footage/song really testifies to that. I knew the popular version of this song, but had never heard this version (or much less knew about it)... this is the one I’ll go to from now on!
One of the songs that expressed our generation (of the '60s.
Father’s Day 6.19.22
I’m here after reading Ecclesiastes 3 w Father Mike Schmitz by BIAY 🙌
All words from the Bible
...this an AWESOME duo....memories!!
Thank You . . . 1 Eye . . .
You ever have one of those moments where you get caught so completely off guard by something that tears start flowing because of how beautiful it is? Yeah, I just had one of those moments.
I just finished a reading assignment for history about Pete Seeger and i thoroughly enjoyed learning about this mans life. It is nice to put a voice to a story. It's a shame i am only now learning about him.
I hope your studies brought his friend Woody Guthrie to your attention. Those guys understood that not everyone could read, and newspapers were not always available or honest. I hope the music of the folk singers becomes a part of your life. Happy days and keep learning forever 🤗
Welcome to the fold, buddy. There is more injustice in this world than can be recounted but know that Seeger and my comrades are sworn to fight it!
PETE & WOODY! 😍😍✊
I am WAITING for that
Current "RESIST" Album Collaboration! 💚💪🎶💘
i love your profile picture 👀
I'm in a senior choir (virtual at this moment), and this is one of the songs we are rehearsing. The arrangement can't begin to match this beautiful performance by two of folk music's giants. Nor will our singing - not by a long shot.
Beautiful....two great artists.
She is 81 noq -- a year older than my husband AND she is still singing. Her voice has not failed nor her performance. This is probably the best version of this I've seen.
God's word is always beautiful, in His plan, and not taken out of context.
Pete was a national treasure. I'll never forget him with The Boss at Obama's 1st inaugural, at the Lincoln Memorial, singing This Land is Your Land.
Jesus Christ.....Seeger & Collins? Perfect voice & a perfect visionary! There is heaven here....
Judy never disappoints. I could listen to her voice all day and never tire of it.
What a tune, it touches my soul. Sharing
superb
Beautiful🙏
Such talent and a wonderful song🙏
Remembering Peter Seeger born on May 3, 1919. He was an American folk singer and social activist. A fixture on nationwide radio in the 1940s, Seeger also had a string of hits during the early 1950s as a member of The Weavers. - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pete_Seeger
Finest ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
LOVE her voice~LOVE his writing! :)
Well yes, except that ‘his’ writing is from the Old Testament Book of Ecclesiastes. But beautifully sung duet.
@@lucreziawalker952 Lucrezia, you are correct. I've loved this song since 1965, when I was 10 years old. It is from Ecclesiastes 3:1-8. KJV. However, in the Bible, these passages were written by Solomon, to stress that we must put our eternal destiny/home, ahead of material experiences, things; that are fleeting in this mortal life. Keep your "faithful eye" on your eternal life; with our Creator in Heaven. There; is the ultimate "season". BLESSINGS.
My favorite rendition is by The Byrds. I live near Roger McGuinn's son~in Tucson. 🙂
@@debishelton9647 thank you debi. Like you, I’ve loved this song a long time. Was just putting in a word for those who thought Pete Seeger had penned the words. Bit too far back to know if the words are those of Solomon! Ecclesiastes terms the speaker as: the preacher. But good words all the same!
@@debishelton9647 oh yes! The Byrds version is great!
Lyrics proven throughout millenniums, a beautiful voice to reinforce some proverbial truisms. Nice.
This clip, like all the others that survive on RUclips, omits the touching conversation between Collins and Seeger when she praises him for 'your beautiful song'. I miss that. I do hope it pops up again one day.
Found it ❤️❤️❤️ ruclips.net/video/g6gON8A18-Q/видео.html
I actually found this song through a video that included the conversation you mentioned - look it up, you will find it!
i found this on youtube a while back and forgot about it till now a fantastic duet
The words are taken from the book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible. I was never comfortable with the statement that there was 'a time for hate'. Six days ago, a man who lived not five miles from me went into two mosques in a city 200 miles away, and shot dead 49 innocent people as they prayed. Now, finally, I know what those words mean, and I am comforted by them.
Sad day for NZ indeed, kia kaha .
It's ok to hate hate. google "the paradox of tolerance"......sorry for your country's loss...hug from Canada.
@@peggydwyer1932 Thanks for your link to Karl Popper on "Paradox". I'm using it tonight for a lecture on the relationship between Folk Music and Judeo-Christian thought.
Some of the words were taking from the Bible but Pete Seeger added quite a few of his own and wrote a beautiful song. That wasn't King Solomon that did that.
Essa voz, essa música, fico arrepiado, como pode ser tão linda?
I love the Byrds version, but Judy & Pete here touch deeper to the heart. A question of occasion.
I know there are talented people today. But where has the soul and artistry gone? I feel like we're living in a soulless era. Watching this performance heals my soul which no modern artists can come up with.
Wish it could turn back to 1966. Still listening to this song in 2021.
Ecclesiastes inspired, quarantine pandemic 2020 theme, Godspeed turn, turn, turn.
I always love Judy call ins the music is great if you really listen to turn turn turn it means something listen to the words God bless Judy that's all I have to say
simply incredible
Lovely memory.. thanks for the post.
What a gem.
TRAUMHAFT SCHÖN ❤
God's Masterpiece
Great stuff.
Nach Prediger 3 (Bibel) "Alles hat seine Zeit" ______ Unvergleichbar einmalig schön und einfühlsam. Unglaublich berührend.
Her voice is so sweet sounding. Almost like a bird singing.
Wunderful!
Oh ok now that makes sense , Pete Seeger was a 1960’s celebrity . I always wondered where he came from , and couldn’t imagine he was actually on tv at some point
I think Pete would not have regarded himself as a 'celebrity.'
He was not just a great singer, writer and musician but an activist who couldn't be bullied by the fascist goons, politicians or HUAC.
He literally put his life on the line at Peekskill, NY. He stood shoulder to shoulder with the civil rights movement and union activists.
There is a documentary about Pete, well worth watching, 'The Power Of Song.'
Don't just watch Pete, join in with the songs, which is what Pete wanted, but also do what Pete tried, making the world a better place with justice for all.
Who would think anything this beautiful could be in Black n white?
I think, for Pete anything Black and white was beautiful.
How lucky we were to have had him around to inspire us