John McEuen of Nitty Gritty Dirt Band fame, has allowed us to publish the his story documenting Latvian music icon and rock-a-billy artist Pete Anderson and their recent reunion at Norways’ Seljord Country Music Festival.
McEuen and Anderson forged a friendship during the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s historic 1977 tour of the former Soviet Union. On that tour the Dirt Band became the first American group to perform in the USSR.
While that in itself doesn’t make for much of a story, McEuen enlightens us with Anderson’s struggles and hardship playing Rock & Roll which was deemed an illegal activity in the USSR at that time. According to McEuen, Anderson often had run-ins with the KGB and was nearly beaten to death at one time for playing “American” Rock and Roll music.
For more information on John McEuen you can visit JohnMcEuen.com or NittyGritty.com. You can also find out more about Pete Anderson online at Pete-Anderson.com.
Russia 0, America 1
In 1977 the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band became the first American group to perform in the Soviet Union, an historic event of 28 sold out concerts that was covered by various media including U.S. News and World Report, CBS Nighttime News and Rolling Stone. Jim Brown, documentary director of “Rockin’ the Iron Curtain“ (it explores how American music ‘brought down the Iron Curtain, the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union itself’, due for release in 2011) contends that with their Soviet tour, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band opened the door that allowed this to come about.
A one-hour performance on a Moscow Television show was said to be watched by 140 million viewers. Their 28 concerts caused scenes still talked today about.
During the tour (in Riga, Latvia), they crossed paths with Pete Anderson, already an underground music legend in his country. A friendship started between Pete and band member John McEuen that continues to this day, that now leads to this historic event in their lives, one that could only be dreamed of when they met. It would have seemed then an impossible dream, but it has come about: Pete will be making a cameo appearance during the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s headline performance at Norway’s Seljord Country Music Festival, putting Anderson and the band together for what would have been an impossible and illegal pairing in the ’70′s.
The importance of this circular path is best understood when one knows some of Pete’s journey, and the effects of American music on the lives of those in the Soviet Union:
When Pete started his music career performing Little Richard songs on stage in 1959 – it was an illegal activity. Although he was continually harassed, stopped, had electricity turned during shows, warned of arrest, and physically threatened continually by the KGB.. he continued. His art developed, and the word spread – Pete Anderson became the underground Latvian rocker people sought out, both for his representation of American rockabilly music and his own growing list original songs.
But… he became too popular.
By 1972, after years of defying the authorities by performing and building up a large Baltic fan base, the KGB threatened to kill his newborn daughter if he didn’t stop performing American music…at which time he went into depressed seclusion in the countryside outside of Riga, Latvia’s capital, playing and writing only for friends and very private parties.
One night two years later, he went where a college a band was playing the usual “approved” music. Invited and coaxed on stage to sing, Pete gave the performance he was known for, but after a couple of songs realized his mistake. With thoughts of his wife, soon to deliver their 2nd child, on his mind, he quickly exited the building to head home to his family. The KGB met him outside and nearly beat him to death–to be revived in the hospital later that night.
With further threats to him and his family, Pete returned to his house, got lost in alcohol, and didn’t sing in public again until the late 1980′s, when the Kremlin started to lose its grip and control over Latvia. As threats of prison and physical harm began to finally fade, in 1989 he was allowed to make his first record (after 30 years!), and his career “officially” began.
Pete is a now a music hero and star in the entire Baltic region, and freely headlines his own engagements. He has made many music videos and albums, and continues his successful career today. In 2006, Latvia honored him with his own Postage Stamp – representing and honoring his impact as a cultural hero and great music artist.
The circle of music will be unbroken July 30 when Pete Anderson joins the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band for a cameo appearance (during their classic version of “Will the Circle Be Unbroken”) as they headline Norway’s Country Festival in Seljord. Pete, flying in from Latvia for this event, will be doing something that would have been illegal, life threatening and impossible in an earlier era.
It is ironic that even prior to the 1970′s it was deemed by the KGB that American music was a capitalist plot that could cause great damage to and ‘overthrow’ Communism; in the same period, many in America declared Rock and Roll a communist plot to overthrow America. For once, the KGB was right on target.
At this current time, when America’s past influences in the world are often questioned and criticized, this is a great example of how American music has helped effect a great change socially and politically. It has been said that the Dirt Band helped create the first cracks in the Iron Curtain; that soon after their 28 concert sold out Soviet tour in 1977 other acts soon were to follow (it did take 7 years for that)… and the music helped set them free.
The Show: The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Pete Anderson July 31, 2010 Seljord, Norway
Pete arrived Seljord excited and ready to rock, dressed for a Buddy Holly album cover, with a smile to match his excitement. When I met up with him at the hotel, Jimmy had been talking about hot cars and stuff American, and Pete fell right in to the rap.
Later, as he watched the sound check, I wondered what was going through his mind. He told me “It is like a dream, something I never thought possible. Playing my favorite music with a real American band”. We waited for the end of the set, when his turn would come.
A great festival audience and hot response led to the encore that would bring Pete out. After an appropriate introduction celebrating this event, one that would have put him in jail in another era, or brought personal harm to him and/or his family as it had, Pete came out with guitar and voice to sing on “Will the Circle Be Unbroken.” His contribution turned this encore of ours in to a response that heated the Norse audience even more, and led to being called out for a second encore when they would not quit. So we didn’t quit either, and lit in to “Jambalya.”
Pete switched off verses with Jeff, sang on the choruses, and played rhythm guitar like he had been doing it with us for years. They went crazy… and after a show that had people singing back our own words for many songs as loud as the monitors previous to this closing, with rousing applause and our best acceptance ever in Norway, they just got louder than ever… but we had been on almost two hours and at 1:00 a.m. it was time to call in the dogs and head on back to Bowlegs. (And, earlier in the set that song went over like a hit!)
Thank you Pete, for your dedication and pursuit of American music, and giving us a new appreciation of that. Thanks to all those who gave us a career that allowed this to come about, for you are all part of it. And. especially thanks to all those in the past who fought for the freedoms we often take for granted, but seem to exercise every day, that made this dream a reality.
“Baby Let’s Play House” – Pete Anderson & The Swamp Shakers


