Track Listing 1. Po' Lazarus - James Carter & The Prisoners 2. Big Rock Candy Mountain - Harry McClintock 3. You Are My Sunshine - Norman Blake 4. Down to the River to Pray - Alison Krauss 5. I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow - The Soggy Bottom Boys/Dan Tyminski (radio version) 6. Hard Time Killing Floor Blues - Chris Thomas King 7. I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow - Norman Blake 8. Keep on the Sunny Side - The Whites 9. I'll Fly Away - Alison Krauss/Gillian Welch 10. Didn't Leave Nobody But the Baby - Emmylou Harris/Alison Krauss/Gillian Welch 11. In the Highways - Sara, Hanna & Leah Peasall 12. I Am Weary (Let Me Rest) - The Cox Family 13. I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow - John Hartford 14. O Death - Ralph Stanley 15. In the Jailhouse Now - The Soggy Bottom Boys/Tim Blake Nelson 16. I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow - The Soggy Bottom Boys/Dan Tyminski (band version) 17. Indian War Whoop - John Hartford 18. Lonesome Valley - The Fairfield Four 19. Angel Band - The Stanley Brothers
| Details | | Producer: | T Bone Burnett (Compilation) | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Mixed | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes This is an Enhanced CD, which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Includes a 24-page booklet with liner notes by Robert K. Oermann. O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU? won the 2002 Grammy Awards for Album Of The Year and for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For A Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media. "O Death" won the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance. "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow" won the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals. This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Those kings of cinematic quirkiness, the Coen brothers, fashioned their film O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU? as a contemporary adaption of Homer's Odyssey, centering around a group of American chain-gang prisoners. The film's earthy Southern setting makes it a natural for a bluegrass-oriented soundtrack, for which producer T-Bone Burnett picked the cream of the country crop. "Didn't Leave Nobody But the Baby," for example, is a summit meeting of some of the finest contemporary female country vocalists (Gillian Welch, Emmylou Harris, and Alison Krauss). The old school isn't forgotten either, as evidenced by a chilling a cappella rendering of "O Death," courtesy of Ralph Stanley, and by the closing cut, where the Stanley Brothers issue an elegant plea to heaven with "Angel Band."
Editorial Reviews 4 stars out of 5 - ...Mostly traditional spirituals and bluegrass numbers....richly evocative of its time and place, and educational too... Q (12/01/2000)
Included in Mojo's 100 Coolest Movie Soundtracks. Mojo (06/01/2002)
...The rarest of contemporary soundtracks: good (old) music, coherently programmed, and masterfully perfromed....an exceptional album... No Depression (01/01/2001)
3.5 stars out of 5 - ...A collection of folk, bluegrass, gospel and hobo country so true to the music's down-home, egalitarian roots that it's hard to distinguish the old tracks from the new and the folk heroes from screen actors... Rolling Stone (01/18/2001)
Ranked #3 in Mojo's Best [10] Box Sets & Compilations of 2001. Mojo (01/01/2002)
Ranked #56 in EW's 100 Best Movie Soundtracks - ...An unlikely hillbilly smash making 1930s-style string-band music the 1st trend of the 21st-century... Entertainment Weekly (10/12/2001)
Ranked #9 in Rolling Stone's Top 10 2001. Rolling Stone (01/03/2002)
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