Songcatcher: Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture
Dolly Parton
Patty Loveless
Roseanne Cash
Emmylou Harris
Maria McKee
David Mansfield
Allison Moorer
Emmy Rossum
David Patrick Kelly & Bobby McMillen Hazel Dickens
Pat Carrolls
Label: Vanguard Records
Number of Discs: 1
Format: Audio CD
Release date:8th May 2001
| Soundtrack Audio CD |
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Track Listing
- 1. Fair And Tender Ladies - Roseanne Cash
- 2. Pretty Saro - Iri DeMent
- 3. When Love Is New - Dolly Parton & Emmy Rossum
- 4. Barbara Allen - Emmy Rossum
- 5. Barbara Allen - Emmylou Harris Lyrics
- 6. Moonshiner - Allison Moorer
- 7. Sounds Of Loneliness - Patty Loveless
- 8. All My Tears - Julie Miller
- 9. Wayfarin' Stranger - Maria McKee
- 10. Mary Of The Wild Moor - Sara Evans
- 11. Wind And Rain - Gillian Welch, David Rawlings & David Steele Lyrics
- 12. The Cuckoo Bird - Deana Carter
- 13. Score Suite #1 - David Mansfield
- 14. Conversations With Death - Hazel Dickens, David Patrick Kelly & Bobby McMillen
- 15. Score Suite #2 - David Mansfield
- 16. Single Girl - Pat Carrolls
Amazon.com
Maybe they should have subtitled this album O Sister, Where Art Thou? Like the music from the Coen brothers' O Brother... movie, Songcatcher celebrates the emotional purity of mountain music, the acoustic balladry of the Appalachians--only this soundtrack features an all-female assemblage. Among the luminaries who shine the brightest: Rosanne Cash, who sets the tone with the album-opening "Fair and Tender Ladies"; Julie Miller, whose original "All My Tears" could pass as an old spiritual; Patty Loveless, who returns to her Kentucky roots with "Sounds of Loneliness"; and Gillian Welch, who leads an a cappella rendition of "Wind and Rain." Of the more familiar material, Emmylou Harris seems like she's coasting through the oft-revived "Barbara Allen" while Maria McKee sounds like she's singing for her life on "Wayfarin' Stranger." Yet the emphasis throughout is less on vocal virtuosity than on the stark simplicity of the songs, the album more impressive as an ensemble piece than a showcase for individual singers. --Don McLeese
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