O Brother, Where Art Thou?

Various Artists - Soundtrack O Brother, Where Art Thou?

Various Artists - Soundtrack
Label: Lost Highway
Number of Discs: 1
Format: Audio CD
Release date:5th December 2000

Soundtrack Audio CD $3.75Buy now at Amazon

Track Listing

  • 1. Po Lazarus - J. Carter & Prisoners
  • 2. Big Rock Candy Mountain - Harry McLintock
  • 3. You Are My Sunshine - Norman Blake
  • 4. Down In The River To Pray - Alison Krauss
  • 5. I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow - The Soggy Bottom Boys featuring Dan Tyminski
  • 6. Hard Time Killing Floor Blues - Chris Thomas King
  • 7. Man Of Constant Sorrow (Instrumental) - Norman Blake
  • 8. Keep On The Sunny Side - The Whites
  • 9. I'll Fly Away - Gillian Welch & Alison Krauss
  • 10. Didn't Leave Nobody But The Baby - Gillian Welch, Alison Krauss & Emmylou Harris
  • 11. In The Highways - The Peasall Sisters
  • 12. I Am Weary - The Cox Family
  • 13. I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow (Instrumental) - John Hartford
  • 14. O Death - Ralph Stanley
  • 15. In The Jailhouse Now - The Soggy Bottom Boys featuring Tim Blake Nelson
  • 16. I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow (With band) - The Soggy Bottom Boys featuring Dan Tyminski
  • 17. Indian War Whoop (Instrumental) - John Hartford
  • 18. Lonesome Valley - The Fairfield Four
  • 19. Angel Band - The Stanley Brothers

Product Description

The enhanced portion contains a screensaver, links to Websites, and the ability to play the music through the computer.
Genre: Soundtracks & Scores
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 5-DEC-2000

Amazon.com's Best of 2001

The best soundtracks are like movies for the ears, and O Brother, Where Art Thou? joins the likes of Saturday Night Fever and The Harder They Come as cinematic pinnacles of song. The music from the Coen brothers' Depression-era film taps into the source from which the purest strains of country, blues, bluegrass, folk, and gospel music flow. Producer T Bone Burnett enlists the voices of Alison Krauss, Gillian Welch, Emmylou Harris, Ralph Stanley, and kindred spirits for performances of traditional material, in arrangements that are either a cappella or feature bare-bones accompaniment. Highlights range from the aching purity of Krauss's "Down to the River to Pray" to the plainspoken faith of the Whites' "Keep on the Sunny Side" to Stanley's chillingly plaintive "O Death." The album's spiritual centerpiece finds Krauss, Welch, and Harris harmonizing on "Didn't Leave Nobody but the Baby," a gospel lullaby that sounds like a chorus of Appalachian angels. --Don McLeese

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