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GRAMMYs

Billy Bragg

Photo: Lynne Margolis

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Set List Bonus: 2013 Americana Music Festival & Conference

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THE GRAMMYs
GRAMMYs
Dec 2, 2014 - 3:22 pm

Welcome to The Set List. Here you'll find the latest concert recaps for many of your favorite, or maybe not so favorite, artists. Our bloggers will do their best to provide you with every detail of the show, from which songs were on the set list to what the artist was wearing to which out-of-control fan made a scene. Hey, it'll be like you were there. And if you like what you read, we'll even let you know where you can catch the artist on tour. Feel free to drop us a comment and let us know your concert experience. Oh, and rock on.

By Lynne Margolis
Nashville, Tenn.

In 14 years, the Americana Music Festival & Conference has grown from a small gathering of industry professionals to thousands of attendees, each attracted by a mix of legendary and newcomer performers and panelists, an expanding list of special events, and the occasional chance to interact with music icons.

When the Americana Honors & Awards show was added in 2001, it became an instant highlight of the Americana Music Association's annual fall gathering, held this year from Sept. 18–22. And for most of those years, MC Jim Lauderdale, a two-time GRAMMY winner, has kept a running joke about what, exactly, Americana music actually is.

Though Merriam-Webster began defining it in 2011 as "a genre of American music having roots in early folk and country music," Americana is a mix of country, bluegrass, folk, blues, rock, soul, and anything else considered "roots music." At this year's awards show, held Sept. 18 in Nashville's revered Ryman Auditorium (known as "the mother church of country music"), Lauderdale said it's a genre in which the past and traditions matter, "even as we celebrate the infinite new ways those traditions can be extended and expanded."

The thread linking old to new was conveyed with the President's Award, posthumously presented to country standard-bearer Hank Williams, "the hillbilly Shakespeare." Granddaughter Holly Williams accepted, then joined the Buddy Miller-led house band for a rendition of "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry."   

On Sept. 20 she performed during a showcase at 3rd & Lindsley that also included renowned songwriters Darrell Scott and Tim O'Brien. Among Scott's compositions is an ode to her grandfather, "Hank Williams' Ghost." Holly Williams, who called Americana "a home for artists like myself who may be a little too this for that and a little too that for this," performed a beautiful version of John Prine's "Angel From Montgomery," followed by "Waiting On June," the true story of her maternal grandparents' life together.

During his rave-earning showcase on Sept. 19, GRAMMY-nominated singer/songwriter John Fullbright said he was reluctant to embrace Americana "when they started throwin' that term around." But now, he admitted, "I'm liking it. This is my kind of people."

"His kind of people" could be found mingling with fans and fellow players throughout the week, including during a post-awards showcase/jam hosted by actor/banjo player Ed Helms that attracted Instrumentalist of the Year winner Larry Campbell and Emerging Artist of the Year nominees the Milk Carton Kids, who nearly stole the awards show with their mesmerizing performance. That wasn't an easy feat during a night that also featured Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell, who won Duo/Group of the Year and Album of the Year for Old Yellow Moon, and Shovels & Rope, the husband-and-wife duo of Cary Ann Hearst and Michael Trent, who earned Song of the Year for "Birmingham" and Emerging Artist of the Year honors. Lifetime Achievement for Performance honoree Dr. John performed with guitarist Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys; for his first performance in a decade, Grateful Dead lyricist and Lifetime Achievement for Songwriting honoree Robert Hunter delivered a wonderful solo rendition of the Dead's "Ripple." Lifetime Achievement for Instrumentalist winner Duane Eddy credited Hank Williams as his inspiration.

Crosby, Stills & Nash songwriter/guitarist and Spirit of Americana Free Speech Award recipient Stephen Stills invited former Buffalo Springfield bandmate Richie Furay and the Rides collaborator Kenny Wayne Shepherd onstage for a fiery rendition of "For What It's Worth" that presenter Rosanne Cash proclaimed "an out-of-body experience."

Throughout the conference and festival, attendees took in performances by young artists such as JD McPherson, Aoife O'Donovan and the Lone Bellow, while also absorbing the wisdom of veterans such as Paul Kelly and Woody Guthrie disciple Billy Bragg, who noted, "I don't work in the record industry. I work in the music industry. There's a difference."

For many, that's the crux of Americana: It's music that has to be made, whether it finds a market or not. Americana might be today's fastest-growing genre, but for artists and listeners alike, it’s still about authentic music.

(Austin-based writer/editor Lynne Margolis contributes regularly to print, broadcast and online media including American Songwriter and Lone Star Music magazines. Outlets also have included the Christian Science Monitor, Paste, Rollingstone.com and NPR affiliates. A contributing editor to the encyclopedia, The Ties That Bind: Bruce Springsteen From A To E To Z, she also writes bios for new and established artists. This year's Americana Festival & Conference was her 10th.)

GRAMMYs

Bonnie Raitt and John Hiatt

Photo: Rick Diamond/Getty Images

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Strong Roots: The 2012 Americana Music Festival & Conference

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THE GRAMMYs
GRAMMYs
Dec 2, 2014 - 3:22 pm

By Baron Lane

What is Americana music? The central and elusive question asked in the 13-year history of the Americana Music Festival & Conference was attempted to be put to rest in 2011 when the word was added to Merriam-Webster's dictionary. According to the dictionary listing, Americana is a "genre of American music with roots in early folk and country music."

But what the definition achieves in brevity it fails in accuracy as the genre stretches far beyond early folk and country music. From Sept. 12–15 Nashville played host for the premier gathering of Americana's industry professionals and fans, including roughly 150 performers. Though there is a unifying DIY ethos and a paramount focus on songwriting among Americana artists, the enthralled audience witnessed a sampler platter of performances that ranged from Canadian neo-folk duo Whitehorse to the hell-raising, guns-blazing red dirt band Reckless Kelly. Audience members would not be remiss if they questioned whether the diverse lineup of artists spawned from the same Americana family.

But a close listener would be rewarded with some of the finest and most authentic music being created today. More than 150 acts on five stages kept the music full tilt long into the fall-tinged Tennessee nights for fans and performers in town from as far away as Scotland and Australia. Established veterans such as GRAMMY-nominated artists Darrell Scott and Billy Joe Shaver shared a bill with newcomers that included honky-tonk upstarts Turnpike Troubadours and swamp-funk collective Jimbo Mathus & The Tri-State Coalition. Witnessing veterans and newcomers share the stage was similar to watching a passing of the torch that rewarded fans with spectacular shows.

Also featured were one-of-a-kind events such as a tribute to the late Gram Parsons featuring Jim Lauderdale, Brendan Benson, honeyhoney, and Tim Easton, among others, who performed their favorite selections by a patron saint of Americana.

Then there was the outstanding Mercyland event celebrating Nashville veteran Phil Madeira's non-denominational release in the historic Downtown Presbyterian Church featuring Luther Dickinson, Amy Stroup, Kasey Chambers, Shane Nicholson, and Emmylou Harris. This event had everyone out of their seats.

The Americana Honors & Awards show is singular in the quality of talent across the nominees and performers it featured. Hosted Sept. 12 at the hallowed Ryman Auditorium, multiple generations of artists were honored, including Booker T. Jones, Bonnie Raitt and Richard Thompson, all of whom received Lifetime Achievement Awards, along with Justin Townes Earle, Robert Ellis, the Mavericks, Punch Brothers, Chambers, Nicholson, Hayes Carll, Cary Ann Hearst, Carolina Chocolate Drops, and Alabama Shakes. Alabama Shakes, who took home the Emerging Artist award, teamed with Jones for a raucous performance of their "Be Mine." John Hiatt and Raitt also teamed for "Thing Called Love." The inspired performances seemed to draw from the historic surroundings and the ghosts of the greats that had performed there during the Grand Ole Opry's glory days.

From the stage, Americana Music Association Executive Director Jed Hilly spread the gospel. "Tonight was a perfect example of why I love Americana. From the rock and soul of Alabama Shakes to the perfection of Gillian [Welch] and Dave [Rawlings], all of our winners honor the traditions of American roots music while pushing the form forward."

Of course he was singing to a choir of true believers. Even though the event continues to gain in popularity, what is perhaps most impressive is it remains intimate and inclusive.

"We've been fortunate to balance success with integrity," said Hilly.

Upon accepting her Lifetime Achievement Award from Hiatt, GRAMMY-winning blues rocker and conference keynote speaker Raitt summed up the genre and the event perfectly.

"Who cares what kind of music it is?" she asked. "It's great music. … It needs to be celebrated."

(Baron Lane is a Bay Area-living ex-pat Texan. You can read his thoughts on Americana/roots music at www.twangnation.com. He is also the official GRAMMY.com Community Blogger for the Americana genre. He's onry, but good-natured.) 

GRAMMYs

Sarah Jarosz

Photo: Steve Granitz/WireImage.com

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Exploring The American Roots Field Nominees

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A look at the nominees in the American Roots Field categories for the 56th GRAMMY Awards
Crystal Larsen
GRAMMYs
Dec 2, 2014 - 4:06 pm

You've seen the list of nominees, now take a closer look at the artists nominated in the American Roots Field categories for the 56th Annual GRAMMY Awards.

First-time nominee Edie Brickell, previous GRAMMY nominees Sarah Jarosz, Charlie Musselwhite and Allen Toussaint, and GRAMMY winner Steve Martin lead the American Roots Field with two nominations each. Additional first-time nominees include Joe Bonamassa, the Boxcars, Della Mae, James Harman, Beth Hart, Mark Hummel, James King, and the Milk Carton Kids. Returning GRAMMY winners looking to add to their GRAMMY gold are James Cotton, Rodney Crowell, the Del McCoury Band, Steve Earle, Ben Harper, Emmylou Harris, Jim Lauderdale, Buddy Miller, Tim O'Brien, Mavis Staples, and Terrance Simien & The Zydeco Experience.

Best American Roots Song

Sarah Jarosz, "Build Me Up From Bones" (Sarah Jarosz, songwriter)

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Jarosz has two nominations this year and one prior GRAMMY nomination.

Steve Earle & The Dukes (& Duchesses), "Invisible" (Steve Earle, songwriter)

GRAMMYs

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Steve Earle & The Dukes (& Duchesses) - Invisible [Official Music Video]


Steve Earle & The Dukes (& Duchesses) have one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of their career. As a solo artist, Earle has 15 prior GRAMMY nominations and three prior GRAMMY wins.

Tim O'Brien And Darrell Scott, "Keep Your Dirty Lights On" (Tim O'Brien & Darrell Scott, songwriters)

O'Brien has one nomination this year, four prior GRAMMY nominations, including one as part of Hot Rize, and one prior GRAMMY win. Scott has one nomination this year and three prior GRAMMY nominations.

Steve Martin & Edie Brickell, "Love Has Come For You" (Edie Brickell & Steve Martin, songwriters)

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Steve Martin & Edie Brickell - "Love Has Come For You" (Lyric Video)


Brickell has two nominations this year, marking the first GRAMMY nominations of her career. Martin has two nominations this year, 11 prior GRAMMY nominations and four prior GRAMMY wins.

Allen Toussaint, "Shrimp Po-Boy, Dressed" (Allen Toussaint, songwriter)

Toussaint has two nominations this year and four prior GRAMMY nominations.

Best Americana Album

Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell, Old Yellow Moon

GRAMMYs

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Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell: "Hanging Up My Heart"

Harris has one nomination this year, 44 prior GRAMMY nominations and 12 prior GRAMMY wins.

Steve Martin & Edie Brickell, Love Has Come For You

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Steve Martin & Edie Brickell - ""When You Get To Asheville"

Brickell has two nominations this year, marking the first GRAMMY nominations of her career. Martin has two nominations this year, 11 prior GRAMMY nominations and four prior GRAMMY wins.

Buddy Miller And Jim Lauderdale, Buddy And Jim

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Buddy Miller and Jim Lauderdale - It Hurts Me

Miller has one nomination this year, two prior GRAMMY nominations and one prior GRAMMY win. Lauderdale has one nomination this year, six prior GRAMMY nominations and two prior GRAMMY wins.

Mavis Staples, One True Vine

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Mavis Staples - "I Like The Things About Me"

Staples has one nomination this year, six prior GRAMMY nominations, including one as part of the Staple Singers, and one prior GRAMMY win.

Allen Toussaint, Songbook

Toussaint has two nominations this year and four prior GRAMMY nominations.

Best Bluegrass Album

The Boxcars, It's Just A Road

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

The Boxcars Live from the XM Studios - "You Took All the Rambling Out of Me"


The Boxcars have one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of their career.

Dailey & Vincent, Brothers Of The Highway

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Dailey & Vincent - "When I Stop Dreaming" (OFFICIAL VIDEO)


Dailey & Vincent have one nomination this year and two prior GRAMMY nominations.

Della Mae, This World Oft Can Be

GRAMMYs

Content Not Available

Della Mae - "Empire" (Official Video)

Della Mae have one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of their career.

James King, Three Chords And The Truth

King has one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of his career.

Del McCoury Band, The Streets Of Baltimore

The Del McCoury Band have one nomination this year, 10 prior GRAMMY nominations and one prior GRAMMY win.

Best Blues Album

Billy Boy Arnold, Charlie Musselwhite, Mark Hummel, Sugar Ray Norcia & James Harman, Remembering Little Walter

Arnold has one nomination this year and one prior GRAMMY nomination. Musselwhite has three nominations this year, including Best Music Film for I'm In I'm Out And I'm Gone: The Making Of Get Up!, and eight prior GRAMMY nominations. Hummel has one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of his career. Norcia has one nomination this year and two prior GRAMMY nominations.

James Cotton, Cotton Mouth Man

Cotton has one nomination this year, nine prior GRAMMY nominations and one prior GRAMMY win.

Beth Hart & Joe Bonamassa, Seesaw

Hart and Bonamassa have one nomination each this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of their respective careers.

Bobby Rush, Down In Louisiana

Rush has one nomination this year and one prior GRAMMY nomination.

56th GRAMMYs: American Roots Field Nominees Playlist

56th GRAMMYs: American Roots Nominees


Best Folk Album

Guy Clark, My Favorite Picture Of You

Clark has one nomination this year and six prior GRAMMY nominations.

The Greencards, Sweetheart Of The Sun

The Greencards have one nomination this year and two prior GRAMMY nominations.

Sarah Jarosz, Build Me Up From Bones

Jarosz has two nominations this year and one prior GRAMMY nomination.

The Milk Carton Kids, The Ash & Clay

The Milk Carton Kids have one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of their career.

Various Artists, They All Played For Us: Arhoolie Records 50th Anniversary Celebration

Album producer Chris Strachwitz has one nomination this year and two prior GRAMMY nominations.

Best Regional Roots Music Album

Hot 8 Brass Band, The Life & Times Of...The Hot 8 Brass Band

The Hot 8 Brass Band have one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of their career.

Kahulanui, Hula Ku'i

Kahulanui have one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of their career.

Zachary Richard, Le Fou

Richard has one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of his career.

Terrance Simien & The Zydeco Experience, Dockside Sessions

Terrance Simien & The Zydeco Experience have one nomination this year, one prior GRAMMY nomination and one prior GRAMMY win. 

Joe Tohonnie Jr., Apache Blessing & Crown Dance Songs

Tohonnie has one nomination this year, marking the first GRAMMY nomination of his career.

Who will take home the awards in the American Roots Field categories? Tune in to the 56th Annual GRAMMY Awards on Jan. 26, 2014, taking place at Staples Center in Los Angeles and airing live on CBS from 8–11:30 p.m. (ET/PT). 

(Note: The videos embedded reflect official videos available through official artist and record label channels.)

GRAMMYs

Depeche Mode's Martin Gore and Dave Gahan

Photo: Rick Kern/WireImage.com

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Set List Bonus: 2013 Austin City Limits Music Festival

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THE GRAMMYs
GRAMMYs
Dec 2, 2014 - 3:22 pm

Welcome to The Set List. Here you'll find the latest concert recaps for many of your favorite, or maybe not so favorite, artists. Our bloggers will do their best to provide you with every detail of the show, from which songs were on the set list to what the artist was wearing to which out-of-control fan made a scene. Hey, it'll be like you were there. And if you like what you read, we'll even let you know where you can catch the artist on tour. Feel free to drop us a comment and let us know your concert experience. Oh, and rock on.

By Lynne Margolis
Austin, Texas

When the Austin City Limits Music Festival kicked off as a two-day event in 2002, promoters were concerned how it would fare. In 2003 it expanded to three days. This year, it swelled to two weekends, with the Oct. 4–6 lineup scheduled to repeat Oct. 11–13. But with more than 130 acts on eight stages in Austin's Zilker Park, even six days wouldn't be enough to catch every single one.

This year's bill was neatly summed up by one festivalgoer as "nostalgia versus now." Headliners playing against each other on day one were Depeche Mode and Muse. Day two pitted the Cure against Kings Of Leon, and on day three Atoms For Peace (featuring Radiohead's Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich and Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist Flea) duked it out with Lionel Richie.

Some of the most exciting sets occurred on smaller stages or earlier in the day. Highlights on Oct. 4 included performances by Americana artists Shovels & Rope and Holly Williams, along with gospel group the Blind Boys Of Alabama and British folkie Jake Bugg, whose voice earned an offhand comparison to Herman's Hermits' Peter Noone and — when he covered "Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)" — Neil Young. The surprise of the day may have been Kaskade, aka Ryan Raddon, whose evening DJ set, complete with a wild light show and smoke cannons, inspired a massive dance party.

On Oct. 5 standouts included Valerie June, a real-deal genre-jumper from Memphis who played the BMI stage. Festival veterans know this stage often features up-and-comers, and June, who played acoustic guitar, electric guitar (using a long scarf in a slide to make it fit her thin finger) and banjo, channeled nearly every Tennessee sound imaginable to create what she calls "organic moonshine roots music." It encompassed blues, gospel, soul, twangy "hillbilly," bluegrass, folk, and even some doo-wop.

"Every roots musician, no matter what kind of roots you do, it's good to always throw in a murder ballad," June announced before delivering "Shotgun," followed by "Workin' Woman Blues."

North Carolina six-member band Delta Rae delivered a powerful set of arena-ready pop, blues and gospel-influenced tunes, including a kinetic "Dance In The Graveyards" and a cover of Fleetwood Mac's "The Chain."

Reunited Austin band the True Believers, featuring singer/guitarists Alejandro Escovedo, his brother Javier, and Jon Dee Graham, cranked up some steamy, melodic rock and roll, including "Dedication" and "The Rain Won't Help You When It's Over," but the Oct. 5 set that kept everyone buzzing came from the also reunited Mavericks.

Fronted by the formidable Raul Malo, who possesses one of the finest voices in any genre, the band reeled off one Latin-flavored favorite after another, including "Every Little Thing About You," "Come Unto Me," "There Goes My Heart," and "All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down." The audience danced and sang along exuberantly during a set that several fans said was too short.

Oct. 6 brought Dawes' folk rock, the McCrary Sisters' gospel harmonies, Red Baraat's East-meets-West funk, party rock from Franz Ferdinand, Atoms For Peace's rhythmic explorations, and singer-songwriter Neko Case's compelling set. Brooklyn, N.Y., band the Lone Bellow's powerful folk pop drew a curious audience, many of whom beelined for the onsite album shop afterward, and Austin's own Shinyribs —  the alter-ego of the Gourds' Kevin Russell — delivered an alternately hilarious and beguiling set full of blues, reggae, funk, folk, and unbridled fun. Russell stole festivalgoers' hearts working in popular originals such as "Take Me Lake Charles" and "East Texas Rust" with covers, including T-Pain's "Buy U A Drank (Shawty Snappin')" — into which he injected falsetto bits of Marvin Gaye's "Sexual Healing" (complete with hip swivels) and a reference to "Dancing On The Ceiling" as a nod to Richie.

And they all get to do it again next week.

(Austin-based writer/editor Lynne Margolis contributes regularly to print, broadcast and online media including American Songwriter and Lone Star Music magazines. Outlets also have included the Christian Science Monitor, Paste, Rollingstone.com and NPR affiliates. A contributing editor to the encyclopedia, The Ties That Bind: Bruce Springsteen From A To E To Z, she also writes bios for new and established artists. This year's Austin City Limits Music Festival was her 11th.)

(L-R) John Turturro, Tim Blake Nelson and George Clooney in 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?'

(L-R) John Turturro, Tim Blake Nelson and George Clooney in 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?'

Photo: Universal/Getty Images

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'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' At 20 o-brother-where-art-thou-20-year-anniversary

20 Years Ago, 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' Crashed The Country Music Party

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In honor of the 20-year anniversary of the GRAMMY-winning album, GRAMMY.com spoke to the creative minds behind the groundbreaking soundtrack, including T Bone Burnett, Dan Tyminski, Luke Lewis and others
Jim Beaugez
GRAMMYs
Dec 5, 2020 - 1:29 pm

The Coen Brothers' 2000 tragicomedy O Brother, Where Art Thou?, set in Mississippi during the Great Depression, pulls deeply from the early-20th century American songbook to drive the film's Homeric storyline, which entangles the lives of escaped convicts Delmar O'Donnell (Tim Blake Nelson), Pete Hogwallop (John Turturro) and Ulysses Everett McGill (George Clooney).

But while nearly all 19 tracks on the original soundtrack, released December 5, 2000, are once-popular songs enshrined in the Library of Congress, the music wasn't designed to be a hit outside the world of the Soggy Bottom Boys, the film's fictional band composed of the main characters. "Old-Time Music is Very Much Alive!" trumpets the faux Nashville Banner headline in the liner notes to the film's original soundtrack, "But you won't hear it on 'country' radio." 

The prophecy proved true. The popularity of O Brother, Where Art Thou? didn't help traditional music break into radio programmers' playlists—the single for "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow" peaked at No. 35 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart—but it didn't matter. The soundtrack sold more than 8 million copies in the U.S., certified eight times platinum, and won Album Of The Year at the 44th GRAMMY Awards.

On that February evening in 2002, bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley stunned the audience at the Staples Center in Los Angeles with an a cappella performance of "O Death," a traditional folk song featured on the soundtrack, delivered by the then-73-year-old under a single spotlight in the middle of the darkened arena. (Stanley went on to win the Best Male Country Vocal Performance GRAMMY for the track that night.)

"Having Ralph Stanley stand on a stool in the middle of the room and sing 'O Death' was the pinnacle of my entire career," Luke Lewis, whose Lost Highway label released the soundtrack and who also led the Nashville operations of Mercury, MCA and UMG at various points, tells GRAMMY.com. "I was sitting with a bunch of f*cking gangster rappers who were completely blown away."

But the odyssey began long before a host of country, gospel and bluegrass ringers upturned the industry on music's biggest night—before the Coen Brothers even began filming, in fact.

In the spring of 1999, producer T Bone Burnett convened at Sound Emporium in Nashville with a who's who of roots musicians from the city's vibrant bluegrass scene, including Gillian Welch and Alison Krauss & Union Station, to put the song cycle to tape. Lewis, who was just beginning to assemble Lost Highway Records as a creative haven for roots artists like Lucinda Williams, caught wind of the sessions and went to investigate.

"I walked into that creative process when all that was going on, and the Coen Brothers are hanging, T Bone's in there," Lewis recalls. "All these amazing artists come in there and do the record old school, with a mic in the middle of the room."

Classics such as "I'll Fly Away," "You Are My Sunshine" and "In The Jailhouse Now"—the latter sung by actor Tim Blake Nelson—are rendered slower and lower than typical bluegrass interpretations. That was an intentional move, Burnett says, to capitalize on the bass response of the subwoofer-loaded sound systems in movie theaters.

"The first thing we did was stretch the sonic spectrum that bluegrass was ordinarily recorded in, which was very high—the banjo was high, the singing was high, the violins were high, the mandolins were high—and we lowered it a couple of octaves and approached it more as a rock 'n' roll album rather than a traditional bluegrass record."

While Krauss took lead vocals on "Down To The River To Pray," elsewhere collaborating with Welch and Emmylou Harris on "Didn't Leave Nobody But The Baby," her Union Station guitarist Dan Tyminski was asked to audition for the cut of a lifetime: singing lead on "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow," the hit Soggy Bottom Boys song "sung" by George Clooney in the film. 

"I was happy to do it, but I honestly didn't feel like it made a lot of sense," Tyminski remembers. "I didn't necessarily see myself sounding like Clooney's voice at the time, but it's hard to see from your own perspective what other people see or hear. So, I went back and auditioned the next day, and somehow [I] got it, and just couldn't have been more shocked at what would follow."

Read: 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' Soundtrack | For The Record

The brains behind the soundtrack were just as surprised when the film opened in France, prior to its stateside debut, and sold 70,000 copies of the album within a month. It was a hint of what was to come in the U.S. 

As the film's signature song, "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow" helped drive the soundtrack to the No. 1 spot on the Billboard 200, where it spent 15 weeks during a 683-week run on the chart.

The song became Tyminski's calling card, but he almost didn't get to play it. After his version was done and filming had begun, Clooney himself asked to take a pass at the vocal. Tyminski went back to the studio on a day off from shooting and backed him on guitar.

Explore The 'O Brother, Where Art Thou?' OST

"George is actually a really great singer and had learned the song well, and he sang a killer version of it," Burnett says. "But it didn't have the thrill in it that Dan's version had. And so I just said, 'This is great, but we're supposed to be making a movie about a hit record, and now we've got something that sounds like a hit record, so I think we should stick with that. What do you think?' And I think he was relieved, really."

Tyminski says the recording process also played a role in the decision to use his version. "It's not that he couldn't do the job," he says, "but for the sake of the movie, it had to be one take, live, no fixes. It was all really pure, all very organic. 

"After he had taken a couple of swings at it and got the words jumbled a couple of times, he says, 'Dan, I'll make you a deal: I'll act, you sing.' And quite honestly, I was so disappointed because I thought it was so cool to have recorded the song with Clooney. At the time, it felt like that was a bigger deal than singing the song myself. It wasn't until a little bit later that I realized what a loss that would have been. It ended up being the biggest song of my career, easily."

Read: Exclusive: Gillian Welch On Vinyl, Songwriting, 'O Brother...' & More

Tracking down the writers of songs composed nearly a century earlier proved to be an enormous job for Burnett and Denise Stiff, who managed Welch and Union Station. The songs were recorded and re-recorded over the decades, and many versions were unique enough to support their own copyrights. That meant when Burnett used or rewrote an arrangement, they had to determine which previous version of the song was closest and credit the right people. 

"'Man Of Constant Sorrow' has, I think, 50 copyrights in the Library Of Congress," Burnett says. "The one we worked with most closely was The Stanley Brothers' version. Even though we had done our own arrangement, we could've gotten sued by 50 people for infringement."

The version of "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow" recorded for the film earned Tyminski a GRAMMY for Best Country Collaboration With Vocals at the 2002 GRAMMYs. In addition to the Album Of The Year win, the soundtrack also won for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For A Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media, while T Bone Burnett won for Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical.

Two decades later, it's hard to say what lasting impact the success of O Brother, Where Art Thou? made on contemporary country music, or popular music in general. The widespread acclaim for the film and soundtrack is undeniable, and they both made gobs of money. But it could be argued—and Burnett does—that a revival of roots music was already underway when it all hit. 

"The reason I think it was so successful [was] because, one, there was already a very strong traditional music trend," Burnett says. "Kids were learning how to do it."

So-called "alt-country" bands like Wilco and Old 97's were impacting the lower rungs of industry charts, along with Jayhawks, Whiskeytown and others. Bluegrass trio Nickel Creek had hooked up with Krauss and released their 2000 self-titled, platinum-selling album, while bluegrass-adjacent bands Old Crow Medicine Show and The Avett Brothers were beginning to make names for themselves on the touring circuit. 

"Certainly, country radio didn't change, and you wish for things like that to happen," Lost Highway founder Lewis says. "But it makes you aware that there's a wider world than what you hear on mainstream radio, and for a lot of people who really love music, you need something to lead you down the path because it's hard to find guideposts to things you might like. I think O Brother had that sort of impact."

There's another reason, too, Burnett suggests. On the night of the 2002 GRAMMYs, Americans were still reeling from the September 11 terrorist attacks that took place just five months earlier. Tony Bennett and Billy Joel sang a duet on "New York State Of Mind," a nod to the resilience of the city amid tragedy. Alan Jackson performed "Where Were You (When The World Stopped Turning)" in front of children's art created in reaction to the attacks in New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania. And in the middle of it all, Ralph Stanley stood on the GRAMMY stage, alone and vulnerable, pleading with his maker, "Won't you spare me over for another year?"

"Art responds to events without the artists meaning to at all," Burnett says. "The Beatles weren't responding to Kennedy's assassination, and yet everything about The Beatles felt like the thing that we needed the most after the Kennedy assassination. People were looking for our identity as Americans. Why did we get hit like this? Who were we?"

While the music of O Brother, Where Art Thou? offered millions of Americans the comfort of nostalgia, it impacted others in more material ways.

"It did amazing things for the artists that were involved," Lewis says. "All of a sudden, they were going on the road and making 10 times what they made before the record came out. They got royalty payments that they probably didn't ever dream of."

Mississippi-born singer James Carter had forgotten about the day in September 1959 when Alan Lomax recorded him singing "Po Lazarus" at the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman until producers tracked him down in Chicago to present him with a platinum record plaque and a $20,000 royalty check for his performance. The 76-year-old former convict even attended the GRAMMY Awards that night, though he could barely remember recording the song.

In the years that followed, Tyminski recalls that the demographics of Union Station shows began to swing younger than before: more rock T-shirts, more spiked haircuts. He also remembers the rousing applause for the song that George Clooney, as Ulysses Everett McGill, sang into a can in the film's pivotal recording scene.

"From that point forward, that song was in every single show that we did," Tyminski says. "But when you have a song that's been that good to you and that people identify with and they want to hear, shame on you if you're not willing to play that song for the rest of your life."

How 1995 Became A Blockbuster Year For Movie Soundtracks

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