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    Songcatcher II: The Tradition That Inspired the Movie
    Songcatcher II: The Tradition That Inspired the Movie

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    Creators: Michael Davis, Michael Goodwin
    Label: Vanguard Records
    Category: Music

    List Price: $17.98
    Buy New: $12.13
    You Save: $5.85 (33%)



    New (30) Used (8) from $8.00

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
    Sales Rank: 5968

    Format: Soundtrack
    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

    MPN: 79716
    UPC: 015707971621
    EAN: 0015707971621
    ASIN: B000066701

    Release Date: May 7, 2002
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • Babes In The Woods - Almeda Riddle
      • Georgie - Doc Watson
      • The Coo Coo Bird - Hobart Smith
      • The Two Lovers - Almeda Riddle
      • Matty Groves - Doc Watson
      • Oh Death - Dock Boggs
      • Girl Of Constant Sorrow - Sarah Ogan Gunning
      • Winter's Night - Doc Watson
      • Black Jack Davey - Almeda Riddle
      • Wish I Was A Single Girl Again - Cousin Emmy
      • Leather Britches - Fiddlin' Arthur Smith
      • Will The Weaver - Almeda Riddle
      • Little Birdie - Roscoe Holcomb
      • Pretty Saro - Doc Watson
      • House Carpenter - Clarence Ashley
      • Come All Ye Fair And Tender Ladies - Maybelle Carter

    Similar Items:

      • Songcatcher: Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture
      • Songcatcher
      • Songs From the Mountain
      • Classic Mountain Songs from Smithsonian Folkways
      • O Sister! The Women's Bluegrass Collection

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    The first Songcatcher album contained both traditional Appalachian folk ballads and modern songs inspired by the movie of the same name and performed by contemporary female singers, including Iris DeMent, Julie Miller, and Emmylou Harris. The engaging Songcatcher II, however, is a step back in time. The album's 17 recordings date back to the early 1960s folk-music boom, when long-forgotten singers like Dock Boggs, Clarence Ashley, and Almeda Riddle were rediscovered by a new generation of music lovers. They sang ancient English and Scottish ballads that had been brought over to America and passed down through the ages, bleak songs about love, infidelity, God, and murder. Boggs, recorded live at the Newport Folk Festival, offers his bone-chilling version of "Oh Death"; Riddle, who lived her entire life in Greer's Ferry, Arkansas, sings the creepy "Babes in the Woods," in which two children get lost outdoors and die; Roscoe Holcomb, for whom the phrase "high, lonesome sound" was invented, is downright otherworldly as he accompanies himself on banjo on "Little Birdie." The four tracks by Doc Watson, including the lovely "Pretty Saro," come from his early Vanguard albums, which have long been accessible on compact disc, but most of these recordings haven't been available in years, if ever. Culled from Vanguard's extensive archives, they offer a tantalizing glimpse of the label's rich heritage. --David Hill


    Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars Even Better Than The First!   June 23, 2002
     73 out of 74 found this review helpful

    As tireless a defender as I am of the first Songcatcer album against those who dismiss it as little more than slick, overproduced Nashville product (interesting country radio has shunned it, if such is the case) or who gripe that it isn't the music from the film (most of the songs in the film were only sung in short snippets, and the exceptions, such as Iris DeMents stunning version of "Pretty Saro," WERE included) I must admit that the second volume is even better.

    Whereas the first volume was mostly of songs that were inspired by the movie, this second consists of songs that, in their own way, inspired the movie. All the songs here are traditional songs, hundreds of years old with origins from the British Isles that were preserved well into the 20th century by residents of rural parts of the southern Appalachians. Not quite field recordings, but hardly pop versions of these songs, the tracks here are all taken from Vangaurd's remarkable archive of folk recordings.

    The Doc Watson tracks as so exemplary that they alone are worth the price of admission, his take on the old British ballad "Georgie" (aka "Geordie," in some versions) creating such an evocative tale that the song almost sounds like it could have been recorded anytime over the past 450 years. Other songs here follow suit and the whole package (which comes with good liner notes) makes one yearn for even more.


    5 out of 5 stars the tradition, true and unvarnished   June 2, 2002
     62 out of 70 found this review helpful

    Songcatcher was a flawed and peculiarly unlikable film, but if nothing else, it brought two worthy CDs into the world. The first, released last year, featured contemporary artists, mostly Nashville-based acts, who reinterpreted the Southern-mountain tradition in innovative modern settings. Entertaining as its predecessor was, Songcatcher II has the virtue of being the real deal. Its artists grew up in that tradition without ever thinking of it as "folk music." Their performances are unadorned, sometimes even unaccompanied, as in the stark singing of Arkansas's Almeda Riddle and Kentucky's Sarah Ogan Gunning (whose "Girl of Constant Sorrow" is a radical -- in both senses of the adjective -- rewrite, not simply a gender-altered version, of the by now well-known ballad).

    A number of the performances are live, taken from Newport Folk Festival appearances in the 1960s. All four Doc Watson pieces, however, come from his classic Home Again! disc of the same period. This is not a complaint, just an observation; it's one of Doc's finest albums, and the most purely traditional of his Vanguard period. His unforgettable reading of the lyrical "Winter's Night" is mountain music at its most chillingly, achingly lovely.

    Whether you're hearing Watson, Cousin Emmy, Roscoe Holcomb, Dock Boggs, Maybelle Carter, and the rest, for the first time or catching their songs yet again, you're going to be moved and thrilled. How fortunate, in an age that needs its beauty and truth more than ever, that this deep and honest music is finding a broad audience once more.


    5 out of 5 stars My Review For Songcatcher 2   September 3, 2003
     19 out of 26 found this review helpful

    This is a song to song review.1. Almeda Riddle "Babes In The Wood" (5 stars) This woman's voice is amazing. It reminds me of my grandma. Her voice could easily put me to sleep.2. Doc Watson "Georgie" (5 stars) This song could get 5 stars just for the music.3. Hobart Smith "The Coo Coo Bird" (4 stars) I do not like this song but, the banjo playing is great. Plus, this is the best version I have heard.4. Almeda Riddle "The Two Lovers" (5 stars) It is hard to believe somebody could sound so good on a song without music.5. Doc Watson "Matty Groves" (5 stars) This song is so incredibly sad. The music is great.6. Dock Boggs "Oh Death" (2 stars) This might sound better if ol Dock wasn't drunk . But, I doubt it.7. Sarah Ogan Gunning "Girl Of Constant Sorrow" (3 stars) I do not like Sarah's voice but I do like how it tell's the story of coal miner's unlike other version's of this song.8. Doc Watson "Winter's Night" (5 stars) The music and the singing is great. Especially the singing.9. Almeda Riddle "Black Jack Davey" (5 stars) Again, the singing is amazing. The melody and the song are so innocent in their simplicity.10. Dock Boggs "Sugar Baby" (2 stars) This man needed to find a new occupation because he couldn't sing.11. Cousin Emmy "Wish I Was A Single Girl Again" (4 stars) The banjo playing again is excellent. Emmy's voice brings a sense of fun to this track.12. Fiddlin' Arthur Smith "Leather Britches" (4 stars) The playing is good but at times it is too high pitched.13. Almeda Riddle "Will The Weaver" (5 stars) This song is the best. Once again, amazing vocals. Also, this song has a great dark humor to it.14. Roscoe Holcomb "Little Birdie" (3 stars) The vocals were a little off.15. Doc Watson "Pretty Saro" (4 stars) Doc's voice is great. This song is great. But I like Iris Dement's version better. You can find Iris' version on Songcatcher 1.16. Clarence Ashley "House Carpenter" (3 stars) I don't really know what to think of this track.17. Maybelle Carter "Come All Ye Fair And Tender Ladies" ( 5 stars) This song is beautiful. It is sung by one of the best voices of all time. The autoharp playing is excellent.My comments on the whole album is that it is a great album, but the Dock Boggs tracks are stinkers.Corey & Robert


    5 out of 5 stars A Rustic Treasure   May 15, 2003
     12 out of 13 found this review helpful

    In Appalachian lingo, a songcatcher is someone who "catches" (learns) ballads, preserving them with a recording device. The surprise success of O Brother, Where Art Thou? naturally encouraged projects such as the film Songcatcher and its spinoff Songcatcher: Music From And Inspired By The Motion Picture. Songcatcher II moves backward from Vanguard's earlier Songcatcher cd. Here are 17 tracks from the 1960s by 10 true songcatchers (most in their autumn years), with four ballads each from Almeda Riddle and the disc's sole surviving singer, the blind guitar wiz Doc Watson.

    Some tracks come from 1960s Newport Folk Festivals. Others, such as Watson's and Riddle's, enjoy the studio sound that justified Vanguard's old motto "recordings for the connoisseur." Variants of two O Brother classics appear: Doc Boggs' fearful "O Death" and Sarah Ogan Gunning's a cappella "Maid Of Constant Sorrow." The latter reflects Gunning's life in an impoverished Kentucky mining town where, to paraphrase Merle Travis, folks owed their souls to the company store. My favorite is Watson's six-minute tale of deadly infidelity, "Matty Groves," - one of the songs brought to America by Scottish and English settlers.


    3 out of 5 stars Worth the listen   July 7, 2003
     12 out of 24 found this review helpful

    While the music on this CD is not anywhere near as good as the music in the original movie, "Songcatcher," it is better than much of the music from the movie because it is sung by mountain people as opposed to big-name recording artists (or at least mountain-recording artists as opposed to the likes of Emmy Lous Harris & Dolly Parton). Emmy Lou & Dolly do a fine job on the CD music from the original movie, but if I wanted to listen to Dolly, I'd buy her CDs. The music on this CD is soulful and inspiring.


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