Album Review: Various Artists - Inside Llewyn Davis OST


In the last year or so, major entertainment publications have referred to much of today’s mainstream music as “the great folk revival.” It’s true that bands like Mumford and Sons and the Lumineers, amongst others, have re-popularized a sound straight out of the 1960s, but it’s probably more accurate to call them folk-inspired rather than straight-up folk. This distinction has always been a sticking point for true “folkies” who harp on about authenticity, however, the release of the Inside Llewyn Davis soundtrack is proof that folk-inspired can sound pretty, pretty great—if not better than its original inspiration—when it’s done right.

Inside Llewyn Davis is set to debut in December 2013, but the accompanying soundtrack is almost perfect enough to be a standalone album. Produced by T. Bone Burnett, who also wrote and produced the award-winning soundtrack to O Brother, Where Art Thou? (another Coen brothers’ film), Llewyn Davis proves that O Brothers success was more than just lightening in a bottle. Once again, he has taken historical sounds and adapted them for the modern ear, so much so that the 30s-inspired bluegrass and 60s-inspired folk music on your iPod make sense alongside anything released in the last 10 years.

The album is stacked with heavy-hitting talent. Everyone from the mainstream folk poster boy (Marcus Mumford), to classical bluegrass connoisseurs (the Punch Brothers), to the single biggest name in folk music (Bob Dylan) appears on the soundtrack. They offer fresh takes on traditional ballads alongside original songs that are already song-of-the-year contenders.

Oscar Isaac is featured prominently on the album, as he plays the movie’s eponymous songwriter. The soundtrack opens with his rendition of “Hang Me,” a haunting traditional ballad that seems to reflect what we can glean about Llewyn Davis’s character from the trailers (lost, forlorn, gritty, in search of himself). Though only comprised of a voice and a guitar, the song grabs your attention and sets the stage for what else is to come.

Lucky are we to have been prepped for the album’s second song, “Fare the Well (Dirk’s Song),” for it's the kind of stop-you-in-your-tracks oh-my-god-now-that’s-a-song music that makes this album so noteworthy. This song pairs Marcus Mumford and Oscar Isaacs with harmonies so special and wonderful-sounding that they would be doing themselves a disservice to not team up again in the future. This song is also the album’s first example of folk-inspired music working for today’s audience: its folk roots are clear (harmonies, instrumental arrangements), but its lyrics, timing and overall sound feel more fresh.

The third and fourth songs are worthy follow-ups. The third, “The Last Thing on My Mind” features squeaky-clean-sounding Broadway star Stark Sands singing over impeccable Punch Brothers instrumentals (which, in my opinion, are the best part of the entire album). The fourth song, “Five Hundred Miles,” has Carey Mulligan, Justin Timberlake and Stark Sands making harmonies reminiscent of a Peter, Paul, and Mary-type band. Because these actors appear in the movie, my guess is that their characters are meant to represent that part of this music scene’s history.

The soundtrack experiences a break in its momentum with a cheesy jingle about President Kennedy, which has to be ripped straight from the movie. Though appropriate for the movie and because it is, in fact, a soundtrack, I believe this collection would’ve fared better to leave it off.

From there, the rest of the album presents a few more songs by Oscar Isaacs and a few traditional Irish ballads. The last two songs are a never-before-released version of Bob Dylan’s “Farewell” and a song by Dave Van Ronk. These are appropriate, as Dylan is essentially the symbol of the folk movement and Van Ronk is likely the person on whom the Llewyn Davis character was based.

After a few listens, a few things become clear. Most of this album’s music is about leaving, being left, saying goodbye, being said goodbye to, and not returning. There is also a very heavy Irish influence. What these mean to the movie have yet to be revealed, but in terms of the soundtrack, they remind us at once that poignant lyrics have always been a hallmark of folk music and that other cultures have always influenced music that is decidedly “American.” 

This soundtrack is a workhorse, and it absolutely does its job. The excitement gained from listening to this kind of music, in addition to the excitement it sparks to see the movie, are two reasons why Llewyn Davis is fantastic. 

Grade: A




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