Product Code Database
Example Keywords: jacket -winter $23
   » » Wiki: O Death
Tag Wiki 'O Death'.
Tag

" O Death", also known as " O, Death", " Oh Death", " Conversations with Death", or " A Conversation with Death", is a traditional Appalachian folk song, listed as number 4933 in the Roud Folk Song Index. The song is generally attributed to the musician and Baptist preacher , but it was likely taken or adapted from folk songs already existing in the region. The song has been covered in a variety of contexts, including films, video games, and television.


Variants
The version as performed by and members of the :

A modified version with a chorus and different tune, performed by , , and others:


Origin
2004, the Journal of Folklore Research asserted that "O, Death" is 's song "A Conversation with Death", which Chandler performed in the 1920s while preaching in . Chandler's daughter-in-law, Barbara, asserted that "O, Death" was based on Chandler's composition. However, Chandler seems to have taken the song from another source or at least based it on an older version.

In 1913, the Journal of American Folklore printed a version sung by "Eastern North Carolina " 1908:This version seems closer to the version first performed by Dock Boggs than Chandler's "original" version.

Encounters with a personified "Death" featured in traditional English songs which possibly date to the 14th century, including "Death and the Lady" (Roud 1031), which was found in the oral tradition in early twentieth century . "O Death" bears a strong resemblance to a printed in in 1870, entitled "A Dialogue Between Death & the Sinner" (pictured).


Recordings
1920s banjo player recorded the song in 1963 after his 'rediscovery' during the Folk Music Revival. A recording from the 1938 National Folk Festival in Washington, D.C. by an unknown singer is held by the Library of Congress. Various artists included "O, Death" on musical collections throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Wichita Eagle, Op. cit. It is sung in the 1976 documentary Harlan County, USA by early union activist and coal miner , a well known folk music singer from Mingo County, . In the 1960s, recorded the folk and gospel singer Bessie Jones singing "O Death".

's recording of "A Conversation with Death" appears on 1975 release , a collection of recordings made by John Cohen.

Among the most famous recordings is 's version in the 2000 film (and soundtrack album) O Brother, Where Art Thou?, for which Stanley won the Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance in 2002. The soundtrack's producer, , originally asked for a banjo rendition emulating Dock Boggs, but Stanley convinced him otherwise with an performance in the style of the Appalachian Primitive Baptist Universalist church."Old-Time Man" interview by Don Harrison June 2008 Virginia Living, p. 57. The song also appears in episode 7 of the second season of television series Fargo, inspired by another Coen brothers film of the same name. The version used in this episode was recorded by with Monica Martin of Phox.

"O, Death" has appeared twice in American television series Supernatural, both times in connection with the show's personification of Death, portrayed by : the 2010 episode "Two Minutes to Midnight" featured a version by ; performed the song in character as Billie in the 2015 episode "Form and Void". The version sung by was featured in episode three of the first season of Altered Carbon, a original.

A version by , performed by Amy Van Roekel, was featured in , a 2015 horror video game by Supermassive Games. The 2024 remake of the game attracted criticism for omitting the song.Cooper, Dalton. Until Dawn Remake is Missing an Iconic Feature from the Original Game, GameRant. The song returned for Until Dawns spiritual successor, the Dark Pictures Anthology, with a recording by the band Khemmis as part of the series intro and a unique recording over the outro of each of the four episodes. O Death was trademarked in 2022 as the name of the upcoming eighth and final Dark Pictures game.Gina. Will Dark Pictures Anthology Season 2 Reveal the Curator's Identity? CBR.

A written version of the lyrics were included in a letter sent by to KAKE-TV in 1978.


List of versions
  • , as Death Have Mercy (1959)
  • John Reedy, on , (1961).
  • Kaleidoscope, on (1967).
  • Camper Van Beethoven, with variant lyrics and melody, on Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart (1988).
  • with the medieval ensemble Hesperus, on Crossing Over (1988).
  • , on a reissue of (2004).
  • , on All is Well (2008).
  • as protagonist Silas Greaves in the video game (2013).
  • (formerly of Telefon Tel Aviv), under the moniker "Sons of Magdalene" on Move to Pain (2014).
  • , in Rattlesnake on the Road (2014).
  • , on Broken Hearts and Stolen Money (2014).
  • A Hill to Die Upon recorded an variant with harpist Timbre on Holy Despair (2014).
  • English folk-rock band False Lights, on Salvor (2015).
  • Amy van Roekel, for the video game (2015).
  • Bitter End, on Illusions of Dominance (2015).
  • Rising Appalachia with a spoken word interlude by Theresa Davis, on (2015).
  • Americana musician , on Fargo (2016)
  • Diamanda Galás, on Guilty Guilty Guilty (2008), All the Way (2017), and At Saint Thomas the Apostle Harlem (2017).
  • American metal band Khemmis recorded a version on a split EP with Spirit Adrift (2017) and for the video game series The Dark Pictures Anthology.
  • feat. Francesco Turrisi, on They're Calling Me Home (2021).
  • on the soundtrack for (2022).


External links
Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time