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Lloyd Chandler

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Genres
  
Appalachian music

Name
  
Lloyd Chandler

Died
  
1978


Lloyd Chandler wwwvisitmadisoncountycomwpcontentuploadsLloy

Occupation(s)
  
Musician Free Will Baptist preacher

Similar People
  
John Cohen, Dillard Chandler, Dock Boggs, Ralph Stanley

Lloyd chandler a conversation with death


Lloyd Chandler (1896–1978) was an American Appalachian Folk musician and Free Will Baptist preacher from Madison County, North Carolina.

Contents

Research has asserted that Chandler is the writer of "O, Death", a song featured on the acclaimed O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack. Ralph Stanley won a Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance for his rendition of this song.

Indiana University Press' The Journal of Folklore Research features articles in an 2004 issue asserting that "O, Death" is Chandler's song "A Conversation with Death", which he performed for several years while preaching in Appalachia.

One of the articles is from folklorist Carl Lindahl, who researched claims from Western North Carolina that O Brother's "O, Death" is Chandler's composition. The article states that Chandler authored the song after a vision from God in 1916. Lindahl also chronicles his unsuccessful research in trying to find any trace of the song before Chandler's version, debunking previous claims that the song traces back to a 16th-century British composition. The other article is from Chandler's daughter-in-law, Barbara, who asserts that "O, Death" was based on Chandler's composition.

"A Conversation with Death" appears on Rounder Records 1975 release High Atmosphere: Ballads and Banjo Tunes from Virginia and North Carolina, a collection of recordings made by John Cohen.

Lloyd chandler remember and do pray for me


Discography

  • High Atmosphere: Ballads and Banjo Tunes from Virginia and North Carolina, Rounder Records, 1975
  • References

    Lloyd Chandler Wikipedia