Annal:2001 Grammy Award for Album of the Year
From AwardAnnals
Results of the Grammy Award in the year 2001. For a ranked list of albums, try the honor roll.
O Brother, Where Art Thou?: Original Soundtrack
T-Bone Burnett, Various Artists
- 2001 Grammy-Album winner
- 2001 BAFTA-Music nominee
- Score: 16.51
The best soundtracks are like movies for the ears, and O Brother, Where Art Thou? joins the likes of Saturday Night Fever and The Harder They Come as cinematic pinnacles of song. The music from the Coen brothers’ Depression-era film taps into the source from which the purest strains of country, blues, bluegrass, folk, and gospel music flow. Producer T Bone Burnett enlists the voices of Alison Krauss, Gillian Welch, Emmylou Harris, Ralph Stanley, and kindred spirits for performances of traditional material, in arrangements that are either a…
- 2001 Grammy-Album nominee
- Score: 4.51
When we last left the ever-confounding saga that is Bob Dylan’s now-superhuman recording career, he’d reunited with producer Daniel Lanois, with whom he cut 1997’s Time Out of Mind, his most coherent and appealing collection in nearly a decade. Now the still-reigning prince of musical contrariety and potent wordplay is back with his most focused, well-played collection since 1989’s Oh Mercy, another Lanois production. One listen to the fade-in of the opener “Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum” and it’s clear that all Dylan’s roadwork has shaped him and his…
- 2001 Grammy-R&B nominee
- 2001 Grammy-Album nominee
- Score: 10.51
India.Arie’s Acoustic Soul is just as advertised: grooving soul music with an acoustic bent. Arie herself plays guitar, supplemented by strings (instead of synthesizers) and drums (instead of drum machines). The first single, “Video”, is a calm, confident ode to self-love, comparing the dreadlocked, petite Arie to the average girl in a video. Arie is indeed anything but average: her debut marks the auspicious return of the black female singer-songwriter, in the vein of Me’Shell Ndegeocello, Tracy Chapman and Dionne Farris. If you like their music, with…
- 2001 Grammy-Rap winner
- 2001 Grammy-Album nominee
- Score: 14.51
Big Boi and Andre 3000 make a monumental mothership connection on their utterly stupefying fourth album. At a time when the hip-hop “album” seems to be sadly declining in significance, Atlanta’s finest deliver a classic package of space-case imagery, curbside poetry, and delicious experimental funk. While the boys still celebrate their big pimpin’ lifestyles, “Gasoline Dreams” and the breathtaking “Humble Mumble” overflow with striking images of dashed American dreams and urban frustration. Stankonia’s most beautiful moments come in the name of love, whether it’s…
All That You Can't Leave Behind
- 2001 Grammy-Rock winner
- 2001 Grammy-Album nominee
- Score: 14.51
The foursome come roaring out of the blocks with their latest collection. The album's first single, "Beautiful Day," raced to the No. 1 slot on the U.K. singles charts and received a similar rapturous reception stateside. From its shimmering preamble to its sweeping, infectious chorus, it perfectly stakes out the middle ground between the anthemic U2 of the '80s and the more grounded group of the '90s. With Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno sharing production chores again after having taken a break with Pop, the U2 team enters the new millennium with their…
