O Kossoy Sisters, where art thou been? – January 2003
COUNTRY STANDARD TIME
HomeNewsInterviewsCD ReleasesCD ReviewsConcertsArtistsArchive
 

O Kossoy Sisters, where art thou been?  Print

By Jon Johnson, January 2003

Page 2...

"He was in a hospital in Morristown, N.J., and we would go with Ralph Rinzler to visit him," says Ellen. "Sometimes we'd just stay in the hospital and visit him, and sometimes we'd take him out and either go to somebody's house or to Washington Square."

"He was somewhat mobile; he could walk, but he was staggering. His mind was still okay, but he didn't talk a whole lot, and his speech was slurred, so he gave the impression of being drunk. It was a real problem in Washington Square where we had to keep pulling him out of the hands of policemen. He had trouble playing instruments, but he still loved to listen, and he was still very funny."

The highwater mark of the Kossoys' career can perhaps be regarded as their appearance at the 1959 Newport Folk Festival on a program which also featured Pete Seeger, the New Lost City Ramblers, the Stanley Brothers, Earl Scruggs, Odetta, the Clancy Brothers and the Kingston Trio.

No additional records were forthcoming, and after college each sister married and settled in a different part of the country, with further live appearances coming only infrequently in the coming decades.

Asked why the act drifted apart, Ellen says, "Well, we started college, and then almost immediately afterwards, I got married and moved to St. Louis. We just started different lives. I think also the hootenanny thing was coming into popularity at that time."

Wouldn't that have just been all the more reason to stay together and cash in?

"Well, except that we would have been expected to wear these frilly dresses with petticoats, which just wasn't our style at all," says Irene. "And Ellen was still singing with other groups around St. Louis, and I was singing with my husband, and he and I were getting a lot of gigs."

"We were still doing occasional things, like Fox Holler Festival, and we did one tour of California in the early '80s. We would do coffeehouse things around St. Louis when I came to visit, or when Ellen came here, we would do some things."

The Kossoys' public awareness skyrocketed two years ago with the release of the Coen Brothers' movie "O Brother, Where Art Thou," in which the sisters' 1956 recording of "I'll Fly Away" was used.

And though a re-recorded version by Allison Krauss and Gillian Welch ended up on the soundtrack album, the song's presence in the movie gave the sisters a visibility they hadn't seen in years.

"Since 'O Brother' came out, people are rediscovering us," says Ellen. "Up until the last year or two, when we gave a concert it was always older people that would show up for it. And now a lot of young people are showing up, and it's just great to see it."

Interestingly, the song's inclusion in the movie came as a total surprise to both sisters.

"I was visiting my son in California two Christmases ago, says Ellen. "And we decided to go to the movies one afternoon. 'O Brother' had just opened out there -- it hadn't opened here yet -- and since we both liked Coen Brothers movies, we decided to go and see it. So we were just sitting there, and all of a sudden I heard Irene and me singing in the movie."

"It was all negotiated through Rykodisc, so we didn't even know," says Irene.

Have the sisters seen any money from the movie?

"A little bit," says Ellen. "Not a whole lot. Our contract with Rykodisc is based on the contract that we had with Tradition Records when we were 17 years old."

According to Ellen, the use of two different versions of "I'll Fly Away" is still a bit of a mystery.

"As far as we know, (Krauss' and Welch's version of 'I'll Fly Away ') had been recorded before they put the movie out and using us in the movie was a later decision. The CD had already been made, and (for the movie) they were going back and forth between our version and the other. We think it's (director/writer) Ethan Coen who made the decision to use us, but we're not absolutely sure about that."

The decision to start working together again was made a couple of years before the release of "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"

"We had pretty much decided that we wanted to get together and start singing again when Rykodisc reissued our CD (in 1997)," says Ellen. "At that point, I was still living in St. Louis, but the kids were grown and gone, my husband was gone, and I had just retired from my job, so at that point I really didn't have anything tying me to St. Louis. Irene said, 'Why don't you move here?'"

"Hop On Pretty Girls" is the first release by the recently revived Living Folk label, which released a number of folk albums in the '70s.

"(Living Folk label owner) Peter Johnson was kind of out of things for a while, and now he's back into it, and we're the first CD he's put out."

According to Irene, "The songs we selected mostly are traditional songs. That's what we do and that's what we love most. We worked with Pete Sutherland, who's a phenomenal musician who lives in Vermont. It was just songs that we liked and wanted to do. It was a lot of fun doing the recording. A lot of people think of it as work, but we just had a good time."

When asked if it'll be another 46 years until the next record, Ellen laughs and says, "I don't think we'll live that long."

"When I'm a hundred years old, I don't think I'll still be able to sing," adds Irene. "You never know how many people you're influencing. We got an e-mail from Ethan Coen, who really put it well. He said that making a movie is like putting a note in a bottle and throwing it out in the ocean. You just never know who's going to pick it up and be influenced by it."

Finally, the question has to be asked: So which one is the evil twin?

Laughing, both sisters reply, "We both are."

PREVIOUS PAGE    1    |    2


©Country Standard Time • Jeffrey B. Remz, editor & publisher • countrystandardtime@gmail.com
AboutCopyrightNewsletterOur sister publication Standard Time
Subscribe to Country Music News Country News   Subscribe to Country Music CD Reviews CD Reviews   Follow us on Twitter  Instagram  Facebook  YouTube