Traditional Benedictine Nuns in France sign major recording contract
It is hard to resist this story in the Independent.
What the story does not report is that these are the very traditional Benedictines of the Abbey of Sainte-Madeleine who are associated with the monks of Le Barroux on the next hill over. My old chief and mentor, the late Augustine Card. Mayer, OSB, consecrated their first abbess. They use only the old office and Mass and their vocations are through the roof.
Secluded order of nuns signs record deal behind closed doors [They missed the chance to say "behind bars".]
Members of an order of nuns so secluded they are rarely seen in the outside world have found a new vocation as recording artists with the record label of Lady Gaga, Amy Winehouse and Eminem.
The Benedictine nuns of Abbaye Notre-Dame de lAnnonciation, near Avignon, France, signed a "major deal" for an album of their songs, and did so in a fittingly modest fashion. Since no visitors are permitted to enter the convent, the sisters had to be passed the contract through a grille, through which they posted it back signed.
[...]
The nuns new career originated in Deccas search to find the worlds best female singers of Gregorian chant after a company executive was charmed by an old recording he discovered of nuns singing. The Avignon nuns, who sing together eight times a day, beat off competition from more than 70 convents worldwide. Tim Lewis, head of A&R at Decca, said: "When you hear them chanting, its like an immediate escape from the stresses, noise and pace of modern living." [I have written many times on this blog that I find Gregorian Chant sung well by women to be absolutely transporting.]
The album, called Voice: Chant from Avignon, will be released on 8 November. The nuns, who have no access to newspapers, TV or radio, now have their own Facebook page and feature in several YouTube videos.
Decca is hoping to repeat the success found when it signed the Cistercian monks of Heiligenkreuz Abbey, Austria, in 2008. The monks, who won the deal to record an album after uploading a video of their singing to YouTube, sold a million copies of Chant: Music for Paradise.
Singing monks and nuns are nothing new in the Sixties a Belgian nun known as Soeur Sourire (Sister Smile) found international fame with her single "Dominique", and a group of Spanish Benedictine monks sold 16m copies of their album Chant in the 1990s.