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Nuns top charts in time for Christmas

Catholic order鈥檚 music has been heard by millions

ANN ARBOR TOWNSHIP, Michigan 鈥 The members of Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, silently filed into the chapel. Within minutes, they were singing 鈥 first in unison, then in a transfixing, layered harmony that reverberated off the marble floors, wood-panelled walls and cathedral ceiling.

The evening prayer service was intended for no audience but the Lord they have taken vows to serve. Still, The Chapel at the Motherhouse on the rolling grounds of the Catholic order鈥檚 campus outside Ann Arbor, Michigan, is also the place where the members record music that has been heard by millions. Their third and latest album, Jesu, Joy of Man鈥檚 Desiring: Christmas with the Dominican Sisters of Mary, has gracefully climbed to the top of Billboard鈥檚 classical chart and climbed nearly as high on the holiday chart.

They may be sisters, but this is no act.

鈥淚t鈥檚 such a part of our prayer life that when we make a CD, we鈥檙e just praying,鈥 said Sister Joseph Andrew Bogdanowicz, a founder of the community who has overseen the production of three CDs. 鈥淚t鈥檚 what we do, it鈥檚 who we are.鈥

The album鈥檚 16 songs span from the fifth century to present day and represent the music of 10 countries. The collection includes the well-known (We Wish You a Merry Christmas,) obscure (Sleep, Little Jesus, based on a Polish carol) and original (Snowflakes, composed by Bogdanowicz). Some songs are a cappella, others contain light instrumentation 鈥 all supplied by the sisters.

For them, the music is a gift to God, but also to people who can鈥檛 see the sisters perform live. They don鈥檛 tour, and only on rare occasions do they sing in public or on national broadcasts. Their evening services at the Motherhouse are open to visitors on Sundays, but space is limited and those are structured prayers, not performances.

鈥淲e want them to have this beauty, and that鈥檚 the only way we can do it,鈥 Bogdanowicz said. 鈥淚t can even be in another country or part of the world or somebody who doesn鈥檛 even have a clue who we are, but if they鈥檙e quietly listening to this and it鈥檚 elevating them towards God, then God鈥檚 done everything we wanted him to do.鈥

The unconventional recording artists got their start in the music business a few years ago, when the sisters were approached by Monica and Kevin Fitzgibbons, music industry veterans who founded DeMontfort Music and attended the sisters鈥 service known as Vespers. The label specializes in sacred music produced by 鈥渉idden communities,鈥 and the Dominican Sisters of Mary鈥檚 latest album is distributed by Sony Music Entertainment.

Some time and prayer, not surprisingly, was necessary, but a spiritual match was lit.

鈥淢y thought was, if we鈥檙e going to do it, we need to do it well,鈥 said Sister John Dominic Rasmussen, also a founder of the 20-year-old order that started with four sisters and now has roughly 130. 鈥淭he team that came here and approached us 鈥 just from my conversations I knew they would be able to do it well.鈥

Rasmussen oversees the business side of the sisters鈥 musical projects, and she comes by it honestly: Her mother was a country music publicist in Nashville, Tennessee, working for major record labels and then independently. Growing up around the industry has helped her understand some of its language and logistics.

Her mother attends a weekly breakfast meeting of music industry people, and Rasmussen recently tagged along. She wanted to share a video of her sisters performing, so she turned to a longtime TV show host.

鈥淚 said: 鈥楲et me see your iPhone,鈥 and I called it up and showed it to him,鈥 she said, and soon, others grew intrigued. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e like: 鈥楾his is beautiful, let me see that. 鈥 We got to promote this.鈥 My mom鈥檚 like: 鈥榃e鈥檒l get 鈥檈m for everybody.鈥 鈥

鈥淲hen you love what you鈥檙e doing 鈥 you want to find every moment to bring people you know to that experience,鈥 she added.

While the sisters live a structured, contemplative life, they recognize the importance of engaging with culture. Their primary mission is that of education 鈥 they teach preschool through college at private schools across the United States 鈥 and making and sharing their music is a natural extension of that.

鈥淚f [people] only hear bad music or see ugly art, how are they ever going to know the beauty of music or the beauty of art or the beauty of the universe?鈥 asked Mother Mary Assumpta Long, mother superior of the Dominican Sisters of Mary. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all in education 鈥 you have to expose them to beauty and goodness.鈥