Click here to listen!
NCRegister
  National Catholic Register  
11.20.09

A generous donor will DOUBLE donations to the Register up to $240,000 through November 28.

Donate Now

DOUBLE YOUR DONATION

Click to donate

GIVE BEFORE this matching offer ends!

Learn more

For information about the Register's ANNUAL FUND Drive, click here

Last 7 Days 30 Days

 
DAILY UMBERT

EMAIL SIGN UP

Receive our free email updates!

Sign up below


As part of this free service, you will receive occasional special offers.





Print Article | Email Article | Write To Us | Support Us  

The Priests: Heavenly Voices

Share

Posted by Tom McFeely

Friday, December 05, 2008 1:34 PM

Three parish priests from Northern Ireland have a shot at topping the pop charts in Britain during this year’s Christmas season.

The Sunday Times reported earlier this week that a new CD of songs recorded by the three priests — Father Eugene O’Hagan, 49, his brother Father Martin O’Hagan, 45, and their childhood friend Father David Delargy, 45 — sold more than 29,000 copies on its first day of release last week.

The trio, who perform as The Priests, grew up in Northern Ireland and began singing together decades ago. According to The Sunday Times, when the trio were in seminary together their harmonies earned them the good-natured nickname of “Holy, Holy, Holy.”

“Even after all three became priests, they carried on getting together to sing,” writes Times reporter Rosie Millard. “At one point, while studying at the Gregorian University in Rome, they even sang a liturgy before Pope John Paul II.”

How were The Priests discovered by the commercial music industry?

“They would have happily continued as a part-time local act,” Millard reports “But then someone from Sony came across a demo tape from the trio, while searching for individual male voices for a Latin Mass album. And almost immediately, the words ‘potentially one of the world’s biggest musical acts’ started being muttered at executive levels. “

Sony has backed up this judgment by signing the priests to a $2-million contract. And Millard agrees with Sony’s assessment that the three fathers — all of whom continue to serve as parish priests despite their newfound musical fame — are the real McCoy musically.

“A cynic might easily conclude that these three singing priests are just the latest gimmick for a recession-hit music industry, desperate for some seasonal payola,” Millard comments. “After all, these particular fathers come ready-packaged with twinkling eyes and great voices. The sincerity in their Ave Maria vibrato is almost palpable. And what do you know? More than 29,000 copies of their debut CD shifted last week in its first day of release, making it a likely contender for a Christmas No. 1 in the UK album charts. The bosses at Sony, who have given this mini-God squad a recording deal worth £1.4m, will be opening their Advent calendars tomorrow morning with joy in their hearts.”

Says Millard, “Yet for all the high-level packaging, The Priests really are the genuine article, who deliver the classic church music they have always sung, from Ave Maria to O Holy Night, in perfect harmony.”

You can judge their musical abilities for yourself by clicking on the video at the beginning of this Daily Blog post, or by clicking on this link to their version of O Holy Night posted on Youtube. You can also check them out on EWTN’s Christmas Special, which will air Dec. 19th at 8 p.m. and will be rebroadcast several times in the following days.

They will also be featured this weekend on CBS Sunday Morning and on a special being aired at various times by local PBS affiliates. More details are available here, at The Priests’ U.S. website.

— Tom McFeely

Advertisement
Advertisement

Make a Donation now!

Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.

Click here to donate

Current Issue

Important News for Register Subscribers. Click here for details.

You must login for access to articles that are marked For Subscribers Only.

If you subscribe to the print edition, register here to get a Username and Password.

Not a Subscriber? Click here to try
4 Issues FREE!

Now you can subscribe to the digital edition of the Register! Save 29% off the print edition price! Click here for details.








Click here to listen!