The Lord's Prayer (Sister Janet Mead song)  

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"'''The Lord's Prayer'''" is a [[rock music|rock]] setting of the [[Lord's Prayer]] with music by Arnold Strals recorded in 1973 by the [[Australia]]n nun [[Sister Janet Mead]]. "'''The Lord's Prayer'''" is a [[rock music|rock]] setting of the [[Lord's Prayer]] with music by Arnold Strals recorded in 1973 by the [[Australia]]n nun [[Sister Janet Mead]].
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 +It made Mead the first Roman Catholic nun to have a hit record in the United States since [[Jeanine Deckers]] ("[[The Singing Nun]]"), hit No. 1 with "[[Dominique]]" in late [[1963 in music|1963]]. It also became the only song to hit the Top 10 in which the entire lyrical content originated from the words of the [[Bible]]. More specifically, it is the only Top 10 hit with words attributed to [[Jesus Christ]].
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 +Mead was nominated for a [[Grammy Awards|Grammy]] for [[Grammy Award for Best Inspirational Performance|Best Inspirational Performance]] (although she lost to [[Elvis Presley]]'s ''[[How Great Thou Art (Elvis Presley album)|How Great Thou Art]]'') and also became the first Australian artist to sell one million US copies of a record produced in Australia. She donated all of her royalties from the recording's international sales to charity and her record label used their share of the proceeds to build a new state of the art recording studio.
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 +Mead re-recorded "The Lord's Prayer" in 1999 for her album ''A Time to Sing''.
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 +Mead's version was [[cover version|covered]] in the [[satire|satirical]] [[Musical theatre|stage musical]] ''[[Disaster! (musical)|Disaster!]]''.
==See also== ==See also==

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"The Lord's Prayer" is a rock setting of the Lord's Prayer with music by Arnold Strals recorded in 1973 by the Australian nun Sister Janet Mead.

It made Mead the first Roman Catholic nun to have a hit record in the United States since Jeanine Deckers ("The Singing Nun"), hit No. 1 with "Dominique" in late 1963. It also became the only song to hit the Top 10 in which the entire lyrical content originated from the words of the Bible. More specifically, it is the only Top 10 hit with words attributed to Jesus Christ.

Mead was nominated for a Grammy for Best Inspirational Performance (although she lost to Elvis Presley's How Great Thou Art) and also became the first Australian artist to sell one million US copies of a record produced in Australia. She donated all of her royalties from the recording's international sales to charity and her record label used their share of the proceeds to build a new state of the art recording studio.

Mead re-recorded "The Lord's Prayer" in 1999 for her album A Time to Sing.

Mead's version was covered in the satirical stage musical Disaster!.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "The Lord's Prayer (Sister Janet Mead song)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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