Unlikely Recording Stars

Directed by Dana Perry (HBO’s “Boy Interrupted”), the documentary Top Ten Monks takes an unprecedented look at the daily lives of these unlikely celebrities, who rarely allow cameras inside their walls, when it debuts Wednesday, DEC. 22 (8:00-8:30 p.m. ET/PT), exclusively on HBO2.

Other HBO2 playdates: Dec. 25 (6:30 p.m.) and Jan. 2 (8:00 a.m.), 7 (6:00 a.m.), 19 (9:00 p.m.), 22 (8:00 a.m.) and 31 (11:30 a.m.)

The story of the monks’ success began when Universal Music noticed an increase in back catalogue sales of Gregorian chant, and placed ads in notable Catholic newspapers searching for the most beautiful sacred voices.

Father Karl of Stift Heiligenkreuz Abbey, a 12th-century monastery near Vienna, sent the company a link to a website and a YouTube video of the monks’ singing, which Tom Lewis, artist development manager at Universal, calls “some of the most beautiful Gregorian chant we heard.”

“Chant” was a perfect opportunity for the monks to gather the financial means needed for a new recording project – something they had wanted to do for years.

Sung in Latin, the official language of the Roman Catholic Church, Gregorian chant is composed in a free musical rhythm that rises and falls in accord with the inner meaning of each piece. The peaceful and otherworldly – to some ears “eerie” – tonality of Gregorian chant, and its free rhythm, make it the perfect musical form for unfolding the meaning of the sacred texts that are sung in it.

While a monk’s primary activity is prayer, which the monks of Stift Heiligenkreuz have engaged in for 900 years, this documentary dives deeply into their everyday lives, dispelling misconceptions about life in a monastery.

Rather than a place of constriction and monotony, Stift Heiligenkreuz Abbey enables the monks to strive for lives that are open and calm, healthy and happy. These monks are fully engaged in the modern world, using technologies such as cell phones and the Internet, as well as running a number of businesses, including a gas station and a sawmill.

Their sudden celebrity finds them in the headlines and on TV, but the monks are not inspired by money or fame, believing that for many people, Gregorian chant are an escape from and an answer to the pressures of modern life. Father Karl explains, “The music not only calms, it also gives strength. It has an emotional dimension. It is joy and fear, praise and mourning, jubilation and thanksgiving.” He also believes that many people “find it interesting, cool and exotic when they see monks in long white robes, praying together and singing in Latin.”

Explaining the monks’ popularity, Tom Lewis says, “There’s a lot of people out there whose musical appetites aren’t necessarily being served by popular culture. And when something fresh comes along, the appetite for it is incredibly strong.”