PFR (Pray for Rain)
Years active 1989–1997, 2001, 2004, 2012
Labels Vireo, Squint, Fuseic
Members
Joel Hanson
Patrick Andrew
Mark Nash

PFR (aka Pray for Rain) was a Christian rock group in the mid 1990s. Although the group disbanded in 1997, they reunited in 2000 and have since recorded two albums.

Contents

Members [link]

History [link]

PFR was founded in 1989 as the Joel Hanson Band by Joel Hanson, who was a camp counselor at Camp Shamineau, a Christian youth camp in Minnesota. In 1991, the band, now known as Inside Out, was signed to Brown Bannister's newly founded Vireo Records. After signing, Patrick Andrew suggested the band change the name to "Pray For Rain" after a line from a poem. In 1992, the band released Pray For Rain, and gained some attention with the song "Do You Want to Know Love". Shortly after releasing the first album, an existing band (an instrumental group who did soundtrack work) known as Pray for Rain threatened a lawsuit, leading the band to settle on the name PFR. The first album was reissued with a slightly modified cover to reflect the change.

In 1993, PFR released their second album, Goldie's Last Day, whose title track was inspired by the passing of Patrick Andrew's pet golden retriever. Also that year, the band recorded a cover of "We Can Work It Out" by The Beatles with guitar legend Phil Keaggy for the various artists tribute CD Come Together: America Salutes The Beatles. Rumor has it that someone submitted the wrong mix to the label, and the released version unintentionally omits guitar solos by both Joel Hanson and Phil Keaggy. A mix with the guitar solos has never surfaced.

PFR released their third album, Great Lengths in 1994. The album had the band's biggest hit, "The Love I Know", inspired by I Corinthians 13. The Great Lengths tour introduced a new band, Jars of Clay, who would become one of the most popular Christian groups to date, also enjoying great mainstream success.

Having changed musical direction with each album, PFR moved into an edgier, heavy sound for 1996's Them. While the album was well-received, the band shortly afterward announced that they were splitting up. In 1997, The Late Great PFR was released, a greatest hits album containing three new songs, with one ("Forever") becoming a Christian radio hit.

Over the next 5 years, the band reunited for an occasional benefit concert. In 2000, when Mark Nash was working as the A & R director of Squint Records, the band returned to the studio to contribute to Steve Taylor's Roaring Lambs project, inspired by the book by Bob Briner. Working on the project inspired the band to sign to Taylor's Squint Records, and record 2001's Disappear. The album did not gain much exposure, however, due to Squint Records selling to another company, which also displaced artists such as Chevelle and Sixpence None the Richer. Another casualty of the Squint shakeup was the PFR cover of Paul McCartney's "Wonderful Christmastime" recorded for a 2001 Squint Christmas compilation that was never released. In 2002, PFR recorded a cover of "Livin' Thing", originally by Electric Light Orchestra.

PFR returned in 2004 with a new full-length release, The Bookhouse Recordings, an album chiefly consisting of PFR classics rearranged, plus three new songs. The Bookhouse Recordings was recorded in one week at the end of August 2004 in Nashville, TN at Mark Nash's studio. This was the first album wholly produced by the band alone, and features the song "Prayer For Beslan," a song mourning the terrorist attacks on a Russian school the same week the band was recording. The Bookhouse Recordings was released exclusively through Family Christian stores, and was on the FUSEIC label started by Rick Altizer. Altizer now fronts the band Dum Dog Run with Jade Hanson, Joel Hanson's older brother.

Joel Hanson released three solo albums, Broken (2001), Captured (2002) and "What If It Is" (2009). Patrick Andrew formed Eager following the 1997 break-up of PFR, and was signed to Quaestar Mission Records, releasing a self-titled album in 1998, before Eager also disbanded. In 2004, Patrick Andrew released his first solo album, There and Then It's Gone.

In 2012, PFR has reunited for the "PFR Twelve in 2012" tour. The first show was at the Church of the Open Door in Minnesota on January 27, 2012. The band has a new website with details on the concept and tour.

Discography [link]

Studio albums [link]

  • Pray For Rain (PFR) (1992, Vireo)
  • Goldie's Last Day (1993, Vireo)
  • Great Lengths (1994, Vireo)
  • Them (1996, Vireo)
  • The Late Great PFR (1998, Vireo)
  • Disappear (2001, Squint)
  • Bookhouse Recordings (2004, Fuseic)
  • Very Best of PFR (2006, Sparrow)

Compilation Appearances [link]

  • Come Together: America Salutes The Beatles (1995, Capitol)
  • Roaring Lambs (2000, Squint)
  • Lynne Me Your Ears: A Tribute to Jeff Lynne (2002, Not Lame)

References [link]


https://wn.com/PFR

PFR (disambiguation)

PFR (Pray for Rain) is a Christian music group.

PFR may also refer to:

  • Partito Fascista Repubblicano, a former political party in Italy
  • Plug flow reactor model, a reactor simulation model
  • Pontefract Baghill railway station, England; National Rail station code PFR
  • PFFR, an alternative rock group
  • Portable Font Resource
  • Prototype Fast Reactor, a nuclear reactor at Dounreay
  • Pork fried rice, a Chinese dish
  • Persons and Family Relations, one of the subjects covered in Civil Law on the Philippine Bar Examinations
  • Power finesse ratio, a statistic for baseball pitchers
  • Garden

    A garden is a planned space, usually outdoors, set aside for the display, cultivation, and enjoyment of plants and other forms of nature. The garden can incorporate both natural and man-made materials. The most common form today is known as a residential garden, but the term garden has traditionally been a more general one. Zoos, which display wild animals in simulated natural habitats, were formerly called zoological gardens. Western gardens are almost universally based on plants, with garden often signifying a shortened form of botanical garden.

    Some traditional types of eastern gardens, such as Zen gardens, use plants sparsely or not at all. Xeriscape gardens use local native plants that do not require irrigation or extensive use of other resources while still providing the benefits of a garden environment. Gardens may exhibit structural enhancements, sometimes called follies, including water features such as fountains, ponds (with or without fish), waterfalls or creeks, dry creek beds, statuary, arbors, trellises and more.

    Garden (Summer Edit)

    Garden ~Summer Edit~ is FLOW's eighth single. It is a recut single from the original B-Side in their album Golden Coast. It reached #50 on the Oricon charts in its first week and charted for 2 weeks. *

    Track listing

    References

  • "Oricon Profile".
  • "Sony Music Japan Profile".

  • Garden (surname)

    Garden is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Alex Garden, computer game developer and businessman
  • Alexander Garden (naturalist) (1730–1791), known by the botanical author abbreviation "Garden"
  • Alexander Garden (poet), Scottish poet from Aberdeenshire
  • Francis Garden (disambiguation):
  • Francis Garden, Lord Gardenstone (1721–1793), Scottish judge, joint Solicitor General for Scotland 1760–64, Lord of Session 1764–93
  • Francis Garden (theologian) (1810–1884), English theologian
  • Graeme Garden (born 1943), British comedy writer and performer
  • James Garden (1847–1914), engineer and Mayor of Vancouver
  • Jock Garden (1882–1968), founder of Australia's communist party
  • Mary Garden (1874–1967), Scottish-American operatic soprano
  • Nancy Garden (1938–2014), American author of children's and young adult literature
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Garden

    by: PFR

    Standing over my garden I look down
    And disappointment overcomes me
    The tears that formed are now falling from my eyes
    And watering the ground around me
    Lost inside this dissolution
    I hear you say my name
    I hear you calling
    I hear you calling to me
    I hear you calling
    Faith, like a flower, needs water and room to grow
    Placed in sunlight, not in shadow
    Hope that the seed that is hidden will rise and bloom
    From the heart of one forgiven
    Love runs in the living water
    I've heard you say my name
    I hear you calling
    I hear you calling to me
    I hear you calling
    I hear you calling
    I hear you calling to me
    I hear you call
    I hear you calling
    I hear you calling to me
    I hear you calling




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