LaShun Pace | |
Background: | solo_singer |
Birth Name: | Tarrian LaShun Pace |
Birth Date: | 6 September 1961 |
Birth Place: | Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. |
Death Place: | Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. |
Instrument: | Vocals |
Genre: | Gospel |
Years Active: | 1976–2022 |
Tarrian LaShun Pace (September 6, 1961 – March 21, 2022),[1] professionally known as LaShun Pace and sometimes credited as LaShun Pace-Rhodes or Shun Pace-Rhodes, was an American gospel singer, songwriter and evangelist. Pace was also a Stellar Award winner.
Pace was the fifth of ten children born to Pastor Murphy J. Pace and Bettie Ann Pace in Atlanta. Pace along with her sisters and brother were raised in a small community called Poole Creek. For high school, Pace attended Walter F. George High School (now known as South Atlanta High School); graduating in 1979.[2]
Pace began singing professionally during her teen years in the mid–1970s, performing solo and later alongside her sisters in the group The Anointed Pace Sisters which formed in the late–1980s. Pace's singing and ministering skills were honed while she was on tour with the Rev. Gene Martin and the Action Revival Team, and in 1988 she recorded In the House of the Lord with Dr. Jonathan Greer and the Cathedral of Faith Church of God in Christ Choirs for Savoy Records. The label signed Pace as a solo artist soon afterwards. In 1990, she released her debut album He Lives, which reached the number two spot on the Billboard gospel charts and featured her signature song "I Know I've Been Changed". The follow-up song Shekinah Glory, appeared in 1993. Three years later, Pace returned with Wealthy Place, which included the song "Act Like You Know" featuring Karen Clark Sheard.
In addition to successive releases such as 1998's Just Because God Said It, Pace also enjoyed a career as an actress, most notably co-starring as the Angel of Mercy in the 1992 Steve Martin film Leap of Faith.[3] LaShun Pace was inducted into the Christian Music Hall of Fame[4] in 2007. She was to attend the official presentation ceremony with many guests to be formally inducted, but became ill and unable to attend. In 2009, LaShun was nominated for Urban Performer of the Year in the Visionary Awards. Winners were to be announced live during the 2009 Christian Music Hall of Fame Awards Show[5] on November 14, 2009.
Pace was married twice to Edward Rhodes, a Georgia–based pastor from 1987 until divorcing in 1993 Shortly thereafter, Pace then reunited with the Late Reverend James Moore(Singer) who first met pace in 1974 and worked with Lashun Pace between 1990 to 1996 shortly before his death in 2000. Rhodes was responsible for producing and managing Pace and this led to her signing with Savoy Malaco Records. Together they had two daughters; Xenia Pace Rhodes (b. August 31, 1989, [6] –d. February 11, 2001) and Aarion Pace Rhodes (b. July 20, 1993). In 2003, Pace released an autobiography entitled For My Good But For His Glory in which she discussed a wide range of topics, including the death of her first-born daughter, Xenia who had an enlarged heart and died of a heart attack.
Pace had been on dialysis for several years and was awaiting a kidney. She died of organ failure according to her family on March 21, 2022, at the age of 60.[7]