Watermark

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Watermark album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 43:06

eMusic Features

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eMusic Yearbook: 2001

By Melissa Maerz, eMusic Contributor

Was September 11, 2001 really the day the music died? It sure seemed like it at the time. Clear Channel released a memo suggesting the removal of more than 150 songs from their 1200 radio stations, declaring such tracks as Tom Petty's "Free Fallin'," Filter's "Hey Man, Nice Shot," and "all songs by Rage Against the Machine" to be "lyrically questionable" in light of the terrorist attacks. Record stores yanked the latest by hip-hop anarchists… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Thanks to its distinct, downright catchy single “Orinoco Flow,” which amusingly referenced both her record-company boss Rob Dickins and co-producer Ross Cullum in the lyrics, Enya’s second album Watermark established her as the unexpected queen of gentle, Celtic-tinged new age music. To be sure, her success was as much due to marketing a niche audience in later years equally in love with Yanni and Michael Flatley’s Irish dancing, but Enya’s rarely given a sense of pandering in her work. She does what she does, just as she did before her fame. (Admittedly, avoiding overblown concerts run constantly on PBS hasn’t hurt.) Indeed, the subtlety that characterizes her work at her best dominates Watermark, with the lovely title track, her multi-tracked voice gently swooping among the lead piano, and strings like a softly haunting ghost, as fine an example as any. “Orinoco Flow” itself, for all its implicit dramatics, gently charges instead of piling things on, while the organ-led “On Your Shore” feels like a hushed church piece. Elsewhere, meanwhile, Enya lets in a darkness not overly present on The Celts, resulting in work even more appropriate for a moody soundtrack than that album. “Cursum Perficio,” with her steady chanting-via-overdub of the title phrase, gets more sweeping and passionate as the song progresses, matched in slightly calmer results with the equally compelling “The Longships.” “Storms in Africa,” meanwhile, uses drums from Chris Hughes to add to the understated, evocative fire of the song, which certainly lives up to its name. Watermark ends with a fascinating piece, “Na Laetha Geal M’Oige,” where fellow Irish modern/traditional fusion artist Davy Spillane adds a gripping, heartbreaking uilleann pipe solo to the otherwise calm synth-based performance. It’s a perfect combination of timelessness and technology, an appropriate end to this fine album. – Ned Raggett

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Activity

  • 05.24.12 I liked @wajdibellazreg it's wonderful to turn classical to Modern http://t.co/IL31ol0k @holacom please Share it ,Enya XX
  • 05.22.12 I just Watched this on @youtube http://t.co/1ImkEs7q Caribbean Blue by @YuiMatsuda , Love it , Enya XX
  • 05.20.12 Join the http://t.co/1MP0n8e6 email list and receive news and announcements via email, http://t.co/46J1s47L ,Enya XX
  • 05.18.12 Sorry guys, I was very busy with my birthday yesterday , it was a nice party, thanks @holacom for the message and all my fans , Enya XX
  • 05.13.12 4 days left for my birthday & I have received many messages on my website,& twitter, thanks guys, I promise I'll be online on thursday, Enya
  • 05.10.12 My new album will be released SOON , keep checking http://t.co/hebOQkFL & http://t.co/IHdjPVBw, I hope you'll enjoy the songs ,Enya
  • 05.05.12 It's a good time to listen to "May it Be", Relax & enjoy your time, Enya
  • 07.09.11 The very best of enya is on the @iTunesMusic albums chart! If you want to buy it http://t.co/Q4uFaEs . enjoy the songs
  • 07.03.11 Trains and Winter Rains you can watch on http://t.co/rNnxuZl. and I want also to say thanks to Warner Bros Company for supporting me .
  • 06.30.11 This is the real me, so nice that I have joined twitter. so I can keep in touch with my fans around the world.