Watermark – Enya

Release Date: 9/19/1988

Tracks: 12

Length: 00:39:42 Hrs

Label: WEA

Type: CD,CS

Genre/Styles

Album Tracks (12)

Song Title
Length
Lyrics
1.
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02:24
3.
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03:59
5.
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04:20
7.
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04:25
9.
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03:10
10.
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03:36
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What the Critics Say

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, All Music Guide

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Icon lisaendicott7
  Lisaendicott7

11/21/2008 1:58 AM

On the strength of just one song, I purchased this album in 1988. Back then, you couldn't listen to an album before you bought it. I had also purchased two other pop records that day. I decided to listen to "Watermark" first, because I thought that I would like it the least. From the opening piano melody of the title song, to the final track, I was caught in a musical spell that would delight my senses, and that would keep me captivated twenty years afterward. As for the two other pop records I bought that day..well...I can't even remember what they were now. It doesn't matter how beautiful her newer albums are, there is nothing that Enya could ever do to top this record. It is an absolute must-have!

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