
News 16. 11. 2015
Irish singer Enya breaks her silence after seven years
“I’d do the promotion and I’d enjoy talking about the music – but then it was back to work on another album. And it was important to me to retain privacy, because I was kind of worried that fame might interfere with my writing, with my music; that it might have changed what I was working on. I was guarding everything really carefully and closely.”
Enya, who has sold a reported 80 million albums worldwide, says she tries to leave her past achievements at the door when she enters the studio.
“As soon as I walk into the studio, the last piece I was working on is all I think about, therefore you don’t bring all that with you,” she says, shaking her head. “I felt it was wrong to think, ‘Oh my God, Watermark was so successful; I need to do another Watermark.’ I thought that it was best to leave the expectations and all of that outside the door. When I’m told figures and things like that, and the longevity of the career, it’s only moments that I think of it. But I’m certainly amazed that I’m here so many years later – especially with the seven-year gap. The patience of the fans is tremendous.”
She took three years off before commencing work on Dark Sky Island in 2012. She traveled for a while and bought a house in the south of France — where she spends her time when she’s not in Dublin.
“I just did things that I wanted to do,” she says. “All of these inspirations you get from a landscape somewhere else, a story you were told by a person, anything at all. I still felt, ‘I’ll go back to the music when it’s time’. Then it was 2012, March, April; that was it. I thought, ‘Oh. I have to be somewhere else’. I wanted to be back recording music, performing music.”
She acknowledges the the music industry has changed significantly since she signed her first deal in the late 1980s.
“1988 was a very different time,” she says “Even signing a record contract, for me – an unknown artist signing with Warner Music UK – I said that I needed three years between each album. You wouldn’t get that kind of contract today. I was very excited about being signed for a solo album, but I still also thought, ‘I can’t do an album a year, if that’s what they expect’. I was always thinking about the music.”
Another change since her last album was released is the existence of streaming services such as Spotify, Tidal and Apple Music. “The last few years have been really awful – but to me, they’re finding their way back again,” she says of the record companies. “I feel that things will settle down. When the Kindle came out, everybody rushed . . . but now, the sales of books are still good. I think it’ll never go back to what it was, but I think it will settle down from this intense rush of everybody having to have everything immediately. I think it can’t keep up at this pace.”
Regarding her cultural identity, the singer, who is from Gweedore, Co Donegal, says: “I would meet up with other [Irish] musicians more on a private basis – but the musical influence of being Irish is always going to be there. Being brought up in the northwest of Ireland in a Gaeltacht area with Gaelic my first language; I know I’ve studied classical music, but the roots of traditional music will always be there, because there’s this sense of melancholy that’s within the music. I always think that Irish music is very passionate, it’s been passed on to generations and has a great history – so I feel that is always going to be with me.”
Enya has worked with her lyricist Roma Ryan and producer Nicky Ryan for the past three decades. The Ryans have been instrumental in her success.
“I get to work with people who have always encouraged me,” she says. “They have brought it to where it is; they have believed in me, and as a singer and a musician, you really do need people around you that believe in you from day one, instead of going, ‘Now you wrote that – can you write something like this?’. They just kept saying ‘Go for it!’ . . .
“Any album you’ve done, it’s not that you’re trying to recreate what you’ve already done. For some people, they say, ‘Oh, but it sounds similar’ – but that’s because it’s my voice. I feel that every time I go to the studio, I have this great sense of freedom. I can go in there and write whatever I want – so in that regard, I’m really happy with the situation how it is.”
Regarding her long career, she says: “Longevity is all any artist dreams of. It is something you really feel good about, when your albums are still listened to.”
Dark Sky Island will be released on Friday, November 20.
IrishCentral Staff Writers @irishcentral
Václav Bernard