Enya biography
b. Eithne N¡ Bhraon in,
17 May 1961, Dore, Gweedore, Co. Donegal, Eire.
Enya, a classically trained pianist, was formerly a member of Clannad before embarking on a solo career that blossomed
unexpectedly with her 1988 UK
chart-topper, "Orinoco Flow". Daughter of noted Irish Showband leader
Leo Brennan (Brennan is the non-Gaelic form of Bhraon in) who led the
Slieve Foy Band, Enya was born into a highly musical family. Her mother was
also a musician, and in 1968 two of her brothers and two of her uncles formed
the band An Clann As Dobhar (Gaelic for a family from the townland of Dore). The
name was soon shortened to Clannad and another family member, harpist/vocalist Mire Brennan,
added to the line-up. Enya joined the band on keyboards in 1980 and shared in
some of their success as they recorded haunting themes for a variety of
television programmes, giving them their first chart success. However, Enya,
who has professed she has little time for conventional pop music, never quite
fitted into the band and left amicably in 1982. Her first recordings appeared
on the score to David Puttnam's 1985 feature, The Frog Prince. The following
year Enya recorded the music for the BBC Television series The Celts, which was
subsequently released as her debut album in 1987. An endearing blend of
ethereal singing (in Gaelic and English) and lush synthesisers, the album was
largely ignored, as was the accompanying single, "I Want Tomorrow". However,
the following year, Enya signed to WEA Records and released Watermark. Climbing
to number 5 in the UK
charts, the album also generated a surprise number 1 with the hypnotic single
"Orinoco Flow (Sail Away)". Working with her long-time collaborators,
Roma Ryan (her lyric writer) and Nicky Ryan (her producer), Enya followed the
chart-topper with two smaller hits - "Evening Falls"
and "Storms In Africa Part II". The album also enjoyed a long chart
run in America,
eventually attaining multi-platinum status and establishing Enya as a fixture
on the New Age album chart.
Enya adopted a lower profile
for the next couple of years except for an appearance with Sin‚ad O'Connor. She returned in 1991 with the UK chart-topper
Shepherd Moons, which by the mid-90s had attained world sales of 10 million
copies. The album was hugely successful in America, and in 1993 won the Grammy
for Best New Age Album. Her third collection, The Memory Of Trees, didn't alter
the winning formula, but at some stage her warm, ambient music will begin to
pale as listeners realize it is the same delicious cake with a different
topping. The artist spent the remainder of the decade contributing soundtrack
material to various projects, before returning to the studio to record A Day
Without Rain. The album shot up the US
and several European charts almost a year after its release, thanks to the use
of the track "Only Time" in news coverage of the terrorist attacks on
the World Trade
Center in New York.