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A Day Without Rain

Enya  Main Performer

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Track
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1 A Day Without Rain Enya 2:38
2 Wild Child Enya/Ryan 3:47
3 Only Time Enya/Ryan/Ryan 3:38
4 Tempus Vernum Enya 2:24
5 Deora Ar Mo Chroi Enya 2:48
6 Flora's Secret Enya 4:07
7 Fallen Embers Enya 2:31
8 Silver Inches Enya 1:37
9 Pilgrim Enya 3:12
10 One by One Enya 3:56
11 Lazy Days Enya 3:42
  • Overview
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A Day Without Rain

Audio Compact Disc

Label: Reprise

Category: Pop/Rock

A Day Without Rain

UPC: 093624742623

Release Date: 11/21/2000

Original Release Date: 11/21/2000

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [A Day Without Rain, Wild Child, Only Time, Tempus Vernum, Deora Ar Mo Chroi, Flora's Secret, Fallen Embers, Silver Inches, Pilgrim, One by One, Lazy Days]
Contributors:
  • Enya  Main Performer 

William Ruhlmann

Enya's first full-length album of new material in five years (and her fourth in 12 years) will have a familiar sound to the millions who have followed her career so far. As usual, the slow songs sound like "Silent Night" being performed in a cathedral, and the less slow songs are paced by rhythm patterns that would be called pizzicato passages if they were being played on real strings instead of string-like synthesizers. Over the music, Enya sings in her multi-tracked, ethereal voice, making Roma Ryan's lyrics, which are full of pastoral imagery and abstract romantic sentiments, seem even more insubstantial than they already are. In the press materials accompanying the release, Enya explains why it took her five years to come up with less than 34 and a half minutes of music that sounds like most of her earlier music by noting that she plays all the instruments and does all the singing herself without using samples. It might be more accurate to say that there is no need for her to release albums any more frequently than she does, since each one sells over a long period of time. And since her listeners are more concerned with the mood she sets than with musical content, the similarity to her other albums is a good thing. This is music that works almost entirely as a surface pleasure; strip it of its pretensions, and it's just contemporary easy listening music. ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi

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