A Day Without Rain

Not to be confused with A Year Without Rain.
A Day Without Rain
Studio album by Enya
Released 20 November 2000 (2000-11-20)
Recorded 1998–2000
Studio Aigle Studio
(Killiney, County Dublin, Ireland)
Genre New age
Length 37:30
Label
Producer Nicky Ryan
Enya chronology
A Box of Dreams
(1997)
A Day Without Rain
(2000)
Themes from Calmi Cuori Appassionati
(2001)
Singles from A Day Without Rain
  1. "Only Time"
    Released: 20 November 2000
  2. "Wild Child"
    Released: 4 December 2001

A Day Without Rain is the fifth studio album by Irish singer, songwriter and musician Enya, released on 20 November 2000 by Warner Music internationally and 21 November 2000 by Reprise Records in the United States. Following a promotional tour in support of her compilation album Paint the Sky with Stars (1997), Enya took a short break before she resumed writing and recording a new album in 1998 with her usual recording partners, producer and arranger Nicky Ryan and his wife, lyricist Roma Ryan. While making the album, Enya started to question about her life and attempted to answered them in the material she was writing. In a musical departure from her previous albums, Enya incorporates a string section which was not a conscious decision.

A Day Without Rain received mixed reviews from critics and peaked at number six in the United Kingdom and initially, number seventeen on the Billboard 200 in the United States. Following the 11 September 2001 attacks, sales of the album and its lead single, "Only Time", skyrocketed after it was used by several radio and television networks in their coverage and aftermath of the attacks. As a result, "Only Time" climbed to number ten on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and A Day Without Rain reached a new peak on the Billboard 200 at number two. It became the fifth highest selling album of 2001 in the United States,[1][2] and Enya's highest selling album of her career with an estimated 16 million copies sold worldwide. In 2002, the album won Enya her third Grammy Award for Best New Age Album.

Production

Following a promotional tour in support of her compilation album Paint the Sky with Stars (1997), Enya took a short break before she resumed writing and recording a new, full studio album in 1998[3] with her usual recording partners, lyricist Roma Ryan and producer and arranger Nicky Ryan. Recording took place at Aigle Studios, a studio installed at the Ryan's home in Killiney, County Dublin, Ireland. Enya felt the need to work at a more leisurely pace for A Day Without Rain than working on her previous studio album, The Memory of Trees (1995), making a conscious effort not to record for five days a week instead of seven, and take the weekends off. The reduction in her work schedule made her feel happier as a result.[4] As with her previous albums, Enya produced A Day Without Rain in the same way. She first spends time alone developing melodies and outlines of songs on the piano. These would then be presented to the Ryans; "I'm quite anxious at this point", she said, "because it really is an act of laying your soul bare". While Roma starts to write lyrics to the melodies, Enya and Nicky will work in the studio to develop them into completed arrangements. Working without a deadline from her record label or a set timeline, Enya felt the project was complete after two years, feeling it was time to "step out of the studio ... time for it to have its life out in the world".[5]

During the making of the album, Enya found she was questioning herself about her life, and started to answer them in the new material she was writing. She compared the album to reading her own diary. "Like in "Pilgrim"," she said, "I was asking myself: So many years have passed, am I happy with the way I'm working? And my answer is that I wouldn't change anything. I really love what I do."[4] "Flora's Secret" is a song that makes reference to Flora, the Roman mythological goddess of flowers.[4] Enya and Roma incorporated some of Enya's experiences from her own love life on "Only Time" and "Fallen Embers". The former alludes to the difficulties and pressures of finding "the perfect love", which Enya has found difficult throughout her career due to her private lifestyle and that her past relationships were not the right ones.[4] A Day Without Rain features a greater use of strings than previous albums, something that was not a conscious effort. The three work by trying any possible idea with the music, and they stick with elements that give the greatest result, creatively.[6]

Most of the songs on the album were written in the major key, Enya believed it helped to create a more positive and uplifting mood to the music.[4] "A Day Without Rain" was titled to reference the amount of rain that falls over Ireland throughout the year. After one particular stretch of consistent raining over a few days, the sun came out. It was then when Enya proceeded to write the track. She described its meaning as "the mood of a particularly peaceful day".[7] The story behind "Only Time" is about the Irish musician Frankie Kennedy, co-founder of the Celtic group Altan with his wife Mairéad Ní Mhaonaigh. Kennedy died from bone cancer in 1994. Enya played the synthesizer on their album Ceol Aduaidh (1983), and found Kennedy's death particularly sad.[8] Enya singled out "Fallen Embers" as her favourite track on A Day Without Rain. She knew it was a particularly strong track when she presented it to Roma, who understood the emotion that she tried to put across musically. After Roma finished its lyrics, Enya recalled, "It was so moving to actually sing them".[9]

Release

A Day Without Rain was released in the UK on 20 November 2000 on Warner Music. Its North American release followed on 21 November on Reprise Records.[10] In the US, Reprise promoted A Day Without Rain through a campaign that involved E-cards and Amazon.com pages with 30-second snippets of "Only Time", exclusive displays offered at select retail stores, and a dedicated section of the label's web page to the album.[5] It went on to reach, before the 11 September attacks, an initial peak of No. 17 on the US Billboard 200 in December 2000[11] and No. 6 on the UK Albums Chart.

"Only Time" was released as the album's lead single. A promotional edition was shipped to Adult Contemporary radio stations, and the song premiered on the Delilah radio show on 24 October 2000. Its music video, directed by Graham Fink, was distributed to various music television networks from 31 October 2000.[5] The song gained nationwide radio airplay following its use in an episode of the drama series Providence and the soundtrack to Sweet November (2001).[12] By October 2001, the single had spent 43 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard New Age chart.[13] The song, in April 2001, was remixed without authorisation with an added hi-hop beat by the Swiss American Federation (S.A.F.), a group formed of Los Angeles-based radio DJ and producer Christian van Burkholder, a longtime Enya fan, and Marc Dold.[14][15] The song received radio airplay in Los Angeles before it spread to stations across the country. When the song aired on WHTZ in New York City in June, other stations followed suit, which led to Burkholder being contacted by Nicky and Enya, who approved his remix.[16] The second single released from A Day Without Rain, "Wild Child", was released in December 2001. It charted on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart with a peak of No. 12.[17] Its B-side, "Midnight Blue", is originally an instrumental which was extended with added vocals. It was then renamed as the title track for Enya's album And Winter Came... (2008).

In 2001, the album won Best International Pop Albums of the Year at the Japan Gold Disc Awards.[18] In 2002, it won a Grammy Award for Best New Age Album.[19]

9/11 aftermath

Following the 11 September 2001 attacks, "Only Time" was used in radio and television coverage of the disaster which led to increased sales and radio airplay of the single and A Day Without Rain,[20] to the point of both records surpassing their initial peak on the US charts. CNN and ABC News, among other networks, played the song with "Fallen Embers" as backdrops of footage of the victims.[21] Its position on the Billboard 200 climbed from No. 20 prior to the attacks[22] to its all-time peak of No. 2, driven by the increased audience exposure of "Only Time".[23] In the same month, "Only Time" reached No. 1 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart after it already spent 33 weeks on the chart,[24] breaking a seven-year-old record for the longest climb to the top position in the chart's history.[13] In November 2001, the single climbed to its peak of No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart,[25] Enya's highest charting single in the US. From October 2001 to January 2002, over 3 million RIAA-certified units of A Day Without Rain were sold in the US alone, which included a peak of one million copies sold in 19 days.[10]

"Only Time" gained further exposure following its use as a sound bed for promos of the comedy series Friends on the first five episodes of the eighth season.[26] Following the media response and increased sales of Enya's records, "Only Time" was reissued as a maxi-CD on 20 November 2001 containing the S.A.F remix and original version, with earnings from its sales donated to the Uniform Firefighters Association's Widows' and Children's Fund in aid of families of fire fighters involved in the attack rescue operations.[27][28]

A Day Without Rain became the fifth highest selling album worldwide of 2001 and the top selling new age album of the 2000s in the US, according to Nielsen SoundScan.[29] It remains Enya's highest selling album of her career[1] with a total of 15 million copies sold worldwide.[2]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic41/100[30]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[31]
Entertainment WeeklyD[32]
Los Angeles Times[33]
Q[34]
Rolling Stone[35]
The Village VoiceD−[36]

A Day Without Rain received mixed reviews from music critics. In a review for Dallas Morning News, Mario Tarradell gave a rating of "B+". He thought the album was worth the five-year wait since The Memory of Trees and is "another lovely piece of work" from Enya. The title track is "an elegant piano melody" which is followed by "dark-to-light, chaos-to-peace progression" for the rest of the album. "Lazy Days", he thought, was "an engulfing pop song filled with swooshing flourishes that one-ups the hooky, wall-of-sound pull" of Enya's past singles "Orinoco Flow" and "Caribbean Blue". Tarradell finalises with the album is "quintessential Enya".[37] Fiona Shepherd reviewed reviewed the album for The Scotsman and held a more critical review, writing Enya continues a "policy of releasing the same album over and over again using a different title and cover" with "drab Celtic moods". She thought the album was not on par with her "earlier epic stuff".[38] A critical review appeared from Gavin Martin for The Mirror. He thought the title track and "Only Time" will please her fans, but the album "still sounds like undistinguished new age fodder ... The rest of us can go back to watching paint dry."[39]

R.S. Murthi for New Straits Times gave a rating of two-and-a-half stars out of five for Enya's performance and three out of five for the album's sound quality. He writes the album is a "ho-hum New Age effort" with "pretty melodies" but, on the other hand, its "dense textures conceal a compositional shallowness". He deemed some of the track titles "pompous" but the more successful songs, such as "Deora Ar Mo Chroi", are so due to their traditional Celtic elements rather than Enya's own compositions.[40] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 41, which indicates "mixed or average reviews", based on 8 reviews. Stephen Thompson of The A.V. Club found it too derivative of Enya's previous albums, which he found far superior to A Day Without Rain.[41] In his review for The Village Voice, Robert Christgau panned the album as nonsense, "goopier, more simplistic" than Watermark (1988).[36]

Steve Morse welcomed the album in a report for The Boston Globe. He thought the album is "arguably her best work because there is more emphasis on her gorgeous soprano lead vocals rather than the lush, multitracked harmony vocals".[4] Billboard complimented the album's production, writing the more experimental songs like "Only Time" and "Lazy Days" "not only freshen a musical formula that still works extremely well but also leave the listener happily curious about Enya's next move".[42] Rolling Stone remarked that the album sounded too similar with her previous releases and thought a change in musical direction after Paint the Sky with Stars would have been better. Her "skill at ephemeral sonic watercolors has grown wearisome, like a relative who tells the same stories every holiday."[6] In the Baltimore Sun, J. D. Considine thought the album brings "the same lush, contemplative vein" as Enya's previous albums, but thought they were formed of "pretty but unconnected" tracks. A Day Without Rain, however, was more of a unified album that compared to "a suite instead of a pop album". "One by One", he thought, "conveys all the qualities of a pop hit without succumbing to the typical transience of a Top-40 favorite".[43] People recommended the "masterful" album for a "rainy day" because of Enya's characteristic sound and tranquil mood.[44]

Track listing

All music composed by Enya, all songs produced by Nicky Ryan,[45] all lyrics by Roma Ryan, except where noted.

No. TitleLyrics Length
1. "A Day Without Rain"    2:38
2. "Wild Child"  Roma Ryan, Enya 3:47
3. "Only Time"  Roma Ryan, Enya, Nicky Ryan 3:38
4. "Tempus Vernum"    2:24
5. "Deora Ar Mo Chroí (Tears on my Heart)"    2:48
6. "Flora's Secret"    4:07
7. "Fallen Embers"    2:31
8. "Silver Inches"    1:37
9. "Pilgrim"    3:12
10. "One by One"    3:56
11. "The First of Autumn"    3:10
12. "Lazy Days"    3:42

Personnel

Music
Production

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Chart Position
Australian ARIA Album Chart[48] 4
Austrian Albums Chart[49] 1
Belgian Albums Chart (Flanders)[50] 9
Belgian Albums Chart (Wallonia)[51] 5
Canadian Albums Chart[52] 6
Danish Albums Chart[53] 5
Dutch Albums Chart[54] 2
Finnish Albums Chart[55] 29
French SNEP Albums Chart[56] 33
German Media Control Albums Chart[57] 1
Hungarian Albums Chart[58] 15
Irish Albums Chart[59] 7
Italian Albums Chart[60] 6
Japanese Oricon Albums Chart[61] 4
New Zealand Albums Chart[62] 5
Norwegian Albums Chart[63] 12
Spanish Albums Chart[64] 3
Swedish Albums Chart[65] 4
Swiss Albums Chart[66] 2
UK Albums Chart[67] 6
US Billboard 200[68] 2

Year-end charts

Chart (2000) Position
Australian Albums Chart[69] 66
Belgian Albums Chart (Wallonia)[70] 71
Dutch Albums Chart[71] 82
Italian Albums Chart[72] 37
Swiss Albums Chart[73] 91
Chart (2001) Position
Australian Albums Chart[74] 62
Austrian Albums Chart[75] 4
Belgian Albums Chart (Flanders)[76] 52
Belgian Albums Chart (Wallonia)[77] 31
Dutch Albums Chart[78] 11
Japanese Albums Chart[79] 62
Swiss Albums Chart[80] 6
US Billboard 200[81] 8
Chart (2002) Position
Austrian Albums Chart[75] 36
Dutch Albums Chart[82] 19
Swiss Albums Chart[83] 66
US Billboard 200[84] 18

All-time charts

Chart Position
US Billboard 200[85] 153

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/Sales
Argentina (CAPIF)[86] Gold 30,000*
Australia (ARIA)[87] 3× Platinum 210,000^
Austria (IFPI Austria)[88] Platinum 50,000*
Belgium (BEA)[89] 2× Platinum 100,000*
Brazil (ABPD)[90] Gold 100,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[91] 8× Platinum 800,000^
Denmark (IFPI Denmark)[92] Platinum 50,000^
France (SNEP)[93] Gold 100,000*
Germany (BVMI)[94] 3× Platinum 900,000^
Japan (RIAJ)[95] 4× Platinum 800,000^
Mexico (AMPROFON)[96] Gold 75,000^
Netherlands (NVPI)[97] 3× Platinum 240,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[98] Platinum 15,000^
Poland (ZPAV)[99] Gold 50,000*
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[100] 2× Platinum 200,000^
Sweden (GLF)[101] Platinum 80,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[102] 2× Platinum 100,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[103] 2× Platinum 600,000^
United States (RIAA)[104] 7× Platinum 7,000,000^
Summaries
Europe (IFPI)[105] 3× Platinum 3,000,000*
Worldwide 16,000,000[106]

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone

Release history

Country Date Format Label
Worldwide 20 November 2001 Warner Music
United States 21 November 2001 Reprise Records

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  103. "British album certifications – Enya – A Day Without Rain". British Phonographic Industry. Retrieved 9 May 2011. Enter A Day Without Rain in the field Keywords. Select Title in the field Search by. Select album in the field By Format. Select Platinum in the field By Award. Click Search
  104. "American album certifications – Enya – A Day Without Rain". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved 9 May 2011. If necessary, click Advanced, then click Format, then select Album, then click SEARCH
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  106. "Enya en la música". Esmas Música. 4 April 2013. Retrieved 8 April 2013.
Preceded by
Collection by Tracy Chapman
Fever by Kylie Minogue
Austrian Chart number-one album
14 October 2001
28 October 2001
Succeeded by
Fever by Kylie Minogue
Fever by Kylie Minogue
Preceded by
Hits PUR – 20 Jahre eine Band by Pur
Fever by Kylie Minogue
German Media Control Chart number-one album
14 – 21 October 2001
4 November 2001
Succeeded by
Fever by Kylie Minogue

External links

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