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    Memory of Trees

    Memory of Trees
    Creator: Enya
    Category: Music

    Buy New: $37.99



    New (1) Used (1) from $34.50

    Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
    Sales Rank: 802169

    Format: Import
    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

    EAN: 4943674060450
    ASIN: B000BDJ1G0

    Release Date: November 15, 2005
    Availability: Temporarily out of stock. Order now and we'll deliver when available. We'll e-mail you with an estimated delivery date as soon as we have more information. Your credit card will not be charged until we ship the item.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Beautiful   August 3, 2006
    Lonnie E. Holder (Columbus, Indiana, United States)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    The problem with Enya is that she is so consistently good. It is difficult to write a review that says something different from previous reviews (having recently reviewed "A Day without Rain" and previously "Watermark"). The same words, ethereal, ephemeral, airy, haunting, and spiritual apply to each album. The only risk is that my reviews become boring, because Enya could never be.

    This CD begins with the instrumental track "Memory of Trees." While "Memory of Trees" is nominally an instrumental, there are voices that punctuate portions of the music. This opening feels optimistic, though the title feels as though it is vaguely related to forests and lands gone by. The vocals provide a chorale sound that builds and cascades around you with the feeling of great trees and landscapes greater than any of the puny works of mankind. Great beasts wander about and smaller beasts enter and exit the brush at the edges of clearings in the great forest in a celebration of nature.

    The pace speeds up in the peppy "Anywhere Is." The lyrics are poetic and symbolic and are a mirror maze of mental images. As is frequently typical of Enya the lyrics seem to make sense until you attempt to understand them and then their meaning escapes your grasp. In this case the song seems to be describing the paths we take in life and the choices that we make, and whether they can be unmade, and even whether the choices take us to or from the one we love. Another unusual feature of this song is the predominant instruments which compete for attention with Enya's voice. Typically Enya's voice stands out clearly from the instruments, which in this case are mostly strings and piano.

    "Pax Deorum" is somewhat ominous, and fits with the following song, "Athair Ar Neamh." Both songs are simple songs that relate to God. "Pax Deorum" translates roughly as "The Peace of the Gods," or seeking to placate the gods. "Athair Ar Neamh" translates approximately as "Father in Heaven." Note that the title of the latter song appears as a line in the former song, tying both songs together, and placing an Irish Gaelic line into a Latin song. There are moments of choral lightness in the otherwise ominous "Pax Deorum," which I believe has appeared as the background music for a commercial. The latter song is more contemplative and ethereal and Enya allows the beauty of her voice to caress and harmonize the Irish Gaelic verses.

    "From Where I Am" is a relatively sedate instrumental that forms a brief piano interlude leading into "China Roses." This song manages to capture the wonder of the universe and the beauty of heaven all in one song. This song transcends the poetic to the surrealistic both lyrically and vocally. Once again Enya allows her voice to be a beautiful instrument to complement the strings and piano to create a work of aural art.

    "Hope Has a Place" is the first song where the lyrics are relatively easy to understand. The concept is simple: there is always hope where there is love. The vocals are beautiful (again) and may remind a listener of the song Enya wrote for "The Lord of the Rings." This song is for romantics and candle-lit dinners everywhere.

    Another instrumental interlude follows. "Tea-House Moon" has some of the most interesting instrumental effects on this CD. The mood is contemplative and traditional, though with a vaguely Asian flavor. This instrumental is the music for a heavenly choreography.

    The next song changes style, again, and yet fits within the character of the album. "Once You Had Gold" seems to allude to the transitory nature of all things, perhaps most particularly life. There are lines that seem to say that things come and things go, and you need to accept the joys that you can get just from being here to greet the new day. I particularly like the last line which says that there are no promises in life, that there is good and bad and that one must make the best of any situation. The song is sung in a fairy tale style, a cautionary tale young and old.

    The next song translates as "The Dreamer." The music tells you all you need to know about the words, which are surrealistic and, of course, dream-like. The ephemeral lyrics and music bespeaks an atmosphere, a feeling, a place that can only exist in our dreams, though we might wish otherwise. This song nearly achieves allowing us to be a creation of our imagination.

    At last we must awaken from the fantasy Enya has woven for us. "On My Way Home" returns us to this place and time, but with a longing for the place we leave, the poetry that has been woven for us. Yet, we rejoice for we return to a place of familiarity, and still, there is the memory, yes indeed, "The Memory of Trees."



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