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Revision as of 05:03, 28 July 2022 by Dipper Dalmatian (talk | contribs) (Lyrics: fixed)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) 1988 single by Enya This article is about the Enya single. For the Enya tribute album by the Taliesin Orchestra, see Orinoco Flow – The Music of Enya.

"Orinoco Flow"
Single by Enya
from the album Watermark
Released3 October 1988 (1988-10-03)
Studio
GenreNew-age
Length4:25
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Nicky Ryan
Enya singles chronology
"I Want Tomorrow"
(1987)
"Orinoco Flow"
(1988)
"Evening Falls..."
(1988)
Music video
"Orinoco Flow" on YouTube

"Orinoco Flow", also released as "Orinoco Flow (Sail Away)", is a song by Irish singer-songwriter Enya from her second studio album, Watermark (1988). It was released on 3 October 1988 by WEA Records in the United Kingdom and by Geffen Records in the United States the following year. The song topped the UK Singles Chart for three weeks and received two Grammy Award nominations for Best Music Video and Best New Age Performance at the 32nd Annual Grammy Awards.

The Guardian ranked "Orinoco Flow" number 77 in its list of the 100 greatest UK number-one singles of all time in 2020.

Background

The song was released as the lead single from Enya's studio album, Watermark, on 3 October 1988. It became a global success, reaching number one in several countries, including Belgium, Ireland, the Netherlands, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, where it stayed at the top of the UK Singles Chart for three weeks. In the United States, the song peaked at number 24 on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 1989.

The title of the song is an allusion both to Orinoco Studios (now Miloco Studios), where it was recorded, and to the river of the same name. Its pizzicato chords, generated by altering the Roland D-50 synthesizer's "Pizzagogo" patch, are highly recognizable as a New-Age sound. Enya was signed to WEA by Rob Dickins, who served as executive producer of Watermark, and the song pays homage to Dickins in the line "with Rob Dickins at the wheel". Co-producer Ross Cullum is referenced in the song with a pun on Ross Dependency: "We can sigh, say goodbye/Ross and his dependencies".

Lyrics

The lyrics have been likened to "an itinerary for the most expensive gap year of all time", mentioning an array of locations like a "global geography lesson". Locations mentioned in the song include Fiji, Tiree, Peru, Bali, and Cebu.

A few of Enya's songs after Orinoco Flow have a lyrical reference to this song. In The Memory of Trees the song "On My Way Home" repeats the 'turn it up, adieu' section; "Lazy Days" refers to the song with the lyric 'and how it sails away' in A Day Without Rain, and in And Winter Came... "Miraculum" has Latin lyrics, in which the refrain translates to 'to sail away, a wonderful thing'. "Echoes In Rain" from Enya's album Dark Sky Island is somewhat of a continuation of "Orinoco Flow" - the lyric 'everything flows' is also repeated.

Legacy

In 1994, the song was licensed to Virgin Records for the best-selling new-age music compilation album Pure Moods, which contributed to further exposure and "helped provide a multi-platinum bonanza" to the record company.

In 1998, a special-edition 10th-anniversary remix single was released.

In a 2015 interview with The Irish Times, Enya said: “Longevity is all any artist dreams of”, rather than to dwell on how her songs are remembered. She credits "Orinoco Flow" for some of her cross-generational appeal, saying: "people who used to like Orinoco Flow are now playing my music to their children". In another interview, when asked whether people bring up "Orinoco Flow", she responded: "people say 'sail away' to me or whistle bits of it back to me. I think it’s wonderful – I never tire of it."

Critical reception

Ned Raggett from AllMusic described the song as "distinct" and "downright catchy". He noted "its implicit dramatics, gently charges instead of piling things on".

Music video

A music video was made to accompany the song. It features Enya singing the song in front of footage of rivers, flowers and nature, edited to have the appearance of a painting. It was directed by Michael Geoghegan.

Track listings

7-inch and cassette single
No.TitleLength
1."Orinoco Flow" (edit)3:44
2."Out of the Blue"3:10
12-inch and mini-CD single
No.TitleLength
1."Orinoco Flow"4:25
2."Smaoitím..." (d'Aodh agus do Mháire Uí Dhúgain)6:05
3."Out of the Blue"3:10
Japanese CD EP (1990)
No.TitleLength
1."Orinoco Flow" (7-inch version) 
2."Evening Falls" 
3."Storms in Africa" (single version) 
Japanese CD single (1998)
No.TitleLength
1."Orinoco Flow" 
2."Hope Has a Place" 
3."Pax Deorum" 

Charts and certifications

Weekly charts

Weekly chart performance for "Orinoco Flow"
Chart (1988–1989) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA) 6
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40) 8
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders) 1
Canada Top Singles (RPM) 4
Denmark (IFPI) 6
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100) 1
Finland Suomen virallinen lista 5
France (SNEP) 16
Ireland (IRMA) 1
Italy (Musica e Dischi) 20
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40) 1
Netherlands (Single Top 100) 1
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ) 2
Norway (VG-lista) 5
Portugal (AFP) 3
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan) 2
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade) 1
UK Singles (OCC) 1
US Billboard Hot 100 24
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard) 7
US Alternative Airplay (Billboard) 6
US Cash Box Top 100 25
West Germany (GfK) 2

Year-end charts

1988 year-end chart performance for "Orinoco Flow"
Chart (1988) Position
Belgium (Ultratop) 56
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100) 83
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40) 40
Netherlands (Single Top 100) 23
UK Singles (OCC) 18
1989 year-end chart performance for "Orinoco Flow"
Chart (1989) Position
Australia (ARIA) 43
Canada Top Singles (RPM) 60
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100) 72
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ) 34
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade) 19
West Germany (Official German Charts) 20

Certifications

Certifications and sales for "Orinoco Flow"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI) Silver 250,000

Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Covers

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Samples and remixes

  • Samples of the backing track are used in Rebel MC's hit single "Tribal Bass" (1991)
  • Maicol & Manuel sampled the chords in their song "No Hay Ley"

In popular culture

This section may contain irrelevant references to popular culture. Please help Misplaced Pages to improve this section by removing the content or adding citations to reliable and independent sources. (April 2021)

After a significant wave of popularity, including a regular rotation on MTV, the song became "a punch line", representing a new-age cliché of "generic 'bubble bath' music". The song was used in scenes depicting relaxation and to highlight this in a joking manner. In the 1997 South Park episode "Death", Stan's grandfather locks Stan in a room and plays a parody of the song performed by Toddy Walters to illustrate what it feels like to be old. In the Brooklyn Nine-Nine episode "Crime and Punishment", character Jake Peralta mentions Enya as one of his favorite musical artists. Later on, "Orinoco Flow" plays as he walks, in slow-motion, into a courtroom.

In the 2002 I'm Alan Partridge episode "The Talented Mr. Alan", Alan is caught singing the song to himself. The song is in "Funeral", the sixth episode of the first series of Peep Show; the music video is shown during the episode, and the song plays over the end credits. The song is played during Rumpelstiltskin's announcement scene in the 2010 film Shrek Forever After. It is also in the first season of Cougar Town. The song was also used as the title song for the Netflix comedy-drama series Living with Yourself starring Paul Rudd and Aisling Bea.

Alternatively, the song is also used in media to create a dissonance between the calmness of the song and starkly contrasting visuals. The song is featured during a sequence in David Fincher's 2011 adaptation of the novel The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, in which the secondary protagonist is tortured while the song plays. In the Black Mirror episode "Hated in the Nation", one of the characters listens to the song to relax, "shortly before she’s torn apart by murderous drones" and effectively returned Orinoco Flow to the top of the new-age charts after the episode was released.

An exception to this is the use of the song in the 2018 Bo Burnham film Eighth Grade. Burnham wrote to Enya directly for permission to use the song, and recognized it as a serious choice for the film; "in Eighth Grade, 'Orinoco Flow' finally gets to be itself" rather than "fodder for ironic laughs".

In regards to using "Orinoco Flow" in "Brooklyn Nine-Nine", producer Dan Goor remarked that “We weren’t trying to attach ourselves to a history of making fun of it. The joke was just that it’s 100 percent the wrong music to play. It’s supposed to be this triumphant, badass moment, and instead we’re playing that song.”

Other uses

  • A version of the song is performed by the main character of Moone Boy when he and his friend are sailing on a homemade raft.
  • Australian television show Please Like Me features this song in the opening scene of the first episode of its fourth season.
  • The song was featured in the 2018 animated film Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation.
  • The song was played in the background during a scene in the 6th episode of season 2 of The Boys, when A-Train was being recruited to the Church of the Collective.
  • The song was featured in the 2021 film The Boss Baby: Family Business.

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Other references

"Orinoco Flow" has also been used in reference to various object names including an iris cultivar Orinoco Flow by iris breeder Cy Bartlett in 1989, and Leporinus enyae, a species of fish from the Orinoco drainage basin named for the artist herself.

In the 2017 ITV tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales, Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy, while Prince Harry recalls his mother listening to Enya driving in her BMW with the top down.

References

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  60. Diana, Our Mother: Her Life and Legacy. ITV. 2017.

External links

Enya
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