Here is a concept for an immersive audio-visual experience.

Lyrically, her music navigates a geography of the soul. Avoiding confessional pop tropes of broken love or social outrage, Enya’s songs are meditations on exile, nature, and memory. Tracks like "Caribbean Blue" or "The Memory of Trees" invoke an idealized, pre-industrial landscape. This is not the gritty realism of city life, but a pastoral dreamscape drawn from Celtic mythology and Tolkienesque fantasy. In a world speeding toward digital fragmentation, Enya offered stillness. Her music became the soundtrack for study, sleep, and spiritual seeking—aural Valium for the anxious masses.

Enya’s signature sound relies on . She does not just sing a melody once; she sings it dozens of times, layering harmonies upon harmonies until her voice sounds like a choir of angels who have never experienced a bad day.

Nicky Ryan famously calls this "The Wall of Enya." Unlike rock bands using distorted guitars, Enya uses her own voice as the primary instrument.