ENIGMA: MYSTERY REVEALED
By: L.V.
For a very long time, and most especially since
the album MCMXC a.D. was released, together with the
release of the different singles by this "band?", the
fans of this kind of music have been wondering about the true
identity of the artists hiding behind this mysterious name. And
it has been some time indeed before we could discover that the supposed
band was not such, strictly speaking, since it was rather a
one-person project by the artist of Romanian-Austrian origin Michael
Cretu. And this project, which merely reflected in
reality a long time dream by this musician, was but a way to
establish a symbol within which the artist was able to develop a
kind of experimental, creative music. As its creator himself
claimed, "I wanted the music to speak for itself",
that music were appreciated per se on the part of the audience,
no matter who the artists were who were hiding behind this
project. Like he says, "It is music for everybody.
It's intellectual but it has a very simple naive feeling".
And these are precisely the traits that have given it its
international success. It is for this reason that, in the
beginning, there were no references whatsoever to the artists
behind the album, since Cretu's aim was to keep
the artists behind the enigma, so that the audience could react
to the music in a spontaneous way, which broke all the
established rules in this sense. The mystery prompted all kinds
of rumours about the authors of the project, mostly spread by
anxious journalists, who speculated whether it was Alan
Parsons or Mike Oldfield, among others,
the enigmatic creators of this peculiar music.
However, Cretu had his
intentions to keep an anonymous profile frustrated and was unable
to perpetuate the mystery when the music of this first album was
charged with plagiarism because it mixed Gregorian chant with
hip-hop rhythms, and most specifically, at a legal level, Cretu
and Virgin Germany had to face charges in court
when the Munich based choir Kapelle Antiqua,
claimed that they had used their own recordings of Gregorian
chants in the album, namely in certain fragments of
"Sadeness" (part 1) and "Mea Culpa" (part II)
without permission, an issue that would be solved with an economic compensation,
a retrospective appeal for such permission to BMG/Ariola
and Polydor for the use of these choral fragments,
and a written apology. Nevertheless, and from a legal point of
view, no copyrights had in actual fact been infringed, since such
recordings by the Kapelle Antiqua choir were
actually of a public domain. Anyway, this incident sufficed to
end up with the intended "enigma", and the names of Michael
Cretu as the mind behind the project, as well as that of Sandra
Cretu, his wife and closest collaborator, have come to
the light, thus revealing the mystery behind the enigma. Yet,
even if Cretu's wishes in this respect have been
frustrated like this, the artist would at least win the case at
court.
Michael Cretu,
born in Bucarest in 1957, of an Austrian mother and a Romanian father,
emigrated to Germany in 1975, where he studied at the Academy of
Music in Frankfurt, where he graduated in Theory of Composition
with first class honors. Cretu soon became a
renowned studio musician specialized in the keyboards, also
developing a noteworthy career arranging songs and as a producer.
He then began a solo career with the release of his albums Moon,
Light, and Flowers under the label Polygram
in 1979, Legionare (1993) with the label Virgin,
and Invisible Man, an English version of Die Chinesische
Mauer (The Chinese Wall). Furthermore, he received
several awards for his work as a producer, and collaborated with
different internationally famous musicians, among them Mike
Oldfield (Islands), Moti, Thiers
and Sandra Lauer, an European pop singer whom he
married in 1988, also having her own solo successful career.
Currently settled in Ibiza (Spain) together with their twin
children Nikita and Sebastian,
born in 1995, Michael and Sandra
continue to develop their respective musical careers both in the
project Enigma and in other solo projects, or
also collaborating with other musicians, while at the same time
producing their own albums (and other musicians') at their own
studio (A.R.T. Studios).
In their Enigma personas, their
success came by the hand of this first album, MCMXC a.D,
where, loyal to his idea that music was to become the protagonist
instead of the artist, Cretu did not use his
true name, nor did he credit anyone by his or her true names, nor
did he allow any clear references to the people involved with the
album. As can be heard in the opening of the album, what mattered
was "the voice of Enigma" itself. After the legal
trouble caused by the charges of plagiarism mentioned before, in
the following albums there was no longer any reason to continue
maintaining the silence about the names of the different artists who
collaborated in the project, among whom, apart from Cretu
and his wife Sandra, we can name Frank
Peterson (F. Gregorian), who
participated in the first album, though he soon separated from
the project because of "artistic differences" with Cretu;
David Fairstein, who has collaborated with Cretu
since 1990; Andy Hard, (Angel),
a German singer who has participated in "Return to
Innocence" from the album ENIGMA 2, The Cross of
Changes, besides other independent projects on the part of Sandra,
as well as his own solo debut Welcome to the Soul Asylum,
produced by Michael Cretu and Jens Gad; Peter
Cornelius, an Austrian singer and songwriter with his
own solo career since 1980, whose contribution was reflected in
the guitar solo of "I Love You...I'll Kill You", of ENIGMA
2 The Cross of Changes, and in ENIGMA 3 Le Roi Est Mort,
Vive Le Roi!, with "The Child In Us", besides
other collaborations outside Enigma; Jens
Gad, an ex-singer, producer and guitarist whose most
noteworthy contribution was the guitar parts of the album The Cross
of Changes, besides other collaborations; and Julien
Temple, a music video producer, among whose most remarkable
videos are those he produced for "Sadeness",
"Return to Innocence", and "Beyond the
Invisible".
How is the Music by ENIGMA? Why
its international success? Independently from the controversial
opinions in this respect, the truth is that at the time Cretu
succeeded in taking advantage of a series of auspicious
circumstances as well as in creating something that sounded new
in the musical panorama. In all this, the artist himself admits
to the influence that had in him the work by such bands as Pink
Floyd or Yes: "I
always liked music like this, but I could no longer buy it, so I did
it myself". By using samples with the sounds of
flutes Peruvian-style plus Gregorian chants, the artist would
then combine these with disco and pop rhythms to produce this
first album MCMXC a.D, whose single "Sadeness" would
stay at the top charts of 23 countries, while the album would
sell some twelve million units, besides being number one in 41 countries,
not to mention the many awards it was granted at an international
level, including several gold and platinum awards in numerous
countries, plus a triple platinum in the United States.
His success did not diminish with the release of a second album, Enigma 2, The Cross Of Changes, which appeared in the market in 1993, also selling in a record time about five million units, even if it did lose some fans as it omitted the use of Gregorian chants and Peruvian-style flutes that so characteristic had been of the previous album. Instead, the author chose to use a gradual progression produced by different instruments and musical styles of very varied ethnic origins, including Lapp chants, among other ethnic novelties, which would take the music by Enigma along a very different path from that taken in the previous album, in an endless exploration of new musical, innovative roads that at the same time turn out to be commercial and satisfying enough in the field of current music.
According to Cretu, these two
first albums could be considered as the musical forefathers of
his third success as Enigma: "The
intention was to mix the elements of the first two and to give
them a role". In ENIGMA 3 Le Roi Est Mort,
Vive Le Roi! the author recycles the Gregorian chants and
the flutes of the first album and makes them part of the band,
rejecting their former soloist role. As he himself explains,
"The intention was to do a very harmonic, and
more middle of the road album, in that there are more songs, not
only atmospheres. And also I've moved away from the familiar drum
grooves because I can't stand them any more. The drum sounds are
quite different on this album and quieter". By
adding new ethnic traits which range from Zulu chants to Latvian
folk songs, this album intends to reflect on the way things
change while at the same time they remain the same: "In
a naive, philosophical way, the songs on this album are a
reflection on our daily lives, why we do this or that".
One of the basic questions the album reflects, "Why?",
is, in Cretu's opinion, one of the most
fundamental questions the human being wonders about.
Although between albums there tends to be a long parenthesis, because of the conditions in which Cretu lets an idea grow, mature, and become a musical piece which he himself produces (he is his own sound engineer, producer and author of the lyrics and the music that his creative genius dictates him), this third album is not the last one the author intends to release as Enigma. The American magazine Billboard, in its edition dated October 23, 1996, claimed that Michael Cretu has signed a contract to release five additional albums after this last one, and it is expected that a new album will be released every three years, more or less. Hopefully, the good work that has been developed by ENIGMA so far, will continue to have the magnificient quality of Michael and Sandra Cretu's productions that so many of their fans and followers have come to appreciate up to now.
With respect to possible tours by Enigma,
in a letter that appeared in March, 1995, Cretu
said he had been considering the idea of performing a single
concert in some spectacular place soon after the release of his
next album, yet this was merely an idea and nothing definite has
been said afterwards (as far as I know). On the other hand, Cretu's reluctance
to give interviews, maybe partly due to his idea of maintaining a
certain mysterious aura, and an as much of an anonymous profile
as circumstances permit, so that the audience concentrates on his
music rather than on his personal life as an artist, responds furthermore,
according to his statements in this respect, to the fact that he
has no time left for them, because of his multiple work
commitments. Let's not forget that his work for Enigma
is only one of his many projects, since besides this the artist usually
works both in his own solo career and in different collaborations
with other artists, either writing music or in his aspect as a
producer. Like he himself says, "If I start to
answer all of them [questions], I would never have any minute for the
studio". Yet, Cretu did give
an interview via Internet last December 14, 1996, about the
release of the third album by Enigma, Le Roi Est
Mort, Vive Le Roi!, which was an exceptional event.
Cretu likes to work in the peace, solitude and quiet of his own studio, since this is the way he concentrates best on his work and can express what he wishes to say through his music in a most faithful way to his original ideas. Despite the fact that the enigma about the artist who created it in the first place has already been revealed because of circumstances beyond his control, loyal to his ideals, Cretu keeps a low profile denying any undue protagonism to his own persona, especially in the videos. "I'm important while the record is being made, but not now. What is important is the result. The music is the star, not me."
So we continue to enjoy this wonderful music and hope that more will truly be appearing in the market for us to listen to with the same quality we have come to be used to thanks to the careful work of a versatile artist whose successful career will no doubt reach new peaks in the near future.