FIONA’s 'Enough’s Enough' Marks a Soulful, Striking Debut
- Andy Roberts
- Apr 11
- 2 min read

At just 18 years old, rising UK singer-songwriter FIONA delivers a debut single with the emotional weight and vocal prowess of an artist well beyond her years. “Enough’s Enough” is a soul-stirring introduction — an elegant fusion of pop, R&B, and jazz that channels raw vulnerability through powerful lyricism and a voice that refuses to be ignored.
Drawing inspiration from icons like Adele, Stevie Nicks, and Olivia Dean, FIONA’s vocal delivery is at once classic and contemporary. There’s a quiet strength in how she navigates the emotional terrain of the song — the liminal space between love and loss, where heartbreak becomes inevitable but still somehow heartbreaking.
“This song is about the stage before a breakup,” FIONA explains, “when you’re questioning whether you still have love for that person, or if you’re just holding on out of familiarity. But their actions make loving them even harder, almost pushing you towards hate, even when you don’t want to feel that way.” That tension comes through in every note of the track, which builds gradually from an intimate piano arrangement into a sweeping, emotionally charged climax.
Co-written with jazz pianist Jack Noke and produced by Philip Van Den Brandeler, the track’s production is as meticulous as its storytelling. The haunting refrain — “Don’t make me hate you, cause loving you is painful enough” — anchors the song, crystallizing its core message with striking clarity. It’s a breakup song, yes, but one steeped in self-awareness rather than blame — a quiet reckoning more than a dramatic explosion.
There’s a cinematic quality to “Enough’s Enough” — a slow burn that lingers long after the final note. FIONA’s classical training and genre-blending sensibilities shine through, offering a sound that’s both technically refined and emotionally unfiltered.