Mike Oldfield
Michael Gordon Oldfield (born
May 15,
1953 in
Reading,
England) is a multi-instrumentalist
musician and
composer, working a style that blends
progressive rock,
folk, ethnic or
world music,
classical music,
electronic music and more recently
dance. His music is often elaborate and complex in nature.
Oldfield's parents are Maureen and Raymond Oldfield. His sister
Sally and brother
Terry are successful musicians in their own right and have appeared on several of his albums. Mike and his siblings were raised Roman Catholic, the faith of their
Irish[
1] mother. He and the Norwegian singer
Anita Hegerland have two children together.
Early career
Oldfield's career began fairly early in his life, playing acoustic guitar in local
folk clubs. At this time, he already had two fifteen minute instrumental pieces in which he would "go through all sorts of moods", a precursor to his landmark 1970s compositions. In his early teens, Oldfield was involved in a 'beat group' playing
Shadows style music (he has often cited
Hank Marvin as a major influence, and would later cover the Shadows' song
Wonderful Land). In
1967 he and his sister Sally formed the folk duo
The Sallyangie and were signed to
Transatlantic Records after exposure in the local folk scene. An album,
Children of the Sun was issued in
1968. After Sallyangie disbanded, he formed another duo with his brother Terry, called
Barefoot, which took him back to rock music.
In
1970 he joined ex-
Soft Machine vocalist
Kevin Ayers' backing group
The Whole World playing bass. The band also included keyboardist and composer
David Bedford, who quickly befriended Oldfield and encouraged him in his composition of an early version of
Tubular Bells. Bedford would later arrange and conduct an orchestral version of that album. With Ayers, Oldfield recorded two albums,
Whatevershebringswesing and
Shooting At The Moon. Both albums featured early versions of what would become his trademark sound.
Having recorded a demo version of Tubular Bells, Oldfield attempted to convince someone in the music industry to take the project on, but was told the project was unmarketable. However, in
1972 he met a young
Richard Branson who was setting up his own record label,
Virgin Records, and after playing the demo to engineers
Tom Newman and
Simon Heyworth, he began recording the 1973 version of the album.
["Mike Oldfield biography"](1973-1991) Virgin years
Oldfield's most famous work is
Tubular Bells, an instrumental composition recorded in
1972 and launched on
May 25,
1973 as the inaugural album of
Richard Branson's
Virgin Records label. The album was groundbreaking, as Oldfield played more than twenty different instruments in the multi-layered recording, and its style progressed continuously, covering many diverse musical genres. The album quickly reached the top 10 in UK album sales and has spent 279 weeks on the chart to date. In the US, it received attention chiefly by appearing in the soundtrack to
The Exorcist. In the autumn of
1974, the follow-up LP,
Hergest Ridge, was No 1 in the UK for three weeks before being dethroned by
Tubular Bells. In
1979,
Tubular Bells was used as the main musical score for
The Space Movie, a Virgin movie that celebrated the 10th anniversary of the
Apollo 11 mission. The
Exorcist track is the score used for the landing sequence of the Apollo flights.
Like
Tubular Bells,
Hergest Ridge took the form of a two-movement instrumental piece, this time evoking scenes from Oldfield's
Herefordshire country retreat. This was followed in
1975 with the pioneering
world music piece
Ommadawn, and
1978's
Incantations which introduced more diverse choral performances from
Sally Oldfield,
Maddy Prior and the
Queen's College Girls Choir.
 |
Album cover of QE2 (1980) |
Around the time of
Incantations, Oldfield underwent a controversial self-assertiveness therapy course known as
Exegesis. No doubt as a result of this, the formerly reclusive musician staged a major European tour to promote the album, chronicled in his live album
Exposed, much of which was recorded at the
National Exhibition Centre near Birmingham, the first ever concert at that venue.
In
1975, Oldfield received a
Grammy award for
Best Instrumental Composition in "Tubular Bells - Theme From
The Exorcist".
The early
1980s saw Oldfield make a transition to "mainstream" popular music, beginning with the inclusion of shorter instrumental tracks and contemporary cover versions on
Platinum and
QE2 (the latter named after the
cruise ship). Soon afterwards he turned his attention to songwriting, with a string of collaborations featuring various lead vocalists alongside his trademark searing guitar solos. The best known of these is "
Moonlight Shadow", his
1983 hit with
Maggie Reilly, which took
John Lennon's death as one of its themes. This song has been covered by various other artists, including
Aselin Debison (
Canadian folk singer) and
DJ Mystic (
electronic/
techno). In 2002 it was a huge hit in central Europe for the German dance act
Groove Coverage.
The most successful Oldfield composition on the US pop charts during this period was actually a cover version â€"
Hall & Oates's remake of "Family Man" for the duo's 1982 album
H20.
Oldfield later turned to film and video, writing the score for
Roland Joffé's acclaimed film
The Killing Fields and producing substantial video footage for his album
Islands. This was, however, a time of much friction with his record label.
Virgin Records reportedly insisting that any future instrumental album should be billed as
Tubular Bells 2. Oldfield's rebellious response was
Amarok, an hour-long work featuring rapidly changing themes (supposedly devised to make cutting a single from the album impossible), unpredictable bursts of noise, and a very cleverly-hidden
Morse code insult directed at
Richard Branson. Although regarded by many fans as his greatest work, it was not a commercial success. His parting shot from the Virgin label was
Heaven's Open, which continued the veiled attacks on Branson but was notable for being the first time Oldfield had contributed all the lead vocals himself. Some say this was due to his desire to quit Virgin as soon as possible (he had previously stated that his voice did not belong on his recordings).
(1992-2003) Warner years
On the
Warner label Oldfield continued to embrace new musical styles, with
Tubular Bells II (a re-interpretation of
Tubular Bells., which was premiered at a live concert at
Edinburgh Castle,
The Songs of Distant Earth (the latter based on
Arthur C. Clarke's
novel of the same name) exhibiting a softer "
New Age" sound, and
Tubular Bells III (also premiered at a concert, this time in
Horse Guards Parade,
London), drawing from the
dance music scene at his new home on the island of
Ibiza.
During
1999 Oldfield released two albums. The first,
Guitars, which used guitars as the source for all the sounds on the album, including percussion. The second,
The Millennium Bell, consisted of pastiches of a number of styles of music that represented various historical stages over the past millennium. The work was performed live in
Berlin for the city's millennium celebrations in 1999-2000.
Most recently, he added to his repertoire the
Music VR project, combining his music with a
virtual reality-based computer game. His first work on this project is
Tr3s Lunas launched in
2002, a virtual game where the player can interact with a world full of new music. This project appeared as a double CD, one with the music, and the other with the game.
In
2003 he released
Tubular Bells 2003, a re-recording of the original
Tubular Bells, on CD, SACD (Super Audio CD) and
DVD-Audio. This was done to fix many imperfections in the original that existed due to the recording technologies of the early 1970s and limitations in time that he could spend in the recording studio. This celebrated the 30th anniversary of
Tubular Bells, and Oldfield's 50th birthday. The
DVD-Audio version has the same content as the CD version in surround, and some demos of the original
Tubular Bells. The SACD version has a unique mix of the main
Tubular Bells soundtrack, plus the same CD content as the CD and DVD. In the 2003 version, the original voice of the 'Master of Ceremonies' was replaced by the voice of
John Cleese.
(2004- . . . .) Recent years
On
12 April, 2004 Oldfield launched his next
virtual reality project called
Maestro which contains music from the
Tubular Bells 2003 album and also some new chillout melodies. The demo versions of the games can be found on the official Mike Oldfield homepage.
A double album,
Light & Shade is released on
Mercury Records, with whom Mike recently signed a three album deal. The two discs contain music of contrasting moods, one relaxed ("Light") and the other more edgy and moody ("Shade"). The album was released on
26 September 2005.
In an interview on BBC Radio 2's Steve Wright show, broadcast February 23, 2006, Oldfield elaborated on his next project saying he was working on a long instrumental â€" probably in three parts and without any drum loops. He also mentioned the possibility of a tour.
Although probably unrelated to this new project, he will be headlining the German Nokia
Night of the Proms tour, consisting of 18 concerts in December 2006.
Studio albums
*
1973 –
Tubular Bells*
1974 –
Hergest Ridge*
1975 –
Ommadawn*
1978 –
Incantations*
1979 –
Platinum (also named
Airborn for the US release)
*
1980 –
QE2*
1982 –
Five Miles Out*
1983 –
Crises*
1984 –
Discovery*
1987 –
Islands*
1989 –
Earth Moving*
1990 –
Amarok*
1991 –
Heaven's Open*
1992 –
Tubular Bells II*
1994 –
The Songs of Distant Earth*
1996 –
Voyager*
1998 –
Tubular Bells III*
1999 –
Guitars*
1999 –
The Millennium Bell*
2002 –
Tr3s Lunas aka
Tres Lunas*
2003 –
Tubular Bells 2003*
2005 –
Light & ShadeDownloads
*
2006 –
Mike Oldfield This iTunes download seems to be confusing many fans. It is unlike any other version known and fans have guessed that it is either; a demo version, a studio session, a live version with audience 'noise' removed or not Mike Oldfield at all! For now it seems something of a mystery and there is no information given by iTunes other than a photo of a vinyl record with the following information.
Title:
Mike OldfieldLabel:
Crown Records, Culver City, CaliforniaTracks:
Track 1. Tubular Bells, Track 2. Sailors Horn Pipe(Track lengths appear as 25.01 and 22.46 respectively)
Soundtracks
*
1984 –
The Killing Fields - soundtrack for the movie of the same name,
The Killing FieldsNote: Although used in The Exorcist, Tubular Bells (1973) was not a soundtrack album.Live albums
*
1979 –
ExposedCompilations, remixes, etc.
*
1975 –
The Orchestral Tubular Bells*
1976 –
The Orchestral Hergest Ridge (Never officially released)
*
1976 –
Boxed (Versions of
Tubular Bells,
Hergest Ridge and
Ommadawn mixed into Quadraphonic. Also a 4th LP of shorter tracks)
*
1979 –
Impressions*
1980 –
Music Wonderland*
1981 –
Episodes*
1985 –
The Complete Mike Oldfield*
1987 –
A Virgin Compilation*
1990 –
Collector's Edition Box I &
II*
1993 –
Elements - The Best of Mike Oldfield*
1993 –
Elements - The Best of Mike Oldfield 1973-1991 (4CD)
*
1997 –
XXV: The Essential*
2001 –
The Best of Tubular Bells*
2002 –
Collection*
2006 –
The Platinum CollectionCollaborations
*
1967 –
The Sallyangie by
Sallyangie (with his sister
Sally Oldfield)
*
1970 –
Shooting at the moon by
Kevin Ayers and the Whole World
*
1971 –
Edgar Broughton Band by
The Edgar Broughton Band*
1971 –
Ear Of Beholder by
Lol Coxhill*
1972 –
Nurses Song With Elephants by
David Bedford*
1973 –
Whatevershebringswesing by
Kevin Ayers and the Whole World
*
1973 –
Legend by
Henry Cow*
1974 –
Rock Bottom by
Robert Wyatt*
1974 –
The Confessions Of Dr Dream And Other Stories by
Kevin Ayers*
1974 –
June 1, 1974 by
Kevin Ayers,
John Cale,
Nico and
Brian Eno (live album)
*
1974 –
Star´s End by
David Bedford*
1974 –
Unrest by
Henry Cow*
1975 –
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by
David Bedford*
1976 –
Odd ditties by
Kevin Ayers (compilation of singles and unreleased tracks)
*
1976 –
The Odyssey by
David Bedford*
1976 –
Bandages by
The Edgar Broughton Band*
1977 –
Instructions For Angels by
David Bedford*
1977 –
Mathematicians Air Display (also known as a collaboration with
Pekka Pohjola or
The Consequences of Indecisions album (original title is
Keesojen Lehto, under which it is available on CD from
Love Records.))
*
1977 –
Song Of The White Horse by
David Bedford*
1977 –
Fine Old Tom by
Tom Newman*
1979 –
Faerie Symphony by
Tom Newman*
1979 –
Downwind by
Pierre Moerlen's Gong*
1979 –
Downwind Live by
Pierre Moerlen's Gong*
1979 –
Strange Man, Changed Man by
Bram Tchaikovsky*
1979 –
Judy's Gone Down/Jung Lovers by
James Vane (single)
*
1980 –
The Concertina Record by
Lea Nicholson*
1980 –
Joy (1981) by
Skids*
1990 –
Natasha by
Sally Nathasha Oldfield*
1990 –
Kâma-Sûtra by
Michel Polnareff*
1992 –
Still life with guitar by
Kevin Ayers*
1992 –
BBC Radio 1 Live In Concert by
Kevin Ayers*
1995 –
Variations On A Rhythm Of Mike Oldfield by
David Bedford*
1996 –
Singing The Bruise by
Kevin Ayers*
1997 –
Snow Blind by
Tom Newman*
1998 –
The Garden Of Love by
Kevin Ayers*
2000 –
Official Bootleg One by
Phil Beer*
2000 –
Do Ya Wanna Play, Carl by
Carl Palmer*
2002 –
From The Banks Of The River Irwell by
Max Bacon*
2005 –
Tag und Nacht by
Schiller*
List of songs over fifteen minutes in length*
Sally Oldfield*
Terry Oldfield*
Anita Hegerland*
New Age Music*
Electronic Music*
mikeoldfield.com - The official Mike Oldfield website (requires
Flash plugin)
*
mikeoldfield.org - The official Mike Oldfield information service
*
tubular.net - Tubular Web, the largest and most well-established Mike Oldfield website.
*
oldfield.info - A community website; home to the #mike_oldfield IRC channel. (This website is currently limited, but the IRC channel is still active on DALnet)
*
musicvr.com - Official MusicVR support website (purchase and subscription required).
*
amadian.net - "The Sound Of The Bell" (A huge Mike Oldfield Resource, contains much information on rarities).
* [
2] - The Site of Distant Earth.