| Mike Oldfield |

Oldfield
on the cover of Amarok
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Michael Gordon Oldfield |
| Born |
15 May 1953 (1953-05-15) (age 54) in Reading,
Berkshire,
England |
| Origin |
Reading,
Berkshire,
England |
| Genre(s) |
Ambient
Celtic
Fusion (1996)
Chillout (2002)
Europop
(1984-1989)
Experimental (1990-1991)
Minimalist
New
Age
Progressive rock
Rock
and roll
Trance
(2005)
World |
| Years active |
1967–present |
| Label(s) |
Virgin Records (1973-1991)
Warner Music Group (1992-2003)
Mercury Records (2004-present) |
| Website |
http://www.mikeoldfield.com/ |
Michael Gordon Oldfield (born 15 May 1953 in Reading,
Berkshire)
is an English
multi-instrumentalist musician and composer,
working a style that blends progressive rock, folk,
ethnic or world
music, classical music, electronic
music, New Age and more recently dance.
His music is often elaborate and complex in nature. He is best known
for his hit 1973 album Tubular Bells
which broke new ground as an instrumental concept
album and launched Virgin Records.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 Early
career
- 1.2 (1973-1991)
Virgin years
- 1.3 (1992-2003)
Warner years
- 1.4 (2004-
. . . .) Recent years
- 1.5 Family
- 2 Discography
- 3 See
also
- 4 Bibliography
- 5 References
- 6 External
links
|
History
Oldfield's parents are Maureen and Raymond Oldfield, a nurse
and doctor respectively. His sister Sally
and brother Terry are successful musicians in
their own right and have appeared on several of his albums. Mike
Oldfield attended the now defunct Presentation College at 63 Bath Rd.,
Reading, in Berkshire.
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
guitar. 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 the 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.
Album cover of Tubular Bells
(1973)
(1973-1991) Virgin years
Tubular Bells
became Oldfield's most famous work. The instrumental composition was
recorded in 1972 and launched on 25 May 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 made in Branson's Manor
studios, and its style progressed continuously, covering many diverse
musical genres. The album quickly reached the Top 10 of the UK album
chart and has spent 279 weeks on the chart to date, a figure bettered
by only ten other albums in chart history
. Its 2,575,000 UK sales put it at No.28 on the all-time list of
the best selling albums in the UK. In the U.S., 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. Although Hergest Ridge was
released over a year after Tubular Bells, it
reached No.1 first. Tubular Bells spent 11
consecutive weeks at No.2 before its solitary week at the top. 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.
Album cover of QE2 (1980)
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.
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". In 1979, Oldfield recorded a version
of the theme tune of the
popular British Childrens Television show, Blue
Peter, which was used by the show for 10 years.
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. 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.
Album cover of Five Miles Out
(1982)
The most successful Oldfield composition on the US pop charts
during this period was actually a cover version — Hall
& Oates's remake of "Family Man" for the duo's 1982 album H2O.
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.
Islands continued what Mike had been doing on the
past couple of albums, with an instrumental piece on one side and
rock/pop singles on the other. Of these, 'Islands', sung by Bonnie
Tyler and 'Magic Touch', with vocals by Max Bacon (US version) and Jim
Price (UK/rest of the World) were the major hits. In the USA, Virgin
America really worked 'Magic Touch', servicing album rock, new age and
top 40 programmers. The single was a major success, reaching the top 10
on the Billboard album rock charts. Earth
Moving was released in July 1989, and was a
moderate success. The album was the first to feature rock/pop songs on
both sides. Several were released as singles: 'Innocent' and 'Holy',
which were released in Europe, and 'Hostage', which was released in the
USA to album rock stations. This was, however, a time of much friction
with his record label. Virgin Records reportedly insisted
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).
Album cover of The Songs of
Distant Earth (1994)
(1992-2003) Warner years
On the Warner Bros. Records 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 and The Songs of
Distant Earth (the latter based on Arthur
C. Clarke's novel of the same name)
exhibiting a softer "New Age" sound. In 1994 Oldfield also had an
asteroid
named after him, 5656 Oldfield.
In 1995 Oldfield further continued to embrace new musical
styles by producing a celtic themed album, Voyager.
In 1998 Oldfield produced the third Tubular Bells album, 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. This album
was still inspired by themes from Tubular Bells,
but differed by not having the same clear two part layout.
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, 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.
At around the same time Virgin released an SACD
version containing both the original stereo album and the 1975 quadraphonic
mix by Phil Newell. In the
2003 version, the original voice of the 'Master
of Ceremonies' (Viv Stanshall) was replaced by the
voice of John
Cleese, Stanshall having died in the interim.
(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
was released on Mercury Records, with whom Mike had
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 2006 Oldfield said he was working on a long instrumental
and later added that it would be a classical album "going to be based
around the festival of Hallowe’en".
Oldfield will only be playing "classical guitar and grand piano", while
the rest is choir and orchestra. Karl
Jenkins has been assisting with the orchestration. The
confirmed title of the album is Music of
the Spheres and should be released by Universal
in the UK on November 5, 2007. Although unrelated to this new project,
he headlined the German
Nokia Night of the
Proms tour, consisting of 18 concerts in December 2006.
In November 2006,
fellow musician Noel Gallagher won a Spanish court case
against Oldfield. Gallagher had bought an Ibiza villa for £2.5 million from Oldfield in 1999, but quickly
discovered that part of the cliff-top property was falling into the
sea. He was also annoyed by the huge “eyesore” of a yacht moored in his
view - but it turned out it was his with the house. Gallagher and
girlfriend Sara MacDonald spent summer 2006 at the villa, and the
resulting court case paid Gallagher a six-figure sum in compensation.
His autobiography Changeling
was published in May 2007
by Virgin
Books.
Family
Mike and his siblings were raised Roman
Catholic, the faith of their Irish mother.In
the late 1970s, Oldfield briefly married Diana D'Aubigny (the sister of
the Exegesis group leader), but this
lasted just a few weeks.
Mike Oldfield has six children. In the early 1980s, Oldfield
had three children with Sally Cooper, a PR girl. In the late 1980s,
Oldfield had two children with Norwegian singer Anita Hegerland. In the 2000s,
Oldfield married Fanny Oldfield (née Vandekerckhove), whom he met
during his time in Ibiza; they have one son together.
Discography
-
Main article: Mike Oldfield discography
Oldfield on the album cover of Incantations
(1978)
Oldfield on the album cover of Voyager
(1996)
See also
- Sally Oldfield
- Terry Oldfield
- Maggie Reilly
- Anita Hegerland
- New Age Music
- Electronic Music
Bibliography
- A Man and his Music - Biography by Sean
Moraghan, BookSurge Publishing ISBN
978-1419649264.
- Music from the Darkness - Peter Evans
- Elements - The Best of Mike Oldfield 1973-1991
booklet
- Losing My Virginity
by Richard Branson, Virgin Books ISBN
978-0753506486
- Changeling
by Mike Oldfield, Virgin Books ISBN
978-1852273811
References
-
Not
Totally Tubular by Dave Thompson - Goldmine July 18, 1997
-
This
is the year of the expanding man... Karl Dallas - Melody Maker November
25, 1978
-
Oldfield 5656, Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics
-
Mike
Oldfield Interview on BBC Radio 2, September 9, 1998, tubular.net
-
German site of the Proms. Retrieved
on 2006-06-01.
-
Noel gets home win over Mike, The
Sun, November 10, 2006
-
Interview
with Mike Oldfield from BBC 1's Heaven and Earth programme August 25,
2002 "My mother being Irish, she was a Roman Catholic. They
put me on the first stages of educating me to be a Catholic"
-
"Mike Oldfield biography"
External links
- mikeoldfield.com - The official
Mike Oldfield website (requires Flash plugin)
- mikeoldfield.org - The official
Mike Oldfield information service
- tubular.net - Tubular.net, the
largest and most well-established Mike Oldfield website.
- Argiers - Mike Oldfield's collector
corner, one of the biggest Mike Oldfield collections worldwide.
- Mike
Oldfield at Last.fm
| v • d • e Mike
Oldfield |
| Albums |
| Studio albums: Tubular
Bells | Hergest
Ridge | Ommadawn
| Incantations
| Platinum
| QE2 | Five
Miles Out | Crises
| The Killing Fields
| Discovery
| Islands
| Earth Moving | Amarok
| Heaven's Open
| Tubular Bells II
| The Songs of
Distant Earth | Voyager
| Tubular Bells III
| Guitars
| The Millennium Bell
| Tr3s
Lunas | Tubular
Bells 2003 | Light
& Shade |
| Orchestral albums: The Orchestral Tubular
Bells | Music of
the Spheres | Live albums: Exposed |
| Singles |
| 1974: "Mike Oldfield's Single" 1975:
"Don Alfonso", "In Dulci Jubilo" 1976:
"Portsmouth" 1977:
"William
Tell Overture", "Cuckoo Song" 1978:
"Take
Four" 1979: "Guilty", "Blue Peter" 1980:
"Arrival",
"Sheba"
1982: "Five
Miles Out", "Family Man", "Mistake" 1983:
"Moonlight
Shadow", "Shadow On The Wall" 1984:
"Crime
Of Passion", "To
France", "Tricks of the Light", "Étude"
1985: "Pictures
In The Dark" 1986: "Shine" 1987:
"In High Places", "Islands",
"The Time Has Come", "Magic
Touch" 1988: "Flying Start" 1989:
"Earth Moving", "Innocent", "(One
Glance is) Holy" 1990: "Étude
(Nuforen Advert)" 1991: "Heaven's
Open", "Gimme
Back" 1992: "Sentinel", "Tattoo" 1993:
"The
Bell", "Moonlight Shadow", "In Dulci Jubilo" 1994:
"Hibernaculum" 1995:
"Let There Be Light" 1997:
"Women of
Ireland XXV" 1998: "Man
In The Rain, "Far Above The Clouds" 2002:
"To
Be Free", "Thou Art In Heaven" |
| Related
content |
| Changeling | Virgin
Records | Richard Branson | Sally
Oldfield | Terry Oldfield | Anita
Hegerland | Maggie Reilly |