Everything about Mike Oldfield totally explained
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, and for his 1983 hit single "
Moonlight Shadow".
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 Presentation College at 63 Bath Rd., Reading, in Berkshire (now the Elvian School).
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'd "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.
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. Its 2,575,000 UK sales put it at No.28 on the 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 weeks (10 of them consecutive) at No.2 before its one 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.
Like
Tubular Bells,
Hergest Ridge is 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. Possibly as a result, 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 there.
In 1975, Oldfield received a
Grammy award for
Best Instrumental Composition in "Tubular Bells – Theme From
The Exorcist". In 1979, he recorded a version of the
signature tune of the popular British Children's Television programme,
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 to songwriting, with a string of collaborations featuring various lead vocalists alongside his characteristic 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 number one 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 —
Hall & Oates's remake of Oldfield's "
Family Man" for their 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 Oldfield 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 promoted the song "Magic Touch" to a large extent, making it a 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' in Europe, and 'Hostage' in the USA for 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 wasn't 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 didn't belong on his recordings). This theory is supported by the fact that
Heaven's Open is the only album that Oldfield released as Michael Oldfield, not Mike Oldfield.
1992–2003: Warner years
The very first thing Oldfield did when arriving at this new label,
Warner Bros. Records, and as his final insult to his former label, was to write and release
Tubular Bells II (the sequel to the first record released by Virgin), which was premiered at a live concert at
Edinburgh Castle. He then continued to embrace new musical styles, with
The Songs of Distant Earth (based on
Arthur C. Clarke's
novel of the same name) exhibiting a softer "
New Age" sound. In 1994 he 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 he 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 then new home on the island of
Ibiza. This album was still inspired by themes from
Tubular Bells, but differed in lacking a clear two part layout.
During 1999 Oldfield released two albums. The first,
Guitars, 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.
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 due to the recording technologies of the early 1970s and limitations in time that he could spend in the recording studio. It celebrated the 30th anniversary of
Tubular Bells, Oldfield's 50th birthday and his marriage to Fanny in the same year. 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–present: Recent years
On
12 April, 2004 Oldfield launched his next
virtual reality project,
Maestro, which contains music from the
Tubular Bells 2003 album and also some new chillout melodies. The games have since been made available free of charge on Oldfield's website.
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.
Light includes a selection of tracks from the album in
U-MYX format, which allows listeners to create their own remixes. Oldfield headlined the
German Nokia Night of the Proms tour, consisting of 18 concerts in December 2006.
His autobiography
Changeling was published in May 2007 by
Virgin Books. In March 2008 Oldfield released his first classical album,
Music of the Spheres;
Karl Jenkins assisted with the orchestration.
Personal life
Oldfield 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 seven children. In the early 1980s, he'd three children with Sally Cooper (Molly, Dougal and Luke). In the late 1980s, he'd two children (Greta and Noah) with
Norwegian singer Anita Hegerland. In the 2000s, he married Fanny Oldfield (née Vandekerckhove), whom he met during his time in Ibiza; they've two sons together (Jake and Eugene).
Oldfield is a motorcycle fan, and has five bikes. These include a
BMW R1200GS, a
Suzuki GSX-R750, a
Suzuki GSX-R1000 and a
Yamaha R1. He also says that some of his inspiration for composing comes from riding them.
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. The resulting court case awarded Gallagher a six-figure sum in compensation.
In 2007 Oldfield caused a minor stir in the British press by criticizing Britain for being too controlling and over protective, specifically concentrating on the smoking ban which England and Wales introduced that year. Oldfield then moved from his Gloucestershire home to
Palma de Mallorca,
Spain. Oldfield has lived outside the UK in the past; including living in
Los Angeles and
Ibiza in the 1990s and
Switzerland in the mid-1980s, for tax reasons. Oldfield also currently has a home in
Monaco.
Discography
Studio albums
Instruments
Oldfield is a
multi-instrumentalist; however he considers himself to be predominantly a guitarist. For a large list of Oldfield's instruments, past and present, see
the Instruments section
at Tubular.net.
Guitars
Over the years Oldfield has used a various selection of guitars, some of the most noted being:
- A 1961 salmon pink Fender Stratocaster – Used by Oldfield from the early 1980s until 2007 – Sold for £30,000.
- A late 1980s amber PRS Artist Custom 24 – Used by Oldfield from the late 1980s to the present day.
- A 1966 blonde Fender Telecaster serial no. 180728 – The only electric guitar used on Tubular Bells and also previously owned by Marc Bolan – Sold for the SANE charity in 2007.
- Various Gibson Les Paul and SGs – Used by Oldfield extensively in the 1970s and 80s.
Oldfield used a modified
Roland GP8 effects processor in conjunction with his PRS Artist to get many of his heavily overdriven guitar sounds from the
Earth Moving album onwards. Oldfield has also stated that his playing style originates from the way in which he started out as a musician; playing folk music and the bass guitar.
Recording
Oldfield has self-recorded and produced many of his albums, and played the majority of the instruments that appear on them, largely at his home
studios. In the 1990s and 2000s Oldfield has been mainly using
DAWs such as
Apple Logic Pro,
Digidesign Pro Tools and
Steinberg Nuendo as recording suites. For composing classical music Oldfield has been quoted as using the software notation program,
Sibelius,. In the 1980s Oldfield composed the score for the film
The Killing Fields on a
Fairlight CMI.
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