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Michael
Gordon Oldfield was born in Reading on the 15th May, 1953, where
he also went to school and played in local folk clubs as a teenager.
When he was 13, his parents moved to Essex, shortly after which
he moved out following a disagreement with his parents about his
long hair.
Mike
was 15 when he and sister Sally started the folk duo The
Sallyangie. Two singles, "Lady go lightly" and
"Two Ships" and an album "Children of The Sun"
were released before going on a national tour. The project only
had limited success, resulting in its downfall. In 1968, almost
immediately after that, Mike formed the folk group Barefoot
which also faded away within a year. Barefoot was a band Mike and
his brother Terry set up, during which time they wrote a song with
grunting lyrics which were to become the Piltdown Man section of
Tubular Bells in later years.
In
1969, Mike joined Kevin Ayers and the Whole
World as guitarist. The band featured, as well as Kevin himself,
David Bedford, who Mike was to often
to work keenly together with in the following years. Mike worked
on the albums "Shooting at the Moon", "Whatevershebringswesing",
"Confessions of Dr. Dream and other stories" and "June,
1, 1974" (live) as well as appearing on the compilation LP's
"The Kevin Ayers Collection" and "Odd Ditties".
The Whole World split in 1971, although Ayers continued with other
musicians.
Mike
was already thinking about Tubular Bells
in 1970, whilst still with the Whole World and a rough demo was
ready by 1972, after many unsocial hours at the Abbey Road studios.
Mike was so pleased with the result that he sent copies to all the
major record companies, all of which rejected it as uncommercial
... until he came upon Richard Branson,
who ran a chain of budget price record stores. Richard was very
impressed, but didn't have the resources to fund its release.
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A year later, he decided to launch the record label and rang Mike,
expecting him to have already sold "Tubular Bells" to another
record company. Instead, Mike was second reserve guitarist in the
musical "Hair" and thoroughly depressed. Richard immediately
drew up a contract with Mike, copied from that of a session musician,
Sandy Denny, because neither knew what a recording contract should
contain!
It
was Tom Newman who suggested to Richard
that they build a recording studio, for which they borrowed £25,000
and bought The Manor near Oxford. A squash court was converted to
a studio, but they couldn't get permission to use it at night. Because
of a neighbour who kept ringing the police, they took it in turns
to sit at the gate and press an alarm button to alert the studio.
By the time the police arrived, everyone was in the kitchen drinking
coffee! After a while the police got fed up and didn't bother any
more!
Mike
moved into the Manor for the next year, learning how to be engineer
and producer, whilst making "Tubular Bells", which they
then took to the Cannes music festival together with a jam session
called "Manor Live", featuring Elkie Brooks. Executives
from many record companies listened to them, showing greet interest
in "Manor live", which was completely forgettable in the
long term run of things, but not in "Tubular Bells".
The only company to show any interest was the American Mercury records,
who said they'd be interested if Mike put vocals to it, so Richard
decided they weren't getting anywhere and after 2 days put a sign
on their stand: "VIRGIN RECORDS - GONE SKIING". The only
way forward was to release "Tubular Bells" themselves.
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