Label: Victor Music (Japan), VDP-64
Style: Progressive Rock, Instrumental, Pop Rock
Country: Reading, Berkshire, England (15 May 1953)
Time: 48:54
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 233 Mb
I
used to listen to Tubular Bells endlessly when I was about sixteen.
Back then it seemed like some the most exciting music ever made, two
massive suites of throbbing instrumental prog recorded by one bloke, a
few mates, and one of the great British raconteurs as Master of
Ceremonies. Two dozen years later my opinion of Tubular Bells is
somewhat more realistic. While it is a hugely influential album, and it
is a supremely clever piece of music, its reliance on repetition can
render some parts of it a little dull, that is until the next layer of
music is added to the mix. If nothing else you’ve got to admire Mike
Oldfield’s skill and patience in putting this album together, though I
do suspect that there might have been the odd overdub.
Tubular Bells
has moments of gentle beauty, big slices of widdly prog, some strangely
exciting moments where Oldfield just decides to rock out, parts which
defy explanation (The entire Piltdown Man section still baffles me, as
does ending the album with “The Sailor’s Hornpipe”), and it still has
time to be one of the key releases in the evolution of electronic and
ambient music. As instrumental orchestral rock music goes, there’s
little than can compare to it.
As much as his fans salute the intense
genius that is Mike Oldfield, he has admittedly struggled to match the
artistic and commercial success of Tubular Bells ever since, despite
repeated attempts to recapture its slippery appeal by way of sequels,
orchestral follow ups, and even complete re-recordings using new fangled
technology. Perhaps part of this is the fact that, despite the
technical virtuosity, and it being painstakingly constructed from dozens
of overdubs, the original version of Tubular Bells was largely organic,
and subsequent attempts to remove even the most minute error have
robbed this largely instrumental behemoth of its humanity.
(backseatmafia.com/classic-album-mike-oldfield-tubular-bells/)
01. Part One (25:30)
02. Part Two (23:23)
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