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Tubular Bells

Artist: Mike Oldfield
Label: Virgin
Catalog#: V2001
Format: Vinyl
Country: United Kingdom
Released: 1973-05
Tracklist
A Tubular Bells (Part One) 25:00
  Notes:

Bass [String Basses] - Lindsay Cooper
Chorus [Girlie Chorus] - Mundy Ellis
Chorus [Girlie Chorus] - Sally Oldfield
Chorus [Nasal Chorus] - Nasal Choir
Flute [Flutes] - Jon Field
Mc [Master Of Ceremonies] - Vivian Stanshall
Piano [Grand], Glockenspiel [Glokenspiel], Organ [Farfisa], Bass Guitar, Electric Guitar, Guitar [Speed], Organ [Taped Motor Drive Amplified Organ Chord], Guitar [Mandolin-like], Guitar [Fuzz], Percussion [Assorted], Acoustic Guitar, Flageolet, Piano [Honky Tonk], Organ [Lowrey], Bells [Tubular] - Mike Oldfield

B Tubular Bells (Part Two) 23:50
  Notes:

Acoustic Guitar - Tom Newman
Chorus [Bootleg Chorus] - Manor Choir
Chorus [Girlie Chorus] - Mundy Ellis
Chorus [Girlie Chorus] - Sally Oldfield
Conductor [Bootleg Chorus] - Mike Oldfield
Drums - Steve Broughton
Electric Guitar, Organ [Farfisa], Bass Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Piano, Electric Guitar [Speed Elec. Guitars], Organ [Lowrey], Timpani [Concert Tympani], Guitar [Guitars Sounding Like Bagpipes], Performer [Piltdown Man], Organ [Hammond], Guitar [Spanish], Chorus [Moribund] - Mike Oldfield

Credits

Artwork By [Sleeve Design] - Trevor Kay
Photography - Trevor Kay
Technician [Sound] - Mike Oldfield
Technician [Sound] - Simon Heyworth
Technician [Sound] - Tom Newman

Notes

Original UK release, black and white labels.
Recorded at: The Manor/Autumn 1972 Spring 1973.
"In Glorious Stereophonic Sound.
Can also be played on mono-equipment at a pinch."
"This stereo record cannot be played on old tin boxes no matter what they are fitted with. If you are in possession of such equipment please hand it to the nearest police station."
℗ 1973 Virgin Records.
Distributed by Island and E.M.I.
Address: 130 Notting Hill Gate, London, W.11

Strawberry Bricks Entry: 
Imagine a young musician trying to interest you in a 20-minute cassette of instrumental music, on which he played every instrument. Such was Virgin Records boss Richard Branson presented with when he first encountered Mike Oldfield. Not that the young Oldfield didn't have credentials: he'd been in a folk band with his elder sister Sally since he was fourteen, and spent the past few years in Kevin Ayers' band, The Whole World. His original demo was eventually recorded at Virgin's in-house studio The Manor, with Tom Newman producing and Oldfield playing nearly every instrument heard on the album. The rest, as they say, is history. The first release on Virgin Records (catalog V2001), Tubular Bells was an overnight sensation. It rose to No. 1 in the UK and No. 3 in the US. That the album garnered such immediate success was telltale of the time: Oldfield was presented as a multi-instrumentalist-savant, and the long of it only added to its appeal. He takes accessible, near Celtic themes, and weaves them together in a gentle and naïve fashion that approaches minimalism, but remains populist. The first side opens with the hook of a lifetime; the piece ebbs sideways more than forward, gradually building momentum until the resplendent finale, where Bonzo Dog Band's Viv Stanshall introduces each instrument. The second side works similarly: only the Moribund vocals and the bootleg chorus interrupt the circular motion of the acoustic instruments. It's a gentle extension of the first side, except with a Bugs Bunny ending this time around (in fact the traditional "The Sailor's Hornpipe"). Early the following year, an excerpt used as the theme for the movie The Exorcist would break the Top 10 in the US singles charts. And it didn't end there: An orchestrated version, courtesy of composer David Bedford followed in 1975 and again charted in the UK, but a live version from 1973 (with a host of Virgin labelmates) remains unreleased. Oldfield released Tubular Bells II in 1992, Tubular Bells III in 1998 and re-recorded the original in 2003, as Tubular Bells 2003.
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