Search - Mike Oldfield :: Elements: Mike Oldfield 1973-1991

Elements: Mike Oldfield 1973-1991
Mike Oldfield
Elements: Mike Oldfield 1973-1991
Genres: New Age, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #3
  •  Track Listings (19) - Disc #4

UK reissue of 1993 Virgin America box-set that's out-of-print in the US. A beautifully packaged four CD set that essentially covers every aspect of Mike Oldfield's 20-year span as a multi-instrumentalist. The discs are ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Mike Oldfield
Title: Elements: Mike Oldfield 1973-1991
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: EMI Import
Release Date: 12/3/2001
Album Type: Box set, Import, Original recording remastered
Genres: New Age, Pop, Rock
Styles: Meditation, Progressive, Progressive Rock, Electronic
Number of Discs: 4
SwapaCD Credits: 4
UPC: 724381141229

Synopsis

Album Description
UK reissue of 1993 Virgin America box-set that's out-of-print in the US. A beautifully packaged four CD set that essentially covers every aspect of Mike Oldfield's 20-year span as a multi-instrumentalist. The discs are housed in a sturdy book-style format (approx 5.5 x 10 inches) with an extensive booklet containing biographical information, as well as a breakdown of each of the instruments used throughout the 15 albums represented.
 

CD Reviews

The Best - and the Mediocre - of Mike Oldfield - ***1/2
B. Niedt | Cherry Hill, NJ United States | 01/06/2007
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Mike Oldfield peaked early, producing a trilogy of ambitious, symphonically-structured rock tone poems in the early- to mid-1970's. The first and most famous, "Tubular Bells", served as the theme for the film "The Exorcist". It was a groundbreaking album, with Oldfield playing most of the instruments himself, thereby proving himself a formidable studio wizard and instrumentalist (especially on guitar). The work was beautiful, minimalist, overblown, scary, funny, and mind-blowing. The sophomore effort, "Hergest Ridge", had its great moments, too, but Oldfield's masterpiece is "Ommadawn", the third of the series. Drawing on Celtic roots (and influencing a lot of subsequent music in the process), it's a majestic and gorgeous work that wraps with a charming vocal folk tune, "On Horseback". This box set contains all of "Tubular Bells", and the first part of each of the other pieces, as well as samples of Oldfield's output from 1973 through 1991. After the first three works, though, his work was variable. "Incantations" is an interesting and hypnotic piece, a chant of Longfellow's "Song of Hiawatha" with Steeleye Span's Maddy Prior providing the vocals. And some of the shorter instrumentals, like "Woodhenge", are intriguing. But subsequent works seem to degenerate into semi-progressive 1980's rock. There's very little on the last two discs that could be called "outstanding", and some of it is downright mediocre. It's all impeccably produced, but much of it, especially the vocal tracks, leave one with a "so-what" feeling - you feel like you've just listened to the Alan Parsons Project or Styx. There are still highlights, though, like the post-modern, dissonant departure of "Evacuation" from the "Killing Fields" soundtrack; and "Aramok", a composition that's a throwback to the earlier works. In summary, the "Elements" box set is a mixed bag that will give you an accurate overview of Oldfileld's work into the early 90's, but if you want to acquire the best of the best, get the first three or four albums individually, especially "Tubular Bells" and "Ommadawn"."