Mike Oldfield
![Oldfield at the [[Night of the Proms]] in 2006](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/87/Mike_Oldfield_NOTP_2006.jpg)
Oldfield took up the guitar at age ten and left school in his teens to embark on a music career. From 1967 to 1970, he and his sister Sally Oldfield were a folk duo The Sallyangie, after which he performed with Kevin Ayers. In 1971, Oldfield started work on ''Tubular Bells'' which caught the attention of Richard Branson, who agreed to release it on his new label, Virgin Records. Its opening was used in the horror film ''The Exorcist'' and the album went on to sell over 2.7 million copies in the UK. Oldfield followed it with ''Hergest Ridge'' (1974), ''Ommadawn'' (1975), and ''Incantations'' (1978), all of which feature longform and mostly instrumental pieces.
In the late 1970s, Oldfield began to tour and release more commercial and song-based music, beginning with ''Platinum'' (1979), ''QE2'' (1980), and ''Five Miles Out'' (1982). His most successful album of this period was ''Crises'' (1983), which features the worldwide hit single "Moonlight Shadow" with vocalist Maggie Reilly. After signing with WEA in the early 1990s, Oldfield's most significant album of the decade was ''Tubular Bells II'' (1992) and he experimented with virtual reality and gaming content with his MusicVR project. In 2012, he performed at the opening ceremony for the 2012 Olympic Games held in London. Oldfield's discography includes 26 studio albums, nine of which have reached the UK top-ten. His most recent album is ''Return to Ommadawn'' (2017). Provided by Wikipedia
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