Mike Oldfield
Hergest Ridge (50th Anniversary) UMC
Softly spoken Bells follow-up now sounds better than the big beast.
No pressure, then. In Spring 1974, Mike Oldfield’s debut solo album Tubular Bells was, to the surprise of many, not least its creator, taking over the world as Oldfield, just turning 21, was pushed by his label Virgin (for whom Bells was their first ever album release) to write and record a follow-up in double-quick time. Not a natural look-at-me rock star, and prone to panic attacks, he retreated to the England/Wales border, in the shadow of the hill Hergest Ridge. He flew gliders. Eventually his subconscious rekindled itself, and he constructed another two-movement tour de force.
Hergest Ridge was received with a mild backlash or shrug, and even though it had a spell at No.1 in the UK it was superseded by its all-consuming predecessor. Yet, half a century on, the difficult second album sounds stronger than its now over-familiar big brother. By accident (the mix was always counter-intuitive, but that gives it an extra dimension) or design (its arc is superior, more fluid), Hergest Ridge is Transformer after Lou Reed. It’s The Godfather 2. It might even be Paddington 2.
Some of that is down to the distracting cultural baggage that Tubular Bells now carries, but most of the magic here comes because a gifted muso decides to do his thing and, in his gentle diffident way, goes nuts. It’s beautiful, pensive and immersive for about 30 minutes, then turns into doolally dynamite. There are passages, layered by instinct not rules, where it’s still impossible to pick out what instrument’s doing what. If an obscure Krautrock foot soldier had sold three copies of this, it would now be critically acclaimed from multiple rooftops. Plus it doesn’t have any talking on it. Viv Stanshall’s narration on Bells may have amused at first, but has since locked and limited that album, restricting it from acquiring fresh resonances in the imagination. Ridge can still go anywhere it pleases – and does.