Cover of Mike Oldfield Guitars
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For fans of mike oldfield, lovers of instrumental and progressive rock guitar music, and listeners interested in melodic guitar craftsmanship.
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THE REVIEW

This album by Mike Oldfield lives up to its promises, with its rather sparse title already announcing that the guitars will be the undisputed stars of this music. And that's how it is, venturing through the ten tracks of "Guitars," released in 1999. Total duration 43 minutes, nine guitars employed, including classical, flamenco, electric guitars, and guitars treated via MIDI, which Oldfield uses to simulate the timbre of percussion or to produce sounds similar to strings, also using, as an exception that proves the rule, a Roland VG8 synthesizer.

But beyond a quick survey of the instruments used (always a must in the case of an extraordinary sound craftsman like Mike Oldfield), what remains are the musical values expressed in "Guitars" and the overall high-quality level of the work. What strikes most is the great melodic inventiveness found in these purely instrumental tracks: Oldfield, it's true, had long accustomed us to the particular singability of his themes, and here he provides further confirmation of it.

Fully acoustic tracks (like "Muse" at the beginning, or "Enigmatism") alternate with electric tracks, tinged with the tone of distorted electric guitar (as in "Cochise" or "Out of Sight"). "Summit Day" is very beautiful, where the theme entrusted to the classical guitar is doubled after the exposition by the electric guitar an octave above. And "Four Winds," the longest track on the album (9 minutes), is divided into four episodes, each with well-defined sounds and characteristics, which ideally represent a musical portrait of the compass rose and the four cardinal points.

It's hard to find faults in this work; perhaps in some passages, the accentuated use of reverb makes the sounds a bit too dainty, but it's a forgivable sin quickly overlooked. For the rest, note after note, sound after sound, there is only Mike Oldfield's sure and convincing musicality.

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Summary by Bot

Mike Oldfield's 1999 album 'Guitars' highlights the guitar as the central instrument through ten instrumental tracks. The album blends acoustic and electric guitar styles, revealing his melodic creativity. Each track offers distinct guitar sounds with high production quality, despite minor overuse of reverb in places. Overall, it exemplifies Oldfield’s confident musical artistry.

Tracklist Lyrics

01   Muse (02:12)

02   Cochise (05:15)

Instrumental

03   Embers (03:51)

04   Summit Day (03:46)

05   Out of Sight (03:48)

06   B. Blues (04:30)

07   Four Winds (09:32)

08   Enigmatism (03:32)

09   Out of Mind (03:46)

10   From the Ashes (02:28)

Mike Oldfield

Mike Oldfield is a British composer, guitarist and multi-instrumentalist widely associated with progressive rock and long-form instrumental suites. He rose to major international fame with the 1973 album “Tubular Bells,” later exploring folk/Celtic, ambient, pop and orchestral/symphonic directions across a long discography.
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