Sally Oldfield

Sally Oldfield
Birth name Sally Patricia Oldfield
Born (1947-08-03) 3 August 1947
Dublin, Ireland
Origin Reading, Berkshire, England
Genres Pop, folk
Years active 1968present

Sally Patricia Oldfield (3 August 1947),[1] is a singer-songwriter, sister of composers Mike Oldfield and Terry Oldfield.

Early life

Born in Dublin, Ireland, Oldfield and her siblings were raised in the Roman Catholic faith of their mother, Maureen. Spending her childhood in Reading, Berkshire, Oldfield studied ballet from the age of four and won numerous competitions in all styles of dance, including ballet, tap and modern. At the age of eleven, she won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dancing, then located in Holland Park, London, and two years later was starred to move on to the Royal Ballet School at White Lodge. However, she gave up ballet two years later, and achieved three A-Levels at Grade A. She also studied classical piano to Grade 7. All her school years were spent at St Joseph's Convent School, Reading, where she became friends with Marianne Faithfull. Oldfield then went on to read English Literature and Philosophy at Bristol University.

Musical career

Oldfield's musical career started in early 1968, when she recorded some demo recordings with Mike Oldfield. These sessions were suggested and overseen by Mick Jagger. It is not known what became of those recordings.[2]

Soon after this she founded the folk music duo The Sallyangie together with her brother Mike. The duo recorded their first and only album at the recommendation of Pentangle band guitarist, John Renbourn, whom Oldfield met at the Troubadour Folk Club in Bristol. The album Children of the Sun was recorded in August 1968. The songs on it are mainly co-written by Sally and Mike Oldfield, and the album contained some of her brother's early guitar work. Guesting were Terry Cox on drums and Ray Warleigh on flute. Ten years later, she had a hit in the UK Singles Chart with a song called "Mirrors", which, contrary to a popular fiction circulated about the song at the time, was not written by Mike Oldfield, but was all Sally's own work.

Keesojen Lehto

Oldfield's first mainstream recorded release was by a Finnish bass player named Pekka Pohjola. This album was mainly recorded at Througham Slad, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom between 22 November - 5 December 1976 and was originally released in 1977 as Keesojen Lehto by Pekka Pohjola. Later different labels translated the titles and changed the artist's name due to the name recognition of Mike and Sally Oldfield.[3]

Oldfield's debut solo album, Water Bearer, was released in 1978. Her track, "Mirrors", peaked at #12 in the UK Singles Chart, spanning 1978 and 1979, and remained in that chart for thirteen weeks.[4] Since then, she has released fifteen solo albums.

On the demise of her record label Bronze Records in 1984, Oldfield relocated to Germany where her musical career was based from that time. Most of her albums from 1983 onwards were not released in the UK. She worked with many German record producers and musicians, including Gunther Mende and Candy DeRouge. Oldfield regularly appeared on national television and radio, and undertook several European concert tours, the last being in Germany in 2003.

Guest appearances

Oldfield provided background vocals in sections of brother Mike's 1970s albums Tubular Bells, Ommadawn and Incantations. She reprised her role on Tr3s Lunas in 2002 and for the 2003 re-recording, Tubular Bells 2003. In addition, she worked on her other brother Terry's recordings. She sang "Shadow of the Hierophant" on Steve Hackett's 1975 album, Voyage of the Acolyte. On her 1988 CD album "Instincts", released by CBS Records UK, she did a vocal duet with Justin Hayward of The Moody Blues, titled "Let It Begin", which was a big hit in the UK and Europe, and was a popular music video.

Discography

Solo

With Steve Hackett

With Mike Oldfield

References

  1. Oldfield, Mike (2007). Changeling, the autobiography of Mike Oldfield. Virgin Books. According to her younger brother Mike Oldfield, she's six years older than he is, Mike being born in 1953
  2. Oldfield, Mike (2007). Changeling, the autobiography of Mike Oldfield. Virgin Books. pp. 69–70. My first experience of recording came ... I was just marking time and waiting for my fifteenth birthday
  3. "The Consequences of Indecisions". Dark Star (mikeoldfield.org).
  4. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 405. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.

External links

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