It's autumn 1972. John Cale is vacating The Manor, a picturesque residential studio nestled in the Oxfordshire hills of the UK. It's a recent acquisition by a budding music impresario called Richard Branson. The next artist booked into the studio is a wan, taciturn 19-year-old virtual unknown called Mike Oldfield. Noticing a shining silver set of tubular bells among Cale's equipment, Oldfield asks if he can add it to the two dozen instruments he'll use to record his one-man symphony, tentatively titled Opus One.
Re-titled Tubular Bells and released the following year, after a slow start the almost all-instrumental album went on to become a commercial and cultural phenomenon, and launched Oldfield as one of the UK's most acclaimed composers. The first album to be released on Branson's fledgling Virgin Records, its massive worldwide sales bankrolled the label for years to come and set Branson on course to becoming the country's most recognisable captain of industry.
Thirty-six years later, in 2009, with his Virgin contract ended and the