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  1. "Five Miles Out" is a single by musician Mike Oldfield, released in 1982 by Virgin Records. It is from the album Five Miles Out and predominantly features vocals by Maggie Reilly, but also includes vocals by Oldfield himself.. The B-side, a live version of "Punkadiddle", was recorded during Oldfield's European tour 1980.

  2. Newswire Mailing List. The Mike Oldfield Newswire is a service set up to report breaking news about Mike Oldfield tours, releases, public appearances and other news and information relating to Mike Oldfield. News may come direct from official sources, such as Oldfield Music or the record company or from other sources such as the web and press ...

  3. Far Above The Clouds (5:30) Produced and engineered by Mike Oldfield Assistant engineer: Silvia Müller Executive producer: Rob Dickins. Recorded at Ibiza Studio: December '96 - March '98 London Studio: April '98 - June '98. Vocalists: "MAN IN THE RAIN" features Cara from Polar Star "MAN IN THE RAIN" additional vocals: Heather Burnett "THE ...

  4. The best of Mike Oldfield Elements September, 1993 1. Tubular Bells opening theme 4:162. Family Man 3:453. Moonlight Shadow 3:254. Heaven's Open 4:275. Five Miles Out 4:146. To France 4:427. Foreign Affair 3:538. In Dulci Jubilo 2:499. Shadow on the Wall 5:0710. Islands 4:1711. Etude 3:0612. Sentinel 3:5613. Ommadawn excerpt 3:3814. Incantations part four excerpt […]

  5. Mike Oldfield Talks About Man On The Rocks “Being included in the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony really did me some good, because it validated Tubular Bells as an iconic album that stands the test of time,” says its creator Mike Oldfield. “The logical thing for me to have done would have been to make another Tubular Bells-style album to try and cash in, but I’m not that kind of person ...

  6. The Songs Of Distant Earth November 14th, 1994 0. CD ROM Track1. In The Beginning 1:242. Let There Be Light 4:523. Supernova 3:294. Magellan 4:415. First Landing 1:166. Oceania 3:277. Only Time Wil…

  7. As @andy106298 described, this song was written by Oldfield after a frightening experience in an aircraft in bad weather. The lyrics of the song draw heavily (but not accurately) on aviation jargon and radio procedure. Oldfield\'s use of technical terms involves a lot of poetic license.\n\n"You\'ve got thirty degrees" -- probably thirty degrees of bank, i.e. the aircraft is not flying level ...