A few weeks ago the Warner Music label released a special boxset of Mike Oldfield productions under the name of 'The Studio Albums 1992-2003', a box that compiles the eight albums recorded by Oldfield during that period, among which are the four sequels that have been published after his masterpiece 'Tubular Bells'.
Mike Oldfield He signed a contract with Warner in 1992 and made his debut for this label with 'Tubular Bells II', a work produced with the well-known Trevor Horn and which reached number one in the early eighties. In 1998 the third part would arrive with Tubular Bells III, which immediately had its continuation the following year with 'The Millenium Bell'.
A few years later Oldfield records 'Tubular Bells 2003', a 'revisited' version in which he revisits the original album and re-records it using the latest technology, which was not available in the 1970s. The boxset special is completed with the albums 'Tr3s Lunas' (2002), his album "Spanish", 'The Songs of Distant Earth' (1994) inspired by the science fiction book of the same title by Arthur Clarke, and finally the albums 'Voyager' (1996) and 'Guitars' (1999) are added.