Guru Meditation
Group: Members
Posts: 55
Joined: May 2003 |
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Posted: Feb. 25 2007, 16:46 |
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ThisName, I tried to make it short and got ununderstood - I didn't say whay you imply, you would have to consume some very bad drugs to say that
HOwever I was reffering to a different, more side-way influence. The very beggining of Incantations I see as an unsucesfull try to recreate the enigmatic quality of Oxygene, that Oldfield must have felt connected in a way with his TB opening (that first popularised it). You can also recognise principal similarity between Incantations and Oxygene openings, even Inc. instrumentation (the flutes) is reminiscent of Oxygene trademark sounds. But above all it's the repetitiveness of Incantations that shows Oxygene influence. Inc. is by far the most repetitive work of Oldfield, described by some criticists as "disco-inferno" - it didn't work at their's opinion as it doesn't in my. Most of those repetitive sections are mostly in minor, like on Oxygene, and even some melodic lines are down the lines of Oxygene melodic lines (for example, the voice-like section of Oxygene 1 compares wtih finale of Incantations part 1). Even some of the incant. percusions are reminiscent of Oxygene percusive sounds.
When you know all of this and that Inc. were released just after Oxygene, you are inclined to believe that Oldfield was somewhat influenced by Oxygene. It was a PRINCIPAL AND SIDEWAYS influence, not anything like substantial musical influence you were talking about. After all, as far as I now Oldifled has low opinion on Jarre's music (at least he said so in a few interviews).
I suppose that Oldfield just couldn't ignore the huge success of Oxygene in that time and tried to integrate a few things from it - or he may have realy liked some of Jarre's principal ideas. But I repeat, I think that this influence didn't work well and that the actual qualities of Incantations have little to do with it
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