Mike Oldfield — Tubular

The pattern changes. A mandolin races in, then stops. A timpani roll, like thunder from a clear sky. The guitars begin to double-time, not frantic, but eager – the way a child runs downhill. You can hear the fingers on the frets, the squeak of the strings. It's human.

Now the piano , hesitant, strikes a chord that sounds like dawn breaking over a moor. The glockenspiel sprinkles frost. And from somewhere in the left channel, a bassoon lumbers in, half-asleep, adding a touch of the ridiculous – as if to say, this is serious, but not that serious. mike oldfield tubular

A second guitar joins, then a third, layering harmonies that don't quite fit, then fit perfectly. They circle each other like sleepers turning in a vast, empty bed. The bass enters: not a rhythm, but a pulse. The heartbeat of a house left alone. The pattern changes

And the whole thing starts to fold in on itself, layer by layer, until only the first guitar remains, walking its barefoot circle. The bell's echo fades last. The guitars begin to double-time, not frantic, but

Then, just before the two-minute mark: a single tubular bell strikes.

The piece isn't about beginning. It's about remembering a beginning you never had.

A single note, plucked, hangs in the silence like a dust mote in a cathedral. It shivers, then drops, finding its twin a fifth below. The guitar – not a voice, but a breath – begins to walk. Slowly. Barefoot on stone.