Discovery is the ninth studio album by English multi-instrumentalist and songwriter
Mike Oldfield, released on 25 June 1984 on
Virgin Records. It comprises a number of
pop songs, most notably the single "
To France", as well as the instrumental "The Lake".
Background and recording
After his 1983 tour, Oldfield relocated to
Villars-sur-Ollon, Switzerland for tax purposes and started work on a new album.[1] The album was recorded from January to June 1984.[4] Sessions typically ran from 10:30 a.m. to around 7 p.m. each day.[4] While living in Villars, Oldfield also composed
the soundtrack to
The Killing Fields (1984). Selections from the two were released as The 1984 Suite, in 2016.
The album contains a number of
pop songs, which Oldfield had been encouraged by
Virgin Records to write, following the success of "
Moonlight Shadow" from his previous album, Crises.
The first track of the album, "
To France", with
Maggie Reilly on vocals, seamlessly continues into the second track, "Poison Arrows", sung by
Barry Palmer.
According to Oldfield, the instrumental "The Lake" was inspired by his time in Switzerland and around Lake Geneva.[5]
During 1984 Oldfield and his band embarked on a
Europe wide tour in promotion of the album.
2016 reissue
Discovery was re-released in a deluxe edition format on 29 January 2016,[6] as per all previous albums which were originally released on the Virgin label.
The reissue comprises 2 CDs (Discovery and the 1984 Suite) and a DVD featuring
5.1 surround sound mixes. The 1984 Suite is a compilation album of Discovery and Oldfield's other 1984 album, The Killing Fields. It also includes two previously unreleased tracks: "The Royal Mile", a slight reworking of the 1984 track "Afghan", and "Zombies (Halloween Special)", a reworking of the song "Poison Arrows" with the original vocals replaced by a "
Macintalk" voice named Fred and the lines "Somebody's out to get you" replaced with "Zombies are out to get you".
^
abOakes, Tim (September 1984).
"Mike Oldfield". Unknown. Archived from
the original on 27 August 2019. Retrieved 27 August 2019 – via JustOneMoreThing.com.
^Mike Oldfield (2 August 2012),
Two Sides Sleeve Notes, Mercury Records, retrieved 3 January 2015