Oasis! Look back in delight as best reunite!
Happy fans at the second Oasis concert at Páirc Uí Chaoimh in in Cork in 1996.

Sadly, Cork has not featured in the plans, as yet we hope, but that’s hardly surprising as they target main cities. But fans who were at Páirc Uí Chaoimh for those two Cork concerts in August 1996 will tell you it was definitely (not maybe!) one of the best concert series that the city has ever seen.

Speaking on Sky Arts programme Noel Gallagher: Out Of The Now, he said: “And the driver pulled off and that was it. I didn’t feel a sense of relief because I knew there was a shitstorm coming. And there was going to be a lot of nonsense talked about it.”

He said: “I’d written every meaningful song that was ever recorded by Oasis. And it was my life, I directed it and creatively it was my thing. With the benefit of hindsight it was the best thing for me and for the band.

In 2015, Noel said he would “never forgive” his brother for walking out on the band during a series of live shows before they broke up.

Reflecting on Liam’s performance on a number of their hits, Noel said: “It’s the delivery or the tone of his voice and the attitude. I don’t have the same attitude as him.”

Noel has been notably absent from the concerts, but during a show in Cardiff Liam made a point of dedicating Half The World Away to his brother, saying he is “still playing hard to get”.

Looking back to the 1990s here in Cork, the Oasis concerts were, not maybe, definitely, one of Cork’s greatest concert series held here!
We might not have much to judge it against, such is the lack of big concerts in Cork, but many will say that the Oasis gigs in 1996 were among the most memorable ever.
Liam and Noel Gallagher are back together for Oasis’s long-awaited reunion with a worldwide tour in 2025.
The Britpop band, who split nearly 15 years ago and released their chart-topping album Definitely Maybe around three decades ago, announced the series of dates will kick off at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium.

The tour will also visit Manchester’s Heaton Park, London’s Wembley Stadium, Edinburgh’s Murrayfield Stadium and Dublin’s Croke Park throughout July and August next year.
Confirming the Oasis Live 25 tour, they said: “The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised.”
The dates are as follows: Principality Stadium, July 4 and 5; Heaton Park, July 11, 12, 19, 20, 25 and 26; Wembley Stadium, August 2 and 3; Murrayfield Stadium, August 8 and 9; and Croke Park, August 16 and 17.
There are also plans for dates outside Europe, but let’s hope somebody somewhere can also persuade them to plug in Cork.
Tracks from the first recording session for Oasis’s debut album Definitely Maybe will be put out on Friday, August 30, a day after the record marks 30 years since its release. Yes, it was released 30 years ago.
Unheard versions of songs including Live Forever, Cigarettes & Alcohol and Rock ‘N’ Roll Star were taken from their first recording session as a signed band, at Monnow Valley Studio in Rockfield, Monmouthshire.

The recordings were scrapped before the band re-recorded the album at Sawmills Studios in Cornwall.
Tickets for the Dublin concerts go on general sale on Saturday at 8am, while tickets for others venues and dates go on sale from 9am on the same day.
