Oasis! Look back in delight as best reunite!

The hype is starting in Cork and all over again, Oasis is back with a bang! With concerts planned for Ireland in 2025, many Cork fans are prepared to do it all over again and trek to relive the good times with Oasis, but of course it would be better if we could have a repeat of the Cork concerts of 1996 
Oasis! Look back in delight as best reunite!

Happy fans at the second Oasis concert at Páirc Uí Chaoimh in in Cork in 1996. Picture: Eddie O’Hare

Oasis were one of the most successful groups to emerge during the Britpop era of the mid-1990s before their bitter split in 2009, prompted by a backstage brawl at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris.

Formed in Manchester in 1991, the rock band was led by lead guitarist Noel Gallagher and his brother, lead vocalist Liam Gallagher, during their 18 years together.

Now, more than a decade later, the pair have confirmed they are to reunite for the Oasis Live 25 world tour, which will start in Cardiff next July, followed by dates in Manchester, London, Edinburgh and Dublin.

Excited fans at the Oasis concert in Páirc Uí Chaoimh in Cork in 1996. 	 Picture: Eddie O’Hare
Excited fans at the Oasis concert in Páirc Uí Chaoimh in Cork in 1996. Picture: Eddie O’Hare

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.

The band signed to independent record label Creation Records in 1993 and released their debut album Definitely Maybe on August 29, 1994.

Featuring tracks including Supersonic, Rock ‘N’ Roll Star and Cigarettes & Alcohol, it became a great critical and commercial success, and propelled the band to stardom.

The group started living up to the rocker stereotype and made headlines when they missed their first international gig in Amsterdam in 1994 because they had been deported back to the UK after getting caught up in a drunken brawl on the outbound ferry.

In 1995, the delivered their second studio album - (What’s The Story) Morning Glory? - which became the fifth biggest-selling album of all time in Britain.

The album contained some of their biggest hits including Wonderwall, Don’t Look Back In Anger and Champagne Supernova - songs which have gone on to become globally known.

The band released a further five studio albums, four of which went to number one in the charts while 1998’s The Masterplan peaked at number two.

During their time together they played across the world, sold out New York’s Madison Square Garden in 2005, and headlined Glastonbury in 2004.

The brothers had been known to get into arguments over the years, but things reached breaking point at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris when Liam began swinging around a guitar.

Noel has recalled in interviews that he left the venue and was sitting in the back of a car outside the event in France when he made the decision to leave the group.

Liam Gallagher salutes the crowd on his arrival at Cork Airport for the 1996 concerts in Cork. Pic: Dan Linehan
Liam Gallagher salutes the crowd on his arrival at Cork Airport for the 1996 concerts in Cork. Pic: Dan Linehan

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.”

In the programme, the guitarist also admitted he felt their break-up helped cement their legacy as one of the greatest British bands of all time.

How we used to do it: Fans queuing for Oasis tickets at Merchant's Quay in 2008. Picture: Denis Scannell
How we used to do it: Fans queuing for Oasis tickets at Merchant's Quay in 2008. Picture: Denis Scannell

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.

“Because the band now... Oasis back in 2009 were not lauded as one of the greats of all time. There was a kind of undercurrent of ‘Well, they should really call it a day’. That’s what I felt anyway.

“I felt that people had stopped listening to the records and were coming to see us trot out the hits, and it’s a position I never wanted the band to be in. But now, of course, we’re seen as up there with all the greats.”

Since their split, Liam and Noel have been locked in a war of words, often taking digs at each other in the media or at shows.

At the NME Awards in 2018, Liam told the PA news agency that his brother was the villain of the year, saying: “He’s worse than Donald Trump. He’s the biggest liar and biggest faker in the business.”

Noel Gallagher applauds his Cork fans in 1996. Pic: Eddie O’Hare
Noel Gallagher applauds his Cork fans in 1996. Pic: Eddie O’Hare

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.

In an interview with the Daily Mirror, he said: “You would have to go out and say in English to a load of perplexed Japanese people ‘I know you don’t understand what I am f****** saying, but the singer has gone off, so I am going to sing the f****** rest of the songs’. I could never forgive him for that, ever.”

The year after Oasis’s split, Noel formed his own band, Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, which has experienced commercial success, with the first three albums all reaching number one in the charts and the most recent, 2023’s Council Skies, peaking at number two.

Noel and his band played the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury in 2022 where they performed a selection of their own tracks before he went back to his Oasis roots with some of the band’s biggest hits.

Liam has enjoyed his own success as a solo artist, achieving five number one albums including 2017’s As You Were, 2019’s Why Me? Why Not, 2022’s C’mon You Know, and two live albums - MTV Unplugged and Knebworth 22.

His recent collaboration album with fellow Mancunian John Squire also soared to number one earlier this year.

Liam has also performed major festivals over the years, including The Other Stage at Glastonbury in 2017 and the Trnsmt festival earlier this year, but each time he has also treated fans by performing a selection of Oasis classics.

While the brothers have done well separately, fans have been pleading with them for years to regroup.

Reunion rumours have circulated from time to time but they have intensified recently amid the apparent thawing in the feud between the pair.

Earlier this week, fans were surprised to hear Noel pay Liam a string of compliments in an interview with music journalist John Robb at Manchester’s Sifters Records in honour of their debut album’s 30th anniversary.

Flashback:  Getting tickets the old-fashioned way as Oasis fans queue to buy them at Ticketmaster, Merchants Quay Shopping Centre, Cork, in 2008. Picture: Denis Scannell
Flashback:  Getting tickets the old-fashioned way as Oasis fans queue to buy them at Ticketmaster, Merchants Quay Shopping Centre, Cork, in 2008. Picture: Denis Scannell

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.”

He also jokingly compared Liam’s voice to “10 shots of tequila on a Friday night” and his as “half a Guinness on a Tuesday”.

As part of celebrations for the debut album’s anniversary, Liam has been touring the UK this summer, playing the record in full.

Liam Gallagher salutes his Cork fans during the second concert at Cork's Páirc Uí Chaoimh. 	Pic: Eddie O’Hare
Liam Gallagher salutes his Cork fans during the second concert at Cork's Páirc Uí Chaoimh. Pic: Eddie O’Hare

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”.

Fans begin to gather early for Oasis’ Cork concert at Páirc Uí Chaoimh, which took place this month back in 1996 . 	Picture: Richard Mills
Fans begin to gather early for Oasis’ Cork concert at Páirc Uí Chaoimh, which took place this month back in 1996 . Picture: Richard Mills

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.

Oasis brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher on stage in Cork in 1996. 	Picture: Dan Linehan
Oasis brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher on stage in Cork in 1996. Picture: Dan Linehan

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.

Liam and Noel Gallagher of Oasis arrive in Cork for their concerts here in 1996. Picture: Dan Linehan
Liam and Noel Gallagher of Oasis arrive in Cork for their concerts here in 1996. Picture: Dan Linehan

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.

So now they’re back, and Saturday is gonna be the day that they’re gonna throw it back to you, as tickets go on sale... bring it on!

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