logo
Oasis fans go wild as band release new live track from reunion tour

Oasis fans go wild as band release new live track from reunion tour

The Sun24-07-2025
OASIS have given fans who weren't able to bag a ticket to their sought-after reunion a treat.
The band, led by Noel and Liam Gallagher, have been back on tour since July 4th – reuniting after a bust up broke up the band 16 years ago.
4
4
Last weekend, the band returned to their beloved hometown of Manchester, performing at Heaton Park to sold out crowds totalling 340,000 fans across five dates from July 11th to 20th.
The band even got in trouble with the council as thousands descended to "Gallagher Hill" – a knoll overlooking the stadium – to listen to the gigs.
The brothers then went to special lengths to honour those gathered there, including paying for 1,000 special T-shirts which were handed out to delighted fans during last night's show.
Their generous gesture came days after Manchester Council ordered a fence to be erected in the city's ­Heaton Park, blocking the view of several large screens near the stage.
Now they've immortalised the moment for everyone with an official release of their live rendition of iconic track, Cigarettes and Alcohol.
Recorded on the first night of their stint at the stadium, Cigarettes and Alcohol has become a staple favourite on the brothers' set list.
The latest track drop follows their release of Slide Away, which was recorded and released from their first date in Cardiff.
Next stop is Wembley Stadium this Friday – the first of seven dates at the band.
The band will appear July 25th, 26th and 30th, and August 2nd and 3rd.
Oasis kick off first Manchester homecoming gig after 16 years away
They will return towards the end of their tour for two more dates on September 27th and 28th.
In between their Wembley stints, the Oasis tour will be going international – finishing up their UK and Ireland dates with Edinburgh and Dublin dates, before heading to Toronto, Canada.
From there, they will start their Northern America stint, appearing in Chicago, New Jersey, California and Mexico.
They'll then have a two-week break before returning to the UK.
4
4
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fleur East admits she walks around her house NAKED as she reveals she has 'never' had body confidence issues
Fleur East admits she walks around her house NAKED as she reveals she has 'never' had body confidence issues

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Fleur East admits she walks around her house NAKED as she reveals she has 'never' had body confidence issues

Fleur East has revealed she often walks around her house completely naked as she opened up about her body confidence. The Sax singer, 37, detailed how she enjoys walking around her home in the nude, taking after her own mother, who she said used to do the same thing. Fleur said she has never dealt with any body confidence issues and hopes to pass on the same lesson to her own daughter, Nova, who she welcomed last March. She told The Mirror: 'As it's been really hot recently, I've been walking around the house naked. 'Mum was very confident, just walked around naked and it was never spoken about. 'She was never shy or conscious of her body, it was very normal to see my mum's stomach covered in stretch marks after having me and my sister. The Sax singer, 37, detailed how she enjoys walking around her home in the nude, taking after her own mother, who she said used to do the same thing 'Now, I have stretch marks. I am very grateful to my mum for that because I never had body confidence issues and now I am doing the same for my child.' Fleur and her husband Marcel Badiane-Robin welcomed their daughter Nova in March of last year, with the TV host giving birth at her home. Speaking about her difficult labour, Fleur praised Marcel for being extremely supportive and said she would 'roll around naked on the floor' to help with the pain. In September, Fleur opened up about her dramatic birth story on Hits Radio. She told listeners: 'So I started getting some contractions and I was in the bath, just breathing, sitting in the bubbles, loving life and measuring the contractions. 'I knew something was happening, so I upgraded from the bath to the birthing pool which was downstairs in the living room and Marcel was filling it up using different saucepans, boiling water on the stove and bringing them in – we took it old school! 'I was like ''this is great, baby is going to be here any minute now'' then after five hours I got out of the pool, my midwife examined me, and I was 2cm dilated – that's nothing! 'My face dropped and the midwife left, saying she'd come back when something started happening! The presenter revealed things started to ramp up when Marcel and her auntie Tina, who was also a midwife, were watching some classic movies including Sister Act. 'I was lying in my birthday suit on the floor when the midwife came back, and I was in agony. I started screaming, I started swearing and I never swear! 'I was grabbing my Auntie Tina's face, rolling around the floor… I went through four gas and air cannisters before they said you need to push,' Fleur told. 'They tricked me into getting into a squat by putting Marcel on the floor and telling me to straddle him – they knew what they were doing! – so little baby Nova came into the world on my living room floor, on top of my husband!,' she concluded.

Future of ITV's Love Island in doubt following thousands of complaints that female contestants are regularly 'slut-shamed and manipulated'
Future of ITV's Love Island in doubt following thousands of complaints that female contestants are regularly 'slut-shamed and manipulated'

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Future of ITV's Love Island in doubt following thousands of complaints that female contestants are regularly 'slut-shamed and manipulated'

Two reality TV hopefuls' lives will change forever tomorrow when the public crown their £50,000 Love Island winners – with far more riches likely to be waiting for them back in the UK. But the future of ITV 's flagship dating show may not be so rosy. The Mail on Sunday can reveal the broadcaster will be reviewing it later this month, with insiders forecasting the winter series and All Stars are facing 'the chop'. Love Island viewers this season have been rocked by the 'abusive' behaviour of the contestants towards one another, leading to 9,000 Ofcom complaints in a week and prompting the TV watchdog to begin an investigation. The charity Women's Aid even waded in by issuing a statement criticising the show as a place where 'women are often lied to, slut-shamed and manipulated'. One insider said: 'ITV is stuck between a rock and a hard place because this sort of behaviour is generating incredible viewing figures, with this series being the most watched since summer 2022 – it's averaging 2.4million viewers. 'ITV also can't be seen to be promoting the values some of these contestants are displaying – it's all getting a bit too much.' Another issue raised by the insider was 'over saturation', with viewing figures dropping since the launch of the winter series in 2020 and the All Stars last year. At its peak in 2019, it attracted 6million viewers a night, falling by a million a year later. And after the All Stars series was introduced in 2024, figures plummeted to an all-time low of 1million for the launch of this series. The insider added: 'The plan is to follow the US formula of one show a year with more vetting of contestants, higher quality and more control, which will mean the winter series and All Stars get the chop.' The majority of complaints were about the 'bullying' of Shakira Khan, 22, with one viewer saying: 'This isn't entertainment, it's emotional neglect.' Jessye Werner, of Women's Aid, said 'more must be done to educate contestants on sexism and misogyny'. And she praised viewers 'who call out these behaviours'.

ALEXANDRA SHULMAN'S NOTEBOOK: Marvellous Michelle will be utterly fab... as me
ALEXANDRA SHULMAN'S NOTEBOOK: Marvellous Michelle will be utterly fab... as me

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

ALEXANDRA SHULMAN'S NOTEBOOK: Marvellous Michelle will be utterly fab... as me

As a general rule, fashion biopics are hysterical, overblown dramas filled with characters far too ludicrous to be accurate depictions of the inspiring creatives they're based on. So when I heard there was a film in the works about the late Isabella Blow – the maverick fashion editor and early muse and associate of Alexander McQueen – I assumed the worst. But The Queen Of Fashion, which has just wrapped, might be an exception. There's a first-rate cast and it has been endorsed by many of Issy's closest friends and collaborators. The excellent Andrea Riseborough is cast as the eccentric and visionary Issy, and – trumpet sound here – apparently I am played, as editor of British Vogue, by Michelle Dockery. Dockery is one of my favourite British actresses. She can display hauteur and brutality in equal measure. As Lady Mary in Downton Abbey she perfected the cut-glass accent, while in Guy Ritchie 's The Gentleman she was transfixing as the drug baron's hard-bitten Cockney wife. So I am delighted by her casting. In truth, it's not only her acting skills I'm thrilled about. She's just fabulous looking. Who wouldn't want to be portrayed by this elegant beauty? I know nothing of the movie's storyline but I strongly suspect my character won't be treated kindly. Although I was a huge supporter of Issy, introduced her to Vogue and gave her licence and encouragement to produce the stories she was keen on, her own recollections differed. She ultimately saw me as someone who let her down. If the film takes that angle, at least being played by someone as attractive as Dockery will be some compensation. Stop treating Mr Fox as fantastic Last Monday, while we were away, guests staying in our house sent me pictures of several rooms. They showed shoes scattered everywhere, including a pair of half-destroyed sheepskin slippers lying on our bed. One of my Adidas Gazelle sneakers had been dragged from one room to another and torn apart, while the guest's own shoes were in pieces. She was sure the garden door hadn't been left open at any time and there was no sign of a human intruder – nothing of value, such as our laptops, had been taken. Even more oddly, no food in the kitchen had been attacked. We still don't know what happened, but assume the wretched foxes that plague our lives managed to get through the cat flap. Some people have fond feelings toward the vulpine creatures. Not me. I have previous form with them. A few years ago, I discovered one in the living room sitting calmly on the sofa watching Netflix. Once it had been shooed out, I stupidly sat down where it had been and promptly contracted the most painful condition I have ever had – fox scabies. Anyone who thinks these are sweet little creatures who should be fed and cared for is insane. Unfortunately, round our parts they are now as prolific as squirrels. As is the trail of rubbish they leave across the back gardens and pavements. AI can't capture our true beauty I wrote a few months ago about how some modelling agencies are starting to licence the rights to images of their models for use in AI. Then, last week, a story broke about a flawless AI-generated model in a Guess advert in Vogue. While AI models will no doubt become more popular, it's unlikely that they will replace models at the top end of the industry. Although being a clothes horse is the core of the job, a large reason why the most successful models have got where they are is their personality. Linda Evangelista, Cindy Crawford, Gigi Hadid, Kendall Jenner and Kate Moss are all bright women who bring a large dollop of character along with them. Linda Evangelista, Cindy Crawford (pictured), Gigi Hadid, Kendall Jenner and Kate Moss are all bright women who bring a large dollop of character along with them. They have become famous because they are interesting and look fantastic. AI can generate a flawless looking model but she won't exist off the page. And I doubt her looks will have that coveted kink, the slight 'strangeness in proportion' that philosopher Francis Bacon claimed is key to true beauty. See a playlist? I'd rather roll with it I'm off to see Oasis tonight and someone's offered to send me the playlist in advance. Why would I want to know the song line-up? Despite bingeing on Instagram snippets of the reunion tour, I have avoided finding out whether Don't Look Back In Anger or Wonderwall is the encore, or whether they will play Champagne Supernova. I've enjoyed prepping myself with lesser-known songs, just in case. Wanting to know a concert's playlist in advance is as baffling a concept to me as reading a restaurant's menu before you arrive. Anticipation is such a vital part of the experience. Put to shame – by a cool 11-year-old The young of today are different, that's for sure. I took an 11-year-old to see Jurassic World Rebirth at the cinema, with assurances that should he find it too frightening we could leave. As character after character was threatened and devoured by terrifying beasts, I kept glancing at my companion to check he was OK. He sat impassively through it all. Meanwhile, I was scared stiff and found the tension as unbearable as England's penalty shoot-out in last Sunday's Euros final. Is Gwynnie really such a mean girl? Amy Odell's biography of Gwyneth Paltrow paints her subject as a mean girl who becomes the toxic boss of Goop. Funny isn't it how it's always female employers who get tarred with this label? I have no idea how Gwyneth ran Goop but I do know it is frequently women leaders who are portrayed as demanding and cruel. And most often their accusers are other women – as the unnamed employees would have been at Goop. So much for the sisterhood. I hope the Isabella Blow biopic doesn't paint a similar picture of me.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store