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Noel Gallagher's Oasis Live '25 programme tour notes revealed with message to fans

Noel Gallagher's Oasis Live '25 programme tour notes revealed with message to fans

Perth Now18 hours ago
Noel Gallagher has credited Oasis' success with making fans "feel" something.
The Don't Look Back In Anger hitmaker and his brother Liam Gallagher have called a truce on their sibling rivalry and will hit the road this summer on the Oasis Live '25 reunion tour, which starts tomorrow (04.07.25) at Cardiff's Principality Stadium.
In the programme for the tour, Noel, 58, reflects on what makes Oasis special, and writes: "People will never forget the way you made them feel."
The guitarist and songwriter insists part of the legendary Britpop band's appeal is being "chaotic and flawed".
He adds: "A new generation recognises how Oasis wasn't manufactured. It was chaotic and flawed, and not technically brilliant.
"We were rough and ready guys from a rehearsal room."
Although the Wonderwall group were always committed and talented, in the programme Noel plays down his own talents.
He says: "I didn't invent anything. I had a good taste in music, a cool record collection, I could write a melody simple enough to make it work, and it was 50 percent inspiration and 50 percent copying."
Last month, Oasis opened a number of pop-up stores across the UK and Ireland to mark their reunion tour.
The first store opened in the Gallagher brother's home city of Manchester on June 20, and will remain open until July 27 with other sites in Cardiff, London, Edinburgh, Dublin and Birmingham.
The merchandise collection for the Oasis Live '25 Tour is available in stores and online.
Noel and Liam have ended their lengthy feud to get the Britpop icons back together and the former's close friend – U2 frontman Bono – recently claimed that the musician has been left "shocked by how great" Oasis are sounding in rehearsals.
The Irish rocker told Apple Music 1 with Zane Lowe: "They're both funny. I'm still very close with Noel, and he sent a message to me saying he's kind of shocked by how great the band is [sounding at rehearsals]. I think we're going to have a good summer."
Bono added of Oasis: "I love them. I just love them.
"And what I really love is, the preciousness that had gotten [into] indie music, they just blew it out.
"There was just the swagger, and the sound of getting out of the ghetto, not glamorising it."
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Liam Gallagher reacts after Green Day kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song
Liam Gallagher reacts after Green Day kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song

Courier-Mail

timean hour ago

  • Courier-Mail

Liam Gallagher reacts after Green Day kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song

Don't miss out on the headlines from Music Tours. Followed categories will be added to My News. Oasis star Liam Gallagher has responded after Green Day frontman kicked a young fan off stage after he played the British rockers' famous song Wonderwall. Green Day performed in Luxembourg on Monday as part of their Savior Tour, and, per tradition, brought a fan onstage to play the guitar as they closed the show with their 1997 song Good Riddance (Time of Your Life). Things turned sour after the concertgoer started strumming the chords to Oasis' 1995 track, Wonderwall. In a clip shared to Instagram, Armstrong, 53, is seen trying to teach the fan how to play his song, saying through laughter, 'Are you f**king kidding me?' before singing 'You told me you could play this one!' When the fan started playing Wonderwall instead, the frontman exclaimed, 'Oh, f**k me!' In a second video posted to TikTok, Armstrong is seen shaking his head as he takes away the guitar. X SUBSCRIBER ONLY The young attendee is then led off stage by security. 'Nice try. Nice try,' the band's founder said into the mic before he started playing the right chords to Good Riddance. Gallagher replied to a clip online, tweeting: 'Best song of the night.' Critics flocked to the comments section to weigh in on the mishap, with one social media user writing: 'Why do people keep taking once in a lifetime opportunities from real Green Day fans?' A second chimed in: 'The crappy thing about this is he not only ruined his chance to play with an amazing band, but someone else lost out too. Such a shame.' Other followers saw it through a more lighthearted lens. 'Idk I think it's kinda funny,' another person chimed in. 'It's like being able to claim you rickrolled Green Day live and onstage. I know Billie Joe thought it was funny.' Billy Joe put the guitar on the man. Photo: TikTok He initially thought the kid just didn't know the song. Photo: TikTok Billy Joe ripped it back when he realised what was happening. Photo: TikTok Not surprisingly he was dragged off the stage. Photo: TikTok Days before, Green Day played a set at Germany's Hurricane Festival, where Armstrong chastised a fan for squirting him with a water gun. The band was performing their 2004 tune, Jesus of Suburbia, when the singer stopped mid-song and gave the crowd the middle finger. Armstrong then went upstage to confront the culprits. 'I'll beat your a**!' the Grammy winner allegedly shouted before picking up his guitar and getting right back into the song. The most notorious Green Day incident happened in 1994 at Woodstock, when a mud fight broke out and fans stormed the stage. A security guard mistook the band's bassist, Mike Dirnt, for a wild fan, tackled him, and knocked out his front teeth. Despite the chaotic incidents, the group has continued to tour over the years. In May, Armstrong, Dirnt, 53, and drummer Tré Cool, 52, were also honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The trio celebrated with great food and even better friends. 'I had a lot of things that tasted like Slurpees,' Dirnt told The Post at the time, while Cool chimed in: 'Mariachi!' 'Yeah, a mariachi band,' Armstrong said. 'We went to El Compadre yesterday, those guys are friends of ours. It was pretty nice.' Green Day on The Saviours Tour at Marvel Stadium earlier this year. Picture: Jake Nowakowski Armstrong, Dirnt, and Cool couldn't be more thankful for their star. 'Hollywood's literally been a second home to us since we started making big records with Rob Cavallo,' Dirnt gushed. 'Outside of the work and glitz and glamour, I think everybody can tell that Hollywood has a big heart too. As soon as something happens people always step up. You can see it with the fires, you can see it with a lot of different things. It's nice to get our hat tipped like that.' Oasis, meanwhile, is reuniting for the first time in 16 years, after the band dramatically split up due to a feud between brothers and bandmates, Liam and Noel Gallagher. Their last studio album Dig Out Your Soul was released in 2008, a year before the split. In 2009, Liam, 52, contracted laryngitis, causing Oasis to cancel a gig at V Festival. Days later, after Liam recovered from laryngitis, the band was supposed to perform at the Paris' Rock en Seine festival but never came on stage. British Liam (R) and Noel Gallagher on stage in 2005. Photo by Jose Jordan / AFP Two hours later, Noel, 58, released a statement on the band's website. 'It is with some sadness and great relief … I quit Oasis tonight,' he wrote. 'People will write and say what they like, but I simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer.' Liam and the rest of Oasis continued under their new name, Beady Eye, and released two studio albums before splitting in 2014. Years later, in 2011, Noel said that the gig that got cancelled due to Liam's laryngitis was actually cancelled because Liam had a hangover. Liam ended up suing Noel, and demanded an apology. The musician stated at the time: 'The truth is I had laryngitis, which Noel was made fully aware of that morning, diagnosed by a doctor.' Noel complied and issued an apology in which Liam dropped the lawsuit. In August 2024, Oasis teased their reunion on Instagram, writing, 'The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised.' The Oasis Live '25 tour will kick off Friday and Saturday at Cardiff Principality Stadium in Wales. The band is slated for a 41-date run. This story first appeared in the New York Post and was republished with permission. Originally published as Liam Gallagher reacts after Green Day kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song

The bush tax that dampens travel euphoria and complicates logistics
The bush tax that dampens travel euphoria and complicates logistics

The Advertiser

timean hour ago

  • The Advertiser

The bush tax that dampens travel euphoria and complicates logistics

Voice of Real Australia is a regular newsletter from the local news teams of the ACM network, which stretches into every state and territory. Today's is written by Daily Advertiser deputy editor Daisy Huntly. Last year I made a decision: I was going to do more in 2025. Off the back of the COVID years, the never-ending crunch of the news cycle, an increasingly miserable state cost of work, family and paying the bills, I wasn't really factoring myself in. We spend so much of our lives doing what we think we should do, or what others expect of us, rather than finding the balance when and how we can. So as long as the bills were paid and I was squirrelling even a little bit away, I should have some things to look forward to, right? Great plan. The limitations and logistics of public transport in regional NSW have made for some creative travel plans for the sake of efficiency and stretching a buck. Wagga is absolutely not alone in this - in many ways, it's ideally-placed geographically - and those in regional centres and rural communities know the angst well. I also wasn't expecting the surge of musicians and comedians I love making long-awaited visits Down Under. The cost of live gigs aside, it is increasingly expensive to be a music fan while living anywhere outside a capital city. The tickets are nothing compared to what having one incurs. For a one-way flight out of Wagga, you rarely see change from $200 unless it's booked well ahead of time. As I type this, there are just 12 days of July 2025 you could fly to Melbourne with Qantas for less than $219 - and some days it's almost $500 - and if you were organised and got in now you could get to Sydney for $179 in August. Rex is also in the mix, but with similar challenges. Without a concession, the cheapest train ticket out of Wagga to Sydney or Melbourne is around $67 one way. For what it's worth, I quite enjoy the XPT and it's my preferred way to get to Melbourne (if I was heading to Sydney, different story). But it's obscene the difference 130km and a state line can make - the alternative for a Melbourne journey is to drive to Albury and jump on the V/Line for about $15 return. It's easy to see why many Wagga families choose this option. For solo travellers by the time you factor in driving time, fuel, vehicle wear and tear and leaving the car for a night or two, the XPT's siren song is singing. I've turned everything I was already doing into frequent flyer points, for the times I can't make anything else work transport-wise. I've boosted every supermarket rewards offer that hit my inbox and watched for accommodation deals like a hawk. I've boarded the XPT to Melbourne at 2.30am, carpooled to Canberra, scored last-minute lifts to the V/Line, cashed in those points. I've fit in NRL games, wrestling, the Melbourne Comedy Festival. Tyler Childers, Randy Houser, Chris Stapleton (what a birthday present), Luke Combs, and at least Bliss n Eso, Oasis and Usher to come. The Oasis purchase in particular racked me with guilt. Yet I'd paid utilities bills and didn't feel a twinge of regret. No one ever beats themselves up about that. The feeling of being in the crowd - whether it's from the pit, a seat or the nosebleeds - is unquantifiable and something everyone should be able to enjoy. Even if it takes a bit more planning than it should. I'm chronically aware many others face this travel dilemma constantly, and for more than just one person, for far more serious reasons. For me, it's all short-term, it's only for a year or so, and looking back on who I've seen in the last eight months alone, there's not a single regret - other than not having done it sooner, and maybe not all at once. It's just a shame the regional tax that comes with it is so harsh. Voice of Real Australia is a regular newsletter from the local news teams of the ACM network, which stretches into every state and territory. Today's is written by Daily Advertiser deputy editor Daisy Huntly. Last year I made a decision: I was going to do more in 2025. Off the back of the COVID years, the never-ending crunch of the news cycle, an increasingly miserable state cost of work, family and paying the bills, I wasn't really factoring myself in. We spend so much of our lives doing what we think we should do, or what others expect of us, rather than finding the balance when and how we can. So as long as the bills were paid and I was squirrelling even a little bit away, I should have some things to look forward to, right? Great plan. The limitations and logistics of public transport in regional NSW have made for some creative travel plans for the sake of efficiency and stretching a buck. Wagga is absolutely not alone in this - in many ways, it's ideally-placed geographically - and those in regional centres and rural communities know the angst well. I also wasn't expecting the surge of musicians and comedians I love making long-awaited visits Down Under. The cost of live gigs aside, it is increasingly expensive to be a music fan while living anywhere outside a capital city. The tickets are nothing compared to what having one incurs. For a one-way flight out of Wagga, you rarely see change from $200 unless it's booked well ahead of time. As I type this, there are just 12 days of July 2025 you could fly to Melbourne with Qantas for less than $219 - and some days it's almost $500 - and if you were organised and got in now you could get to Sydney for $179 in August. Rex is also in the mix, but with similar challenges. Without a concession, the cheapest train ticket out of Wagga to Sydney or Melbourne is around $67 one way. For what it's worth, I quite enjoy the XPT and it's my preferred way to get to Melbourne (if I was heading to Sydney, different story). But it's obscene the difference 130km and a state line can make - the alternative for a Melbourne journey is to drive to Albury and jump on the V/Line for about $15 return. It's easy to see why many Wagga families choose this option. For solo travellers by the time you factor in driving time, fuel, vehicle wear and tear and leaving the car for a night or two, the XPT's siren song is singing. I've turned everything I was already doing into frequent flyer points, for the times I can't make anything else work transport-wise. I've boosted every supermarket rewards offer that hit my inbox and watched for accommodation deals like a hawk. I've boarded the XPT to Melbourne at 2.30am, carpooled to Canberra, scored last-minute lifts to the V/Line, cashed in those points. I've fit in NRL games, wrestling, the Melbourne Comedy Festival. Tyler Childers, Randy Houser, Chris Stapleton (what a birthday present), Luke Combs, and at least Bliss n Eso, Oasis and Usher to come. The Oasis purchase in particular racked me with guilt. Yet I'd paid utilities bills and didn't feel a twinge of regret. No one ever beats themselves up about that. The feeling of being in the crowd - whether it's from the pit, a seat or the nosebleeds - is unquantifiable and something everyone should be able to enjoy. Even if it takes a bit more planning than it should. I'm chronically aware many others face this travel dilemma constantly, and for more than just one person, for far more serious reasons. For me, it's all short-term, it's only for a year or so, and looking back on who I've seen in the last eight months alone, there's not a single regret - other than not having done it sooner, and maybe not all at once. It's just a shame the regional tax that comes with it is so harsh. Voice of Real Australia is a regular newsletter from the local news teams of the ACM network, which stretches into every state and territory. Today's is written by Daily Advertiser deputy editor Daisy Huntly. Last year I made a decision: I was going to do more in 2025. Off the back of the COVID years, the never-ending crunch of the news cycle, an increasingly miserable state cost of work, family and paying the bills, I wasn't really factoring myself in. We spend so much of our lives doing what we think we should do, or what others expect of us, rather than finding the balance when and how we can. So as long as the bills were paid and I was squirrelling even a little bit away, I should have some things to look forward to, right? Great plan. The limitations and logistics of public transport in regional NSW have made for some creative travel plans for the sake of efficiency and stretching a buck. Wagga is absolutely not alone in this - in many ways, it's ideally-placed geographically - and those in regional centres and rural communities know the angst well. I also wasn't expecting the surge of musicians and comedians I love making long-awaited visits Down Under. The cost of live gigs aside, it is increasingly expensive to be a music fan while living anywhere outside a capital city. The tickets are nothing compared to what having one incurs. For a one-way flight out of Wagga, you rarely see change from $200 unless it's booked well ahead of time. As I type this, there are just 12 days of July 2025 you could fly to Melbourne with Qantas for less than $219 - and some days it's almost $500 - and if you were organised and got in now you could get to Sydney for $179 in August. Rex is also in the mix, but with similar challenges. Without a concession, the cheapest train ticket out of Wagga to Sydney or Melbourne is around $67 one way. For what it's worth, I quite enjoy the XPT and it's my preferred way to get to Melbourne (if I was heading to Sydney, different story). But it's obscene the difference 130km and a state line can make - the alternative for a Melbourne journey is to drive to Albury and jump on the V/Line for about $15 return. It's easy to see why many Wagga families choose this option. For solo travellers by the time you factor in driving time, fuel, vehicle wear and tear and leaving the car for a night or two, the XPT's siren song is singing. I've turned everything I was already doing into frequent flyer points, for the times I can't make anything else work transport-wise. I've boosted every supermarket rewards offer that hit my inbox and watched for accommodation deals like a hawk. I've boarded the XPT to Melbourne at 2.30am, carpooled to Canberra, scored last-minute lifts to the V/Line, cashed in those points. I've fit in NRL games, wrestling, the Melbourne Comedy Festival. Tyler Childers, Randy Houser, Chris Stapleton (what a birthday present), Luke Combs, and at least Bliss n Eso, Oasis and Usher to come. The Oasis purchase in particular racked me with guilt. Yet I'd paid utilities bills and didn't feel a twinge of regret. No one ever beats themselves up about that. The feeling of being in the crowd - whether it's from the pit, a seat or the nosebleeds - is unquantifiable and something everyone should be able to enjoy. Even if it takes a bit more planning than it should. I'm chronically aware many others face this travel dilemma constantly, and for more than just one person, for far more serious reasons. For me, it's all short-term, it's only for a year or so, and looking back on who I've seen in the last eight months alone, there's not a single regret - other than not having done it sooner, and maybe not all at once. It's just a shame the regional tax that comes with it is so harsh. Voice of Real Australia is a regular newsletter from the local news teams of the ACM network, which stretches into every state and territory. Today's is written by Daily Advertiser deputy editor Daisy Huntly. Last year I made a decision: I was going to do more in 2025. Off the back of the COVID years, the never-ending crunch of the news cycle, an increasingly miserable state cost of work, family and paying the bills, I wasn't really factoring myself in. We spend so much of our lives doing what we think we should do, or what others expect of us, rather than finding the balance when and how we can. So as long as the bills were paid and I was squirrelling even a little bit away, I should have some things to look forward to, right? Great plan. The limitations and logistics of public transport in regional NSW have made for some creative travel plans for the sake of efficiency and stretching a buck. Wagga is absolutely not alone in this - in many ways, it's ideally-placed geographically - and those in regional centres and rural communities know the angst well. I also wasn't expecting the surge of musicians and comedians I love making long-awaited visits Down Under. The cost of live gigs aside, it is increasingly expensive to be a music fan while living anywhere outside a capital city. The tickets are nothing compared to what having one incurs. For a one-way flight out of Wagga, you rarely see change from $200 unless it's booked well ahead of time. As I type this, there are just 12 days of July 2025 you could fly to Melbourne with Qantas for less than $219 - and some days it's almost $500 - and if you were organised and got in now you could get to Sydney for $179 in August. Rex is also in the mix, but with similar challenges. Without a concession, the cheapest train ticket out of Wagga to Sydney or Melbourne is around $67 one way. For what it's worth, I quite enjoy the XPT and it's my preferred way to get to Melbourne (if I was heading to Sydney, different story). But it's obscene the difference 130km and a state line can make - the alternative for a Melbourne journey is to drive to Albury and jump on the V/Line for about $15 return. It's easy to see why many Wagga families choose this option. For solo travellers by the time you factor in driving time, fuel, vehicle wear and tear and leaving the car for a night or two, the XPT's siren song is singing. I've turned everything I was already doing into frequent flyer points, for the times I can't make anything else work transport-wise. I've boosted every supermarket rewards offer that hit my inbox and watched for accommodation deals like a hawk. I've boarded the XPT to Melbourne at 2.30am, carpooled to Canberra, scored last-minute lifts to the V/Line, cashed in those points. I've fit in NRL games, wrestling, the Melbourne Comedy Festival. Tyler Childers, Randy Houser, Chris Stapleton (what a birthday present), Luke Combs, and at least Bliss n Eso, Oasis and Usher to come. The Oasis purchase in particular racked me with guilt. Yet I'd paid utilities bills and didn't feel a twinge of regret. No one ever beats themselves up about that. The feeling of being in the crowd - whether it's from the pit, a seat or the nosebleeds - is unquantifiable and something everyone should be able to enjoy. Even if it takes a bit more planning than it should. I'm chronically aware many others face this travel dilemma constantly, and for more than just one person, for far more serious reasons. For me, it's all short-term, it's only for a year or so, and looking back on who I've seen in the last eight months alone, there's not a single regret - other than not having done it sooner, and maybe not all at once. It's just a shame the regional tax that comes with it is so harsh.

Liam Gallagher reacts after Green Day kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song
Liam Gallagher reacts after Green Day kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Liam Gallagher reacts after Green Day kicks fan off stage for playing Oasis song

Oasis star Liam Gallagher has responded after Green Day frontman kicked a young fan off stage after he played the British rockers' famous song Wonderwall. Green Day performed in Luxembourg on Monday as part of their Savior Tour, and, per tradition, brought a fan onstage to play the guitar as they closed the show with their 1997 song Good Riddance (Time of Your Life). Things turned sour after the concertgoer started strumming the chords to Oasis' 1995 track, Wonderwall. In a clip shared to Instagram, Armstrong, 53, is seen trying to teach the fan how to play his song, saying through laughter, 'Are you f**king kidding me?' before singing 'You told me you could play this one!' When the fan started playing Wonderwall instead, the frontman exclaimed, 'Oh, f**k me!' In a second video posted to TikTok, Armstrong is seen shaking his head as he takes away the guitar. The young attendee is then led off stage by security. 'Nice try. Nice try,' the band's founder said into the mic before he started playing the right chords to Good Riddance. Gallagher replied to a clip online, tweeting: 'Best song of the night.' Critics flocked to the comments section to weigh in on the mishap, with one social media user writing: 'Why do people keep taking once in a lifetime opportunities from real Green Day fans?' A second chimed in: 'The crappy thing about this is he not only ruined his chance to play with an amazing band, but someone else lost out too. Such a shame.' Other followers saw it through a more lighthearted lens. 'Idk I think it's kinda funny,' another person chimed in. 'It's like being able to claim you rickrolled Green Day live and onstage. I know Billie Joe thought it was funny.' Days before, Green Day played a set at Germany's Hurricane Festival, where Armstrong chastised a fan for squirting him with a water gun. The band was performing their 2004 tune, Jesus of Suburbia, when the singer stopped mid-song and gave the crowd the middle finger. Armstrong then went upstage to confront the culprits. 'I'll beat your a**!' the Grammy winner allegedly shouted before picking up his guitar and getting right back into the song. The most notorious Green Day incident happened in 1994 at Woodstock, when a mud fight broke out and fans stormed the stage. A security guard mistook the band's bassist, Mike Dirnt, for a wild fan, tackled him, and knocked out his front teeth. Despite the chaotic incidents, the group has continued to tour over the years. In May, Armstrong, Dirnt, 53, and drummer Tré Cool, 52, were also honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The trio celebrated with great food and even better friends. 'I had a lot of things that tasted like Slurpees,' Dirnt told The Post at the time, while Cool chimed in: 'Mariachi!' 'Yeah, a mariachi band,' Armstrong said. 'We went to El Compadre yesterday, those guys are friends of ours. It was pretty nice.' Armstrong, Dirnt, and Cool couldn't be more thankful for their star. 'Hollywood's literally been a second home to us since we started making big records with Rob Cavallo,' Dirnt gushed. 'Outside of the work and glitz and glamour, I think everybody can tell that Hollywood has a big heart too. As soon as something happens people always step up. You can see it with the fires, you can see it with a lot of different things. It's nice to get our hat tipped like that.' Oasis, meanwhile, is reuniting for the first time in 16 years, after the band dramatically split up due to a feud between brothers and bandmates, Liam and Noel Gallagher. Their last studio album Dig Out Your Soul was released in 2008, a year before the split. In 2009, Liam, 52, contracted laryngitis, causing Oasis to cancel a gig at V Festival. Days later, after Liam recovered from laryngitis, the band was supposed to perform at the Paris' Rock en Seine festival but never came on stage. Two hours later, Noel, 58, released a statement on the band's website. 'It is with some sadness and great relief … I quit Oasis tonight,' he wrote. 'People will write and say what they like, but I simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer.' Liam and the rest of Oasis continued under their new name, Beady Eye, and released two studio albums before splitting in 2014. Years later, in 2011, Noel said that the gig that got cancelled due to Liam's laryngitis was actually cancelled because Liam had a hangover. Liam ended up suing Noel, and demanded an apology. The musician stated at the time: 'The truth is I had laryngitis, which Noel was made fully aware of that morning, diagnosed by a doctor.' Noel complied and issued an apology in which Liam dropped the lawsuit. In August 2024, Oasis teased their reunion on Instagram, writing, 'The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised.' The Oasis Live '25 tour will kick off Friday and Saturday at Cardiff Principality Stadium in Wales. The band is slated for a 41-date run.

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