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Brits predict Oasis tour fallout as almost half think Liam and Noel won't see it through

Brits predict Oasis tour fallout as almost half think Liam and Noel won't see it through

Daily Recorda day ago
The famously feuding brothers have called a truce - but for how long?
Oasis are kicking off their reunion tour tomorrow, Friday, July 4, in Cardiff. It is the first of 19 shows that will see roughly 1,543,889 fans rejoice at the chance to see Noel and Liam Gallagher perform live.
This tour marks the first time in 15 years when the brothers' break-up shook the music world way back in 2009. The musicians will grace Edinburgh's Murrayfield stadium for three shows in August, where around 80,000 bucket hats worth of beer is expected to be drunk.

But as fans rejoice at the Gallaghers' reunion, many are sceptical of whether or not their rocky relationship will last the length of the summer tour. In fact, almost half of Brits polled don't think the pair's relationship will last until the end of the shows.

According to a new survey from Betfair Slots, 55 per cent of Brits believe the once-feuding siblings will see the concert tour through without the start of another feud, but 45 per cent think the brothers are headed for another huge falling out.
However, when it comes to the reunion itself, 55 per cent of respondents expressed their excitement, saying they're happy to see the brothers back together, but less than half (48%) believe the tour will live up to the hype.
With rumours swirling about the possible tour setlist, it seems that Don't Look Back In Anger is the song most fans want to hear from the Gallagher brothers, topping the list as people's favourite.
Over half of respondents (56%) named the track - written by Noel and released in 1996 - as their all-time favourite Oasis hit. It was followed by one of the band's best-known songs, Wonderwall (40%), with Morning Glory coming in third (26%).
Meanwhile, (What's the Story) Morning Glory? took the top spot for favourite Oasis album, with 37 per cent of the vote.

Released in October 1995, the album was Oasis 's second studio record and featured some of their standout tracks, including Don't Look Back In Anger, Wonderwall, Roll With It, and She's Electric.
A leaked version of the possible setlist was posted on Twitter earlier this week, as fans anticipate the Gallaghers' return.
One fan took to X, formally known as Twitter, to share the songs they overheard outside the stadium. Posing a video of the Gallagher brothers rehearsing, the message read: "SPOILER ALERT. SETLIST SO FAR PER REHEARSAL LEAKS..."

The post continued to list:
Rock n Roll Star
Bring it on Down
Hello,
Fade Away
Whatever
The Masterplan
Slide Away
Cast No Shadow
Some Might Say
Don't Look Back in Anger
Live Forever
Roll With It
Cigs and Alcohol
Champagne Supernova
However not everyone in the replies were happy with the setlist, as one fan stated: "No Lyla? No Acquiesce? Everything is from the first two albums WTF."
Another showed their disappointment, writing: "Massively disappointing if that's the set. They have so many great tunes outside of Definitely Maybe & (What's the Story) Morning Glory."
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Liam Gallagher makes cheeky quip about THAT dynamic ticket pricing fiasco during Oasis' reunion tour opening night - after fans shelled out hundreds to attend
Liam Gallagher makes cheeky quip about THAT dynamic ticket pricing fiasco during Oasis' reunion tour opening night - after fans shelled out hundreds to attend

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Liam Gallagher makes cheeky quip about THAT dynamic ticket pricing fiasco during Oasis' reunion tour opening night - after fans shelled out hundreds to attend

Liam Gallagher made a very cheeky remark to the crowds at Cardiff's Principality Stadium over the dynamic ticket pricing furore which caused outrage last summer. Tens of thousands of fans descended upon the Welsh capital on Friday to watch Liam and Noel Gallagher at last reunite, 16 years after a feud in Paris tore Oasis apart. Rumours began to swirl about a possible reunion last summer, with the Oasis Live '25 tour being announced a short time later, leaving scores of supporters in a frenzy. But when tickets were at last released, fans were left appalled as £148 standard prices sky-rocketed to more than £350, with many unable to secure a seat at one of the gigs. The ordeal in fact caused such controversy that it prompted a UK watchdog to investigate the use of dynamic ticket pricing. And taking to the stage on Friday evening, Liam - who has previously taunted fans over the fiasco - once again joked with the 75,000 supporters who had flocked to see him and his brother. 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Anticipation in the Welsh capital had been building all week ahead of Friday evening's 'momentous' return of one of the iconic British bands. Cardiff's streets were lined with Oasis supporters from all corners of the continent counting down the minutes to Liam and Noel's arrival. And the big moment came shortly after 8pm, with the Manchester-born brothers waltzing onto stage arm-in-arm sending the crowd wild. Liam and Noel stopped to gaze at the supporters who had waited years for the moment, holding hands in a moment which seemingly proved they've put their differences aside. 'Manchester vibes in the arena', Liam announced with his iconic maracas in-hand before beginning the set with Hello, singing the apt lyrics: 'It's good to be back.' Continuing with some of their biggest hits, Oasis then went into Acquiesce before transitioning into the fan-favourite 1995 tune Morning Glory. 'Yes beautiful people! It's been too long,' Liam announced. 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Danny Dyer was pictured bounding through the streets of the city along with a pal shortly after 7pm, while Gavin and Stacey star Rob Brydon was seen taking in the atmosphere with his family. Vernon Kay was also in attendance, though his wife Tess Daly was nowhere to be seen. Before Oasis took to the stage, Richard Ashcroft was their support for the night, telling the crowd: 'So glad to be here with the greatest rock 'n' roll band. When I heard Oasis were reforming I thought I was in it!' Richard's former band The Verve toured with Oasis back in the early days, and Noel was spotted in the crowd ahead of his own performance to catch some of Richard's set. Noel's ex-wife Meg Mathews and daughter Anais were in the crowd to support him. A source told The Mirror: 'After posting about her ex-husband for weeks, Meg Mathews had a prime seat for watching the band. 'She was in great spirits before the set, watching Richard Ashcroft with pals.' 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Jota's untimely death sent shockwaves through the footballing world and fans have gathered in their hundreds to lay and pay tribute to the 28-year-old. The tragedy came just days after Jota married his new wife Rute Cardoso - who he shares three young children with - on June 22. After 15 years, Liam and Noel finally reunite for 41 shows across Europe and the 900,000 fans who have eagerly snapped up tickets will not be disappointed with the set list which is crammed with the nineties band's classics. The streets of Cardiff were 'electric' ahead Oasis's opening night with Wonderwall blasting from work vans while superfans are queuing up to purchase bucket hats and T-shirts.

Emotional Oasis fans laud reunion tour's Cardiff opening as 'greatest rock show of all time' as brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher proved it was worth the 16-year wait
Emotional Oasis fans laud reunion tour's Cardiff opening as 'greatest rock show of all time' as brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher proved it was worth the 16-year wait

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Emotional Oasis fans laud reunion tour's Cardiff opening as 'greatest rock show of all time' as brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher proved it was worth the 16-year wait

Oasis fans were blown away as the iconic band reunited after 16 years and delivered an electrifying set, packed with energy and nostalgia. Friday night saw more than 75,000 fans gathered at Cardiff's Principality Stadium for the first night of the long-awaited Oasis reunion tour. And as history was made with Noel Gallagher, 58, and brother Liam, 52, appearing on stage together for the first time in over a decade, fans couldn't contain their love and excitement. Taking to social media to share their reactions, many lauded it as 'greatest rock n roll show of all time' as they praised the 'momentous' occasion. Comments included: 'LIAM SOUNDS SO F****G GOOD!!! OASIS ARE BACK. THIS IS BETTER THAN JESUS' RETURN!!!'; 'I died and ascended to a new plane'; 'The birth of my daughter 4 months ago was the best day of my life. tonight became the second best night of my life. To witness oasis with my dad and my brothers means the world to me what a night #Oasis #oasiscardiff'; 'Goosebumps. That was epic!!! #oasiscardiff #OASISLIVE2025'; 'Timeless. Absolutely f*****g incredible. You HAVE to go see them. Oasis are BACK '; 'If you think you've seen everything,I can confidently say that you haven't, unless you were inside the tonight for round 2 of @oasis @liamgallagher Rock n Roll is incredible! #Oasis #oasiscardiff #OASISLIVE2025'; 'What a performance that was tonight #Oasis #oasiscardiff #OASISLIVE2025'; 'Greatest rock n roll show of all time #Oasis #OasisLive25'; 'Oasis didn't just reform - they redeemed themselves. It wasn't just nostalgia. It was rebirth. #oasislive25'; 'Everybody who didn't get Oasis tickets and convinced themselves it wouldn't even be that good are now absolutely fuming… and I don't blame them. Mega. Just, mega. #oasislive25'; 'Anyone with tickets for #oasislive25 you are in for an absolute treat. I've never seen them so on form and it was banger after banger. Roll on Saturday at Heaton Park.' And as history was made with Noel Gallagher , 58, and brother Liam Gallagher , 52, appearing on stage together for the first time in over a decade, fans couldn't contain their love and excitement Kicking off the show, Liam and Noel walked out with their arms around each other in a sweet display of unity, before they proudly gazed on at the crowds, who erupted into rounds of deafening applause. As the masses gathered on Friday, Liam said: 'Manchester vibes in the area,' before he kicked off the show with Hello, which served as the opening track for their 1995 classic 'What's The Story (Morning Glory). They then went into Acquiesce - a song from their first 1995 album, which was followed by the iconic Morning Glory - the titular song of the second studio album. Liam shouted out: 'Yes beautiful people! It's been too long.' He then ordered the crowd to 'turn around and bounce' ahead of Cigarettes and Alcohol. After performing Some Might Say, Bring It On Down and Fade Away, Liam went off for a rest, while Noel performed his acoustic version of Talk Tonight. Then Noel appeared emotional as he performed Half The World Away and even stopped singing for a few bars at one point. Liam later said: 'Are you having a good time?' before addressing the ticket chaos: 'Was it worth the £40,000 you paid for the ticket.' Tickets were meant to start at £74.25 for seated tickets at their Wembley shows, with the most expensive ticket being a £506.25 pre-show party. Throughout their various sets, poignant pictures of the family's home in Manchester flashed up on the screen along with baby pictures of both brothers. Old black and white pictures of their mum Peggy and dad Tommy were also flashed in the screen from time to time as Stand By Me played. Elsewhere in the show, they honoured late Liverpool footballer Diogo Jota with a touching tribute. Jota, 28, and his brother Andre, 26 - also a footballer, who played for Portuguese second division side Penafiel - both died on Thursday following a tragic car crash in Spain. His Lamborghini Huracan had a tyre blow out while he attempted to overtake another vehicle on the A-52 at Cernadilla near Zamora - just ten miles over the border from Portugal. They dedicated their iconic song 'Live Forever' to Jota, raising an LED banner of the former Portugal international in a Liverpool shirt with his back to the crowd. The brothers ended the show with Rock n Roll, but fans cheers for an encore, with the pair strolling back out, with two of their fan favourite hits still to come. The crowds went wild as they belted out Wonderwall and the brothers became very emotional as they began to close down the show. 'Thanks for putting up with us over the years. We're hard work. We get it,' Liam gushed. They then rounded off their first gig in 16 years with legendary track Champagne Supernova.

Oasis take to stage for first gig in 16 years to jumping crowd and flying cups
Oasis take to stage for first gig in 16 years to jumping crowd and flying cups

Powys County Times

time28 minutes ago

  • Powys County Times

Oasis take to stage for first gig in 16 years to jumping crowd and flying cups

Oasis took to the stage for their first gig in 16 years, sending the crowd jumping and cups flying into the air. Noel and Liam Gallagher swaggered onto stage before waving at concert goers at Cardiff's Principality Stadium – the first stop on their long-awaited worldwide reunion tour. The brothers launched into Hello to kickstart their first live show since their dramatic split in 2009 following a backstage fight at a gig in Paris. The Britpop band from Manchester started promptly at 8.15pm following a short video which declared: 'This is not a drill'. Before their third song, (What's the story) Morning Glory? Liam said: 'Hello people, it's been too long.' He walked off stage after performing Roll With It, with Noel taking over singing duties and appearing to reference the dynamic pricing scandal, quoting the audience a price before saying 'it's just gone up'. Later, ahead of launching into Cigarettes And Alcohol, Liam demanded the audience embrace, telling fans to turnaround and hug a stranger. He said: 'Right then beautiful people, I want to see you all turn around and put your arms round each other. 'And when the tunes starts, jump up and f****** down.' During the final bars of Live Forever a picture of Diogo Jota, the Liverpool footballer who died in a car accident on Thursday, was displayed, with the crowd cheering and applauding the gesture. Oasis thanked their fans for 'putting up with us over the years' as they closed out the first night of their reunion tour. While the brothers shared no banter on stage throughout the gig, they very briefly high fived and half hugged each other's shoulders following their closing track, Champagne Supernova. Tens of thousands of fans descended on Cardiff ahead of the gig, with the stadium able to host 74,500 people. On Friday afternoon, every pub and bar along St Mary's Street in the Welsh capital was filled with people waiting for the concert to start, with the majority wearing the Britpop band's merchandise. Fans Lachlan Weekes and Jayden Helm, who spent more than a day travelling from Sydney, Australia, to attend the concert in the Welsh capital, were among fans gathering ahead of the gig. Mr Weekes said: 'We've been planning it forever. We always said that if they got back together, we'd be at that first show.' Mr Helm said: 'We've been lifelong fans – we're 22 and 21, so haven't really had a chance to see them before. 'We always said it was worth it to come, we wouldn't miss it for the world,' he added. 'To take time off work to come over here, it's more than worth it.' Lawrence Evans, from just outside Swansea, said his 'life changed' when he started listening to the band as he then started to play music and write songs. He said: 'They were the band that made me realise how much guitar music meant to me.' His son Jimmy said of the concert: 'The fact that it's in Wales is really special for us. 'It's the first time I get to see Oasis, (my dad) he's lost count, he's seen them countless times. 'I've been waiting for this day all my life.' Alex Schuetz, an Oasis fan from Germany, said you could not travel far enough to see the band. 'The first time I saw them was in 1997,' he said. 'The last time was in Manchester 2009, just before they broke up. 'I even got a ticket for a small festival in Germany and on the ferry to that festival I heard they broke up. 'I was like, 'Oh my god' something was dying inside of me – it sounds a bit stupid, but it took me ages (to get over it).' He added: 'I've come from Germany. You cannot travel far enough, I've been a fan since 1995.' Glenn Moss, an Oasis fan from Essex who regularly gets mistaken for Liam Gallagher, said he started working as an impersonator ahead of the Britpop band's reunion, having previously been against the idea. He said: 'I get stopped all the time – as soon as I got here yesterday four people within five minutes stopped me asking if I was him or for a photo.' The reunion announcement came 15 years after Noel quit the Britpop band, saying he 'simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer', following a backstage brawl at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris. While fans have been pleading for the group to reunite since they disbanded, website issues and controversial dynamic pricing brought outrage, with many failing to secure a spot. After tickets for the UK and Ireland shows went on sale last year, some standard tickets appeared to have jumped from £148 to £355. The controversy prompted the Government and the UK's competition watchdog to pledge to look at the use of dynamic pricing. Following Cardiff, Oasis will visit Manchester's Heaton Park, London's Wembley Stadium, Edinburgh's Murrayfield Stadium and Dublin's Croke Park throughout July, August and September. The group will then head to Japan, South Korea, South America, Australia and North America. A movie, produced by Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight, is being made in conjunction with the reunion tour. The band was led by lead guitarist Noel and his brother, lead vocalist Liam, during their 18 years together. Oasis signed to independent record label Creation Records in 1993, rising to fame with the release of their debut chart-topping album Definitely Maybe on August 29 1994. They had hits with songs including Don't Look Back in Anger, Champagne Supernova, Wonderwall and Live Forever. Dig Out Your Soul, the band's last studio album, was released in 2008, just months before the Paris row.

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