Oasis to reunite after 15 years for world tour
British rock legends Oasis announced Tuesday, Aug. 27 they will reunite for a worldwide tour starting in the UK next year, as brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher ended an infamous 15-year feud.
The band behind hit songs like Wonderwall, Don't Look Back in Anger, and Champagne Supernova, announced on X it will play gigs in Cardiff, Manchester, London, Edinburgh, and the Irish capital, Dublin.
“This is it, this is happening”
— Oasis (@oasis) August 27, 2024
Tickets on sale this Saturday 31st August (🇮🇪8AM IST / 🇬🇧9AM BST)
Dates:
Cardiff Principality Stadium - 4th/5th July
Manchester Heaton Park - 11th/12th/19th/20th July
London Wembley Stadium - 25th/26th July & 2nd/3rd August
Edinburgh Scottish Gas… pic.twitter.com/5hRQ3sJihb
Formed in 1991 in Manchester and credited with helping create the Britpop era of the 1990s, it will be the first time Oasis have played together since 2009 after the Gallagher brothers fell out.
"The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised," Oasis said, as it announced the reunion alongside the first details of the tour.
It capped days of hints and fevered speculation the band was set to play again.
The tour will kick off over two nights at the Principality Stadium in the Welsh capital Cardiff from July 4, 2025, before gigs at Heaton Park in their hometown, Manchester.
It will then play London's Wembley Stadium in early August, Murrayfield Stadium in the Scottish capital Edinburgh before moving on to Dublin's Croke Park later that month.
"Their only shows in Europe next year, this will be one of the biggest live moments and hottest tickets of the decade," an online statement said.
"Plans are underway for Oasis Live '25 to go to other continents outside of Europe later next year."
Britpop
Oasis has long been synonymous with '90s Britpop music, when it enjoyed a fierce rivalry with London band Blur, co-founded by Damon Albarn. The Manchester outfit were also notorious for public fights between Liam and Noel.
Sibling tensions came to a head during a spat in Paris during the Rock en Seine festival in 2009, when Liam broke one of Noel's guitars.
The brothers have not played together since the acrimonious split—but both still regularly play their old band's hits to sold-out crowds.
Until now, they had largely communicated in public through taking swipes at each other on social media.
The reunion will take place 30 years after Oasis's 1995 album (What's the Story) Morning Glory?, which received international critical and commercial acclaim.
Tracks from the first recording session for its debut album Definitely Maybe will be put out on Friday, a day after its 30th birthday, Britain's Press Association (PA) news agency said.
Unheard versions of songs including Live Forever, Cigarettes & Alcohol, and Rock 'N' Roll Star recorded at their first recording session as a signed band will be among them.
However, PA said it understood speculation that Oasis will be on the bill at next year's Glastonbury 2025 were not true.
The brothers have teased at a reconciliation before, with Noel last year saying "never say never" about a reunion.
But the hints of an upcoming reunion grew more visible, with social media accounts for the brothers and Oasis account trailing Tuesday's announcement.
Tickets for the UK dates will go on sale this weekend. (AFP)