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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

Irish Examiner8 hours ago
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 brothers have not performed together since 2009 (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
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 turn around 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.'
Noel Gallagher seemed to make reference to the dynamic pricing scandal during the gig (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
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.
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.
Liam Gallagher said: 'Hello people, it's been too long' (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
'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.
Fans travelled from far and wide to see the show (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
'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 in 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.
Fans began queueing from 8am, outside the Principality Stadium, Cardiff (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
'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.
Fans have gathered outside the Principality Stadium, Cardiff, as the band's long-awaited reunion tour kicks off in Wales (Jordan Pettitt/PA)
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 (€171) to £355 (€411).
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.
Artist Nathan Wyburn with his artwork 'The Wonder Wall', a monochrome portrait of Oasis bandmates Noel and Liam Gallagher constructed entirely from bucket hats (Alistair Heap Media Assignments/PA)
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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Oasis, Abba, Bono and more: What it's like to play in one of Ireland's top tribute acts
Oasis, Abba, Bono and more: What it's like to play in one of Ireland's top tribute acts

Irish Examiner

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Oasis, Abba, Bono and more: What it's like to play in one of Ireland's top tribute acts

For James Bermingham, it was a question of Faith; that, and the other albums. Matt Houlihan has become something of a Super Trouper. Derek Power found what he was looking for, and as for Gavin Fleming, well, he's feeling Supersonic. Is it even better than the real thing? Definitely? Maybe. Just ask some of the members of tribute bands who this weekend — almost every weekend — are playing shows to people up and down the country, and sometimes overseas. According to Gavin Fleming, electrical engineer and marathon runner by day, but who turns into Liam Gallagher at the weekends, 'I know some people look at tribute bands as a bit 'cruise ship', but our fans would say different — I psyche myself up, it's raw, you get into the zone, and the day you lose that, you should give it up'. 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'I couldn't get work for love or money so I said I would go back to my first love,' James says of the recession years. 'I gave it a proper go. In 2011, I did my first show, I did the solo circuit in pubs and clubs, from there on in it accelerated, I got better with the feedback. You're programming yourself to be someone. It can be a pseudo science, and I applied those techniques to the tribute thing.' According to Robbie Lee, the Svengali behind James is 'the head off George Michael', yet James himself says that he focused first on the voice, and then later on the appearance, the mannerisms. He even took a kind of method acting approach, finding that on listening to George's old media interviews, if he replicated George's English accent when speaking, it helped with his impressive vocal delivery. 'I'm so passionate about George's music, I fell into the role,' he says. 'It was like a hand in glove.' 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FINDING WHAT HE'S LOOKING FOR Derek Power, in his former role as Bono: 'It takes a lot of work — it goes from really low to really high, it takes a lot of power.' If Derek Power ever sold his soul, it was in the services of U2, more specifically his role as Bono for many years in the Joshua Tree. Now retired from wearing the shades, and happily living in Tenerife, Derek's introduction to U2 was the classic War album, though his favourite is Achtung Baby. 'Bono has a distinctive vocal,' he says of the artist formally known as Paul Hewson. 'It takes a lot of work — it goes from really low to really high, it takes a lot of power.' That range is something he mastered over the years, but he admits that when it comes to emulating Ireland's greatest ever band, there are some downsides. 'Everybody hates Bono,' he says with a laugh. 'Now, if I did it in mainland Europe, I'd make a fortune but in Ireland, it's marmite, people like him or people don't.' 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LIVING THE DREAM Live Forever, the Oasis tribute band. Picture: Emily Quinn Yet given the appetite for tribute acts, it seems the scene is as robust as ever, particularly in an era where the traditional pathway for an original band — demo, radio airplay, short-term deal with a label, potential stardom — seems a relic of another era. 'I'm not as factional as when I was a kid,' Matt says, sounding like someone who misses the era where you were almost defined as much by what bands you didn't like as those you did. He is not the only interviewee to remark that these days, how you fare on social media, and particularly TikTok, is as likely to be a bellwether for future career prospects as a spin on a radio show. Derek wonders whether a modern day U2 would make it as a far as album three or four, while James remarks that today, thanks to the internet, everything is effectively available all the time, instantly: 'You have multifaceted trends happening at the same time.' 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Careless Whisper... they knew that song inside out.' Live Forever will play Whelans Dublin from 2pm before Oasis take the stage in Croke Park on August 16 and 17. Tickets from Abbaesque play Gleneagle Arena, Kerry on August 9 and Dolan's Warehouse, Limerick on September 20. Tickets from The Ultimate George Michael Tribute performs at Palmerstown House Estate, Kildare on July 25. Tickets from Read More Tom Dunne: Bruce Springsteen gives us an early Christmas gift

Fan ‘stretchered out' after ‘medical emergency' during Oasis comeback show
Fan ‘stretchered out' after ‘medical emergency' during Oasis comeback show

The Irish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Fan ‘stretchered out' after ‘medical emergency' during Oasis comeback show

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Oasis' comeback was terrifying & spectacular all at once but there's an incredible moment I'll never forget
Oasis' comeback was terrifying & spectacular all at once but there's an incredible moment I'll never forget

The Irish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Oasis' comeback was terrifying & spectacular all at once but there's an incredible moment I'll never forget

THE solid concrete floor of the Principality Stadium is shaking so hard I'm scared it might collapse — but the fear is the price I paid to watch the spectacular Oasis comeback. The set list made me feel like I was being punched in the face, repeatedly, by the Nineties. 3 Liam Gallagher's vocals were out of this world and above expectations Credit: PA 3 Noel's masterful performance on the guitar will inspire a new generation of musicians Credit: PA He ought to get an advertising deal with Halls Soothers. And Noel's masterful guitar is sure to inspire generations of young musicians. Like millions, the only hands I ever expected to see the READ MORE ON OASIS To see them Oasis kick off historic reunion tour as Noel & Liam reunite for first show in Cardiff Oasis full set list 1: Hello 2: Acquiesce 3: Morning Glory 4: Some Might Say 5: Bring It On Down 6: Cigarettes & Alcohol 7: Fade Away 8: Supersonic 9: Roll With it 10: Talk Tonight 11: Half The World Away 12: Little By Little 13: D'you Know What I Mean? 14: Stand By Me 15: Cast No Shadow 16: Slide Away 17: Whatever 18: Live Forever 19: Rock 'n' Roll Star 20: Masterplan 21: Don't Look Back In Anger 22: Wonderwall 23: Champagne Supernova 3 Oasis fans were blown away by the floor-shaking performance the band put on Credit: Reuters

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