
We're proper Oasis superfans who fell in love over iconic group & got married – we even named our son after band member
LOVE FOREVER We're proper Oasis superfans who fell in love over iconic group & got married – we even named our son after band member
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WHEN Oasis announced they were reforming last year, most of the nation gasped in shock, got super- excited . . . and then went back to their daily lives.
But for some, the reunion was what they had spent years of their lives discussing, analysing and hoping, wishing and praying for.
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Emily Cleary met future husband Jamie as a teenager on a bus to her first Oasis gig
Credit: Emily Cleary
Because when original members Liam, Noel, Bonehead, Guigsy and Tony McCarroll burst on to the scene in 1994, Oasis changed their lives for ever.
Here, we speak to five superfans who met their partners or found their calling through the band.
"I always loved bumping into this guy who had been on the journey with me from the start" - Emily Cleary
MUM-OF-TWO Emily, 47, from Gerrards Cross, Bucks, met future husband Jamie as a teenager at her first Oasis gig. She says:
"I first set eyes on Jamie when I sat next to him on an eight-hour coach trip to Paris in 1995.
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Emily and Jamie are now married with two children
Credit: Emily Cleary
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Emily at age 16, the year she met Jamie
Credit: Supplied
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And After All: A Fan History Of Oasis tells the story of the band's superfans
Credit: Melissa Locker
I was 16 and had somehow convinced my mum I would be perfectly safe travelling with a group of four boys to the French capital to watch a rock 'n' roll band play at the Bataclan.
While my girl friends were into Take That, I was obsessed with Oasis.
And as we boarded the 5am bus from London's Victoria, I sat down next to Jamie, who I only knew through mutual friends.
Liam Gallagher reveals new details about Oasis tour – before quickly deleting post
We travelled to Paris, watched Oasis bring the house down, and I returned a lifelong fan.
The gig was amazing, so we decided to go to Glastonbury to watch them a few months later.
That appearance at Glasto was the first time we heard Don't Look Back In Anger, and I remember my spine tingling as I looked at Jamie.
This was something special.
Time passed and over the next ten years I saw Oasis at Knebworth, Earls Court, Wembley and more.
Sometimes I'd bump into Jamie and I'd always love seeing this guy who had been on the Oasis journey with me from the beginning – and I rather fancied him.
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Emily and Jamie's inscribed wedding rings
Credit: Supplied
As I approached 30, Facebook was invented and Jamie and I got back in touch properly.
We started to plan a Glastonbury trip and book gigs to go to, including Oasis at the Eden Project.
Friendship developed into more, and soon we were a couple.
So in July 2009 and newly engaged, off we traipsed to Cornwall to watch what was to be one of their last gigs.
Shortly after failing to catch Liam's tambourine, we got married, and now have two kids.
The first song played when we were married was Live Forever, and our wedding rings are both inscribed with 'Live Forever'.
On Friday, Jamie and I, plus two of the original Paris group, will travel to Cardiff to see Oasis's first reunion gig.
A month later we will take our kids to Wembley to watch them.
Everything has come full circle."
"After I met Justin briefly at a concert, the universe just kept throwing us back together" - Lisa Marks
LISA, 41, from Canada, met her husband Justin through their love of Oasis – and named her children after them. She says:
"My son Liam, 13, was named after, well, Liam, and my 11-year-old daughter Jill is named after one of the band's most legendary photographers, Jill Furmanovsky.
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Canadian Lisa met her husband Justin through their love of Oasis – and named her children after them
Credit: Supplied
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Lisa with her hero Noel
Credit: Supplied
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Lisa with Liam, who she named her son after
Credit: Supplied
But it didn't just inspire my parenting, it shaped my entire life. I met Justin through a shared love of the band
We walked down the aisle to Round Are Way, and even had 'OASISGRL' as the licence plate on my old Pontiac.
I first discovered Oasis aged 12 in 1996.
The song I love the most is Whatever. I had a hard time in school.
I was bullied and ended up changing schools.
It made me feel, 'F*** you all. I'm going to be whatever I want to be'.
While my classmates went mad for the Spice Girls, I launched The Liam Lover's Club, sold Oasis bootlegs on eBay and had the email address 'timeforliam'.
Then on June 17, 2005, I met Justin briefly at an Oasis gig.
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Lisa reconnected with Justin at a Noel solo gig
Credit: Supplied
I was in a relationship at the time, but we stayed in touch through MSN Messenger, swapping messages about Oasis news and ticket sales.
Later, when I was single in 2006, I reconnected with him while buying a gift at HMV – after spotting a Liam Gallagher photo taped to the till and discovering from the cashier that Noel would be playing locally.
When I messaged Justin about it he revealed that he was working at HMV, it was his picture of Liam taped to the till that I'd seen and it was his tip – from a music industry pal – that I'd heard about.
The universe just kept throwing us back together.
We reunited at a Noel acoustic gig in November 2006 and got together not long after.
It was so corny but our first kiss was while Wonderwall was playing.
We married in September 2010, with matching rings engraved with 'I U OASISGRL' and 'And7 we can slide away'.
Lisa also tells her story in And After All: A Fan History Of Oasis by Melissa Locker. Re- printed by permission of Gallery Books, an Imprint of Simon & Schuster, LLC
"I've been mistaken for Liam" - Steve Brown
THE 46-year-old from Basildon, Essex, went from fan to lead singer in tribute band Oasiz. He says:
"From the moment I clapped eyes on Oasis blasting out Some Might Say on Top Of The Pops in 1995, I knew life would never be the same.
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Steve Brown went from fan to lead singer in tribute band Oasiz
Credit: @alwpix_theatre
I was just 16. I went from having a curtains haircut and listening to Whigfield to having the basin haircut, getting the baggy checked shirts and walking around in shades even when the sun wasn't out.
I kept scrapbooks with every news-paper cutting.
No matter how small it might seem, like news Liam had had a haircut, I'd make sure I had it.
Within weeks, I'd started teaching myself how to play the guitar.
I started writing songs and then in 2005 I formed Oasiz, with my older brother Marcus as Noel, while still working a day job in exports.
Five years later, I went full-time, performing as Liam Gallagher in the tribute band but also doing solo gigs in character.
In 2023 a video I performed in racked up more than half a million views, with some fans convinced I was the real Liam.
But Oasis didn't just shape my career, the band shaped my entire life.
I met Gary Ayres, the bassist in Oasiz, 25 years ago and we're still best mates.
And while gigging at a hotel in Ibiza in 2012, I met Melanie, then 33 and on holiday with family.
The spark was instant and we married just six months later."
"I started calling people Our Kid" - Felix White
FELIX, 40, is guitarist for indie band The Maccabees and a presenter on cricket podcast Tailenders. He says:
"(What's The Story) Morning Glory? became the first LP I owned. It was better than any-thing I could have ever imagined.
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The Maccabees' guitarist Felix White grew up as a huge Oasis fan
Credit: Getty
Oasis had taken my confusion and searching and turned it into words.
The information that they sent into my infatuated mind, however, could at times be quite confusing.
Rock 'n' roll was the only form of music worth listening to. Got it. The Boyzone and Eternal tapes were dispensed to the bin.
Guitars were the best. Yep. Synthesisers were terrible. I didn't know what one was, but agreed.
Rock 'n' roll was about being yourself. Noted.
It's just that in the same breath, they seemed to not approve of anyone who was 'themselves' and wasn't, well, them.
Fashioning an upbringing from Burnage, Manchester, when you live next to Wandsworth Common in South London is a complicated manoeuvring act.
But I had faith that I could achieve it if I made sure I was exposed to Oasis at all times of the day.
Before I'd sleep I would plan what Oasis song I would listen to first thing the next morning, fast-forwarding the cassette to the position.
I learned the interviews completely by heart. I would now refer to people as 'our kid'.
I looked at Noel Gallagher on the cover of There And Then, the live Oasis video.
I studied every face in the crowd fixed exclusively on him, all joined together in communal worship.
He had achieved all that with a guitar. I knew the only way to make sense of my life from here was to, somehow, get myself there too."
It's Always Summer Somewhere: A Matter Of Life And Cricket, by Felix White, £9.99, published by Cassell.
"No Oasis? I'd be pretty boring" - Rob Fiddaman
THE DJ, music historian and radio host, from Stoke-on-Trent, got in early on collecting Oasis memorabilia. He says:
"I was 17, driving home, when Live Forever came on the radio.
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Rob Fiddaman got in early on collecting Oasis memorabilia
Credit: Rob Fiddaman
We were so used to hearing boybands crooning on bar stools, but to hear this guitar-driven music on the radio changed everything.
I went to see Oasis in 1996 at Knebworth and that sealed the deal.
I'd always been a music collector, but around 2010 I noticed that no one was selling Oasis memorabilia.
So, I started buying bits and bobs for fun.
Then I got a phone call from Alan McGee, the record label owner who'd signed Oasis in 1993.
'Either you're f***ing mad, or you're a genius,' he said to me.
And he asked me to sell some of his Oasis stuff for charity.
Then I started selling and valuing things for ex-bandmembers too.
In 2014, the band's managers asked me to value items for the exhibition Oasis: Chasing The Sun.
On opening night, I was a bit early so I went to the pub next door.
I walked in and a guy went, 'Hi Rob!' It was Brian Cannon, who was the band's original art director.
He introduced me to Paul Gallagher, Liam and Noel's brother.
Then Bonehead joined us, by which point I was feeling pretty rock 'n' roll.
Then the guys said, 'We're going to meet Liam now.
And, soon enough, I was drinking pornstar martinis with my idol.
Over the years, I've somehow become the go-to Oasis guy.
I've made 100 BBC appearances and written a book, Buying Into Britpop.
I'm constantly DJ-ing, and I've just set up my own record label, Deadly Records.
Oasis changed my life. Without them, I'd be a pretty boring guy."
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Scotsman
23 minutes ago
- Scotsman
What's the change in costs seeing Oasis in 2025 compared to Knebworth 1996?
If you thought it was expensive to see Oasis in Knebworth in 1996, wait until you see what inflation has done in 2025. Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... This week, one of the most anticipated reunions in music history takes place. Oasis' 2025 reunion shows kick off with their show at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff, with anticipation at a fever pitch. However - how much more expensive is it to see Oasis in 2025 compared to their triumphant shows in Knebworth back in 1996? One of the biggest musical reunions in history is finally upon us, as the brothers Gallagher head to Cardiff this week for the first of Oasis' reunion shows this year. With anticipation at an all time high for a reunion that only a few years ago seemed stranger than fiction, those who have had the privilege of listening to sound checks ahead of the band's show at the Principality Stadium have already had nothing but positive things to say about what has been heard so far. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The first show's fervent excitement among fans has led to older fans harking back to the hallowed 1996 performances the band undertook at Knebworth; a time when Cool Britannia was at an all time high, the infamous 'Battle of Britpop' was covered on the front pages of many newspapers and magazines, and the event felt like you had to 'be there now,' to paraphrase Oasis. Just how much more expensive is it to see Oasis in 2025 compared to their triumphant Knebworth 1996 shows? | Getty Images/Canva However, we are still living in a cost of living crisis, and with inflation having risen over the decades, some fans have complained about the cost of Oasis tickets - in part thanks to the drama surrounding the dynamic pricing system used by Ticketmaster when the tickets went on sale. So just how much more expensive is it to see Oasis, or even pick up items ahead of seeing the group on their 2025 tour? Spring decided to take a look at the price of seeing the band and picking up certain items dedicated to the group this year in comparison to their 1996 Knebworth shows. Unsurprisingly, their results paint quite the expensive picture. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The science part (methodology) Spring's 1996 prices were compiled based on historical data available as of June 2025, acknowledging that these figures may incorporate some averages to provide a representative baseline. Current prices were then sourced from market data also current as of June 2025 to present these results. How much more expensive has it become to see Oasis in 2025 compared to 1996? In 1996, it would have cost fans just over £22 to see Oasis, but owing to inflation, that price has risen by 560% - when taking into account the cost of face value tickets if you were one of the lucky ones. | Getty Images Starting with the most crucial element – the ticket to see the band – the cost has skyrocketed. In August 1996, a standing ticket to witness Oasis at Knebworth was a mere £22.50. Fast forward to 2025, and the cheapest general admission standing ticket for their reunion shows stands at £148.50. This represents a staggering 560% increase, with some fans paying even more due to the controversial dynamic pricing system employed by Ticketmaster. The cost of refreshments at a gig has also seen a substantial rise. In August 1996, the average price of a pint of beer was a modest £1.75; today, that figure has soared to £4.83. For wine enthusiasts, a 175ml glass of wine, which reportedly cost £1.30 in 1996, is now priced at £5.17. Those seeking a 'Supersonic' buzz will find that a gin and tonic has more than tripled in price, increasing from £2.00 to £7.25. Even a simple packet of crisps, a staple snack, has gone from 30p to £1.10. Beyond the concert experience itself, the price of iconic Oasis-related fashion items has also climbed. Adidas Gazelle trainers, a footwear choice synonymous with the Gallagher brothers, have seen their price almost double, increasing from £45 in 1996 to £85 in 2025. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Interestingly, the Adidas Originals tracksuit top, another staple of the band's look, has increased by a comparatively modest £15 over almost 30 years, rising from £50 to £65 – a 30% increase, but for those wanting a piece of the 2025 tour, a sky-blue t-shirt with the original Oasis logo will set fans back £30, a significant jump from the £14 price tag at Knebworth. Even daily essentials reflect this inflationary trend. A litre of unleaded petrol, which cost 56p in 1996, is now £1.37. These figures collectively paint a clear picture: while the excitement for Oasis's reunion is at an all-time high, the financial outlay for fans in 2025 is considerably steeper than it was during the height of Cool Britannia.


Daily Record
27 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Liam Gallagher says crew have 'no friends' as Oasis release five new tracks
The tour will kick off this Friday in Cardiff. Liam Gallagher has responded cheekily to reports that Oasis crew have not been given tickets to the reunion tour, by claiming 'they don't have friends'. The Gallagher brothers' iconic Britpop band will make a huge comeback when their tour kicks off on Friday at Cardiff's Principality Stadium. They have also announced a new release which will feature five unheard recordings. The show in Cardiff is the first of 19 being held across the UK and Ireland including three Scottish Gas Murrayfield stadium gigs on August 8, 9 and 12. On Sunday, The Mirror reported that the band's crew had not been given access to complementary tickets for the shows, despite them being set to join them on their trips to Japan, South Korea, Australia and South America. They quoted a source saying: 'The crew are all fuming. Many of them have toured with other big-name artists and have never known anything like it. All Oasis seem to care about it making as much money as they can. Is this about fans, or is the truth that it's all about the money?' Liam took to X later on Sunday to respond to the claims. 'Our crew members don't have friends and there [sic] wife's and husbands are glad to see the f***ing backs of them,' he wrote. He added that their loved ones 'tell me n rkid everytime we see them they don't know how we put up with them on a daily basis let alone go around the fucking world with them fyi.' Gallagher also responded to one commenter who had replied: 'As if they aren't already living the dream just going on the tour.' 'Exactly,' the singer wrote. Liam also recently revealed that the opening show in Cardiff will kick off at 8.15pm. He said: 'Don't be late or we'll start without you and you don't want that now do ya'. The UK and Ireland run includes seven shows at London's Wembley Stadium. The band will also head to Canada, the US, Mexico, South Korea, Japan, Australia, Argentina, Chile and Brazil. The 2025 tour consists of 41 dates in total, ending on November 23 in São Paulo. Earlier this week, the band also teased that extra tickets will be made available to fans soo. Oasis are to released a 30th anniversary edition of their classic album (What's The Story) Morning Glory? The album, released on October 3, will include five new unplugged versions of songs including Acquiesce, Cast No Shadow, Wonderwall, Morning Glory and Champagne Supernova.


Edinburgh Live
31 minutes ago
- Edinburgh Live
Edinburgh Murrayfield Oasis gigs seating plan and what your view will look like
Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info Oasis are set to descend on Edinburgh for three huge reunion shows, with fans getting ready for the long-anticipated gigs. While thousands already have their tickets secured, and more are set to be released, many are wondering what their view of the band will be like. Murrayfield is no stranger to a concert, and we've got images of the stage and seating areas. The Britpop band will hit the capital on August 8, 9 and 12 after performing in Manchester, Cardiff and London. On July 27, it was announced that 8,000 extra tickets are set to be released, reports Glasgow Live. A View From My Seat is a site that allows users to post and rate the view from any given seat and Edinburgh's Murrayfield is included. For Oasis fans, this means you can see what the view was like at similar gigs such as Harry Styles, Taylor Swift, Robbie Williams and Beyonce who performed there over the past few years. You can check out the views for Murrayfield Stadium on the website and see what ratings the seats, or those close by to yours were given for factors like how easy it was to see the stage, how far away you are and for those sitting, the all-important leg room. How to see the possible view from your seat (Image: Ticketmaster) You can see the ratings and views for Murrayfield on the View From My Seat website here. Ticketmaster have also revealed the probable seating plan for the gig. Extra tickets for Murrayfield On Monday (June 30), an application to Edinburgh City Council's licensing board to increase Murrayfield's capacity from 67,130 to 69,990 was approved, much to the delight of Scots Oasis fans with as many as 8,000 extra tickets expected to go on sale. Licensing board convener and local councillor Louise Young, said: 'An application to increase the capacity at Murrayfield for the upcoming Oasis concerts was approved by the Licensing Board on June 23." Fans who are members of Oasismynet have been urged to keep an eye on their inboxes for updates. "If you are an Oasismynet member, keep an eye on your inbox for an email from your regular Oasismynet or Ticketmaster correspondence address," the message added. "Please double check the email is from the correct account before following links or sharing any purchase information." Sign up for Edinburgh Live newsletters for more headlines straight to your inbox How to get re-sale tickets for Edinburgh Murrayfield Fans looking to secure their tickets can head to the Twickets website and keep an eye on the Scottish dates to see if anyone places theirs for sale on the site. Those who are happy to travel can also find the other UK dates there. Alternatively, official resale tickets can be found on the Ticketmaster website. Unofficial resale While Twickets is Oasis' official resale website and you may need to wait for sellers, there are other options including viagogo, Vivid Seats and StubHub. Join Edinburgh Live's Whatsapp Community here and get the latest news sent straight to your messages. Possible start time for the Murrayfield Gigs In a post on X, Liam Gallagher told fans in Cardiff when the highly-anticipated first show would kick off - and urged them to be on time. The Oasis frontman posted: "OASIS on stage 8.15pm Cardiff don't be late or we'll start without you and you don't want that now do ya see ya there LG x." It could mean that Edinburgh will be in for a similar start time when the band come to Scotland. More set times have also exclusively been confirmed with the Mirror, who revealed support acts Cast will perform at 6pm and Richard Ashcroft will take to the stage at 7pm. Oasis UK Tour dates Cardiff: July 4-5, Principality Stadium Manchester: July 11, 12, 16, 19, 20, Heaton Park London : July 25, 26, 30, Aug 2-3, Wembley Edinburgh: August 8, 9 and 12, Murrayfield Stadium Dublin: Aug 16-17, Croke Park