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Oasis VIP tickets and where to buy them now ahead of London Wembley gigs

Oasis VIP tickets and where to buy them now ahead of London Wembley gigs

Daily Mirror14 hours ago
Oasis are just a few days away from finally hitting London, and fans eager to get some special treatment can still do so.
Oasis are well in the throes of their reunion tour at the moment. But they still have a lot of work to do.
The Gallagher brothers, Liam and Noel, have just finished up a tenure at Manchester's Heaton Park where they played five shows. Now, they've set their sights on Wembley Stadium.
The enormous London venue holds more than 90,000 people, and will host the iconic Supersonic band for a cumulative seven nights across July, August and September. And while tickets sold out in no time upon release, fans looking for a finer experience may be able to get one using Seat Unique.
The VIP and hospitality-focused website gives fans the chance to enjoy not only the concert in question, but some added extras. We've detailed everything fans need below.
viagogo and resale tickets
Sites such as viagogo, Stubhub, and Vivid Seats allow fans to buy resale tickets from other fans. However, it is important to note that ticket conditions often prohibit resale after initial purchase. Those tickets may not be valid for admittance to gigs.
Fans intending to buy tickets for live events through resale websites should check the ticket terms and conditions, to confirm whether resale is prohibited, before they buy. Ticket terms and conditions can be checked with the original seller, such as Ticketmaster or Live Nation. If resale is prohibited, tickets bought second-hand could be voided and admission to the event refused.
How to buy Oasis VIP tickets now
Oasis tickets with VIP and hospitality bonuses are now available from Seat Unique. These official tickets give fans the chance to see the iconic band with a collection of added bonuses, perks, and special inclusions.
This might mean Oasis fans can see the band with premium views, box seats, or with early access to the venue. And Wembley Stadium has a collection of options available, as well.
The hospitality options come complete with food and drinks packages, buffets, all-inclusive beverages, champagne bars, and after-parties, as well.
Here's the link fans need now:
Of course, there are also other ways to buy tickets to the band's upcoming Wembley shows, beginning on July 25, 2025. Resale websites give fans the chance to buy and sell their tickets at the drop of a hat.
And, these tickets are available now, beginning at around £250 each. Here's the links fans need:
VIAGOGO - Buy Oasis tickets here.
STUBHUB - Buy Oasis tickets here.
Finally, fans have the option of buying standard official tickets from retailers Twickets and Ticketmaster. While these websites do not have any tickets on offer at the moment, they are the most above-board way of buying them.
As a result, here's the links:
Oasis Live '25 Tour Dates
JULY 2025
25th - London, Wembley Stadium
26th - London, Wembley Stadium
30th - London, Wembley Stadium
AUGUST 2025
2nd - London, Wembley Stadium
3rd - London, Wembley Stadium
8th - Edinburgh, Scottish Gas Murrayfield Stadium
9th - Edinburgh, Scottish Gas Murrayfield Stadium
12th - Edinburgh, Scottish Gas Murrayfield Stadium
SEPTEMBER 2025
27th - London, Wembley Stadium
28th - London, Wembley Stadium
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Why has the world turned on the Waltz King?
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On 17 June 1872, Johann Strauss II conducted the biggest concert of his life. The city was Boston, USA, and the promoters provided Strauss with an orchestra and a chorus numbering more than 20,000. One hundred assistant conductors were placed at his disposal, and a cannon shot cued The Blue Danube – the only way of silencing the expectant crowds. Estimates vary, but the audience was reckoned to number between 50,000 and 100,000; in all, there must have been a minimum of 70,000 people present. This month's Oasis reunion only played to 80,000. The result, in an age before modern amplification, was much as you might expect. 'A fearful racket that I shall never forget as long as I live,' was Strauss's own description. Still, the point stands. Johann Strauss II was famous; very famous. A Europe-wide newspaper poll, conducted in 1890, named Strauss as the third most popular individual in Europe – pipped to the top slot only by Queen Victoria and (in second place) Otto von Bismarck. 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Classical music is obsessed with anniversaries and Strauss is proven box office, so where are the festivals, the rediscoveries, the operetta revivals? The Proms has a single Saturday morning concert; the Grange Festival staged Die Fledermaus – and in the UK, that's basically it. In Britain, at least, it seems that the people who decide what classical music we should hear have rather fallen out of love with this most accessible of 19th-century masters. If that's the case, they're swimming against the tide of history and the judgment of genius. The deepest divide in late 19th- century European music – a culture war of generation-defining bitterness – was between the devotees of Wagner and Brahms. Yet both composers revered Strauss. For Wagner, Strauss was 'the most musical man in Europe'. 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