Oasis: five favourite hits
- 'Supersonic' (1994) -
The first Oasis single released was from their inaugural album "Definitely Maybe" and penned, as with most of their songs, by Noel Gallagher.
It features brother Liam's distinctive singing style: holding and drawing out a syllable, with a touch of his Manchester accent coming through.
In a Vogue interview in 2019, Liam named "Supersonic" the song he liked best from the band's repertoire and it contained his all-time favourite lyrics:
"I need to be myself/I can't be no one else/I'm feeling supersonic, give me gin and tonic".
- 'Live Forever' (1994) -
The Manchester band's breakthrough hit came with their third single, which was their first to reach the top 10 in the UK charts.
The single cover was a photo of Beatles legend John Lennon's childhood home -- the band Oasis often compared themselves to and to whom they would be compared.
"It was the tune that changed everything," Noel recalled in an interview in 2009.
The upbeat track, with lyrics such as "I just wanna fly" and "I don't wanna die", were written partly in reaction to the negative message of grunge.
In particular Nirvana's song "I Hate Myself and Want to Die" irked the young songwriter Noel.
"Kids don't need to hear that nonsense," he later said.
- 'Cigarettes & Alcohol' (1994) -
But life-affirming optimism was not exactly a running Oasis theme, already clear from their next single and now one of their all-time classics.
In their concerts it is the most performed of all their songs, featuring 645 times, according to the programmes of 837 concerts published by setlist.fm, analysed by AFP.
The track captured the band's image as bad boys, a reputation that would solidify over the next decade till their break-up in 2009.
It included lines such as: "You could wait for a lifetime/To spend your days in the sunshine/You might as well do the white line."
Questioned about the example the song might be setting for young fans, the brothers said it was not about glorifying bad behaviour.
"It's a feeling you get when you are on the dole and you've got no money, maybe to escape from your surroundings, that all you have is cigarettes and alcohol," Noel said on "The O Zone" in 1994.
- 'Wonderwall' (1995) -
"And after all/You're my wonderwall" -- the refrain is so familiar even non-fans are likely able to belt it out.
The song was taken from their second of seven studio albums, and by far the band's most successful: "(What's the Story) Morning Glory?" shifted over 20 million copies globally.
A 1960s film with the same title, and featuring music by Beatle George Harrison, had been an inspiration for the contemplative song, which includes prominent mellotron that sounds like a cello.
Looking back, the Gallaghers struggled to understand the huge success of the track.
"Every time I have to sing it I want to gag," Liam told MTV in 2008, according to The Guardian.
But in 2012 he did reprise it for the Olympics closing ceremony in London, performing without Noel.
- 'Don't Look Back in Anger' (1996) -
One of the rare tracks with Noel on lead vocals, this pensive song is the second most featured in 837 concerts.
It came out towards the end of Oasis's heady mid-1990s when they were at the peak of their fame.
As a mark of their status in British culture extending well beyond the music scene, when recently elected Prime Minister Tony Blair entered Downing Street in 1997, the fresh-faced leader invited the band for celebratory drinks and Noel was captured in a now-famous image with Blair, both sipping a glass of wine.
"I was 30, off me head on drugs, and everyone telling me we were the greatest band since who knows," Noel said to Spin magazine in 2008 about that time.
The place of "Don't Look Back in Anger" in the public imagination was clear decades after its release, in 2017, following a bombing at a Manchester pop concert that killed 22 people.
A grieving crowd spontaneously sang the song's now-poignant lyrics after a minute's silence in the city centre for the victims, days after the attack.
eab/jj/phz/kjm
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
19 minutes ago
- CNN
Our favorite male movie stars of the moment are flirty, fun and a much-needed breath of fresh air
The summer celebrity forecast predicts clear skies, and an unproblematic leading man heatwave in the form of Jonathan Bailey and Pedro Pascal. In a time marked by division – over politics and pretty much everything else – Pascal and Bailey have seemingly united the internet by abiding by a fairly simple principle: It's ok to have fun being a celebrity. Case in point: Bailey matched wits – and clutched pearls – with one of the web's most gifted in the art of the flirt, Amelia Dimoldenberg, who on Friday welcomed the fellow Brit on her popular YouTube series 'Chicken Shop Date.' Their blush-inducing conversation ranged from Dimoldenberg calling their relationship 'tantric' (Bailey qualified that description with, 'From afar') to her asking him about the chaps he was planning to wear to Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter tour show that evening. 'Are they going to be with the bum, or without the bum?' she asked, to which Bailey responded, 'We'll see, maybe they'll evolve as the night goes on.' For those who don't know him, Bailey was first introduced to most after an enchanting run on three seasons of 'Bridgerton.' He then caught our attention when he starred in 'Wicked' part one last year as the dashing Prince Fiyero. Next up, Bailey is starring in 'Jurassic Park: Rebirth' alongside Scarlett Johansson, out this week, before he reprises his role as Fiyero in 'Wicked: For Good' in November. What has made audiences fall in love with Bailey offscreen though, is that he can be devilishly flirty and disarmingly wholesome all in the same breath. Further proof: The viral craze that was Bailey's so-called 'slutty little glasses,' a moniker for the eyewear that he sports in 'Jurassic Park: Rebirth' coined by internet personality Blakely Thornton. The moniker stuck after audiences saw Bailey's eyeglasses in the first trailer for the film. Fully embracing the moment, Bailey told Entertainment Tonight at the London premiere of 'Jurassic World: Rebirth' earlier this month that he's 'thrilled that people are having a hormonal explosion linked to optical supports.' He also saw his viral moment as an opportunity for good. Bailey and spectacle maker Cubitts recently partnered to launch a limited-edition pair of sunglasses, inspired by his eyewear worn in the film, according to WWD. A portion of the sales will benefit Bailey's charity The Shameless Fund, which he established last year in support of the LGBTQ+ community to 'live authentically.' Bailey is also busy living out his dream of playing in the 'Jurassic' orchestra when they recorded the score for the new film at Abbey Road Studios. Bailey was able to perform the clarinet solo that played over a scene where his character interacted with a dinosaur for the first time. 'I'm sort of shaking,' Bailey said in a featurette for the film after recording his solo. 'It's a total dream come true.' And then, of course, there's bee-swatter and Internet 'daddy' Pascal, who is literally everywhere lately. He not only recently appeared (and absolutely broke our hearts) in the second season of HBO's 'The Last of Us,' but he also showed up in Celine Song's anti-rom-com 'The Materialists,' out now. If that weren't enough, he will also be appearing in the Ari Aster-directed drama 'Eddington' and Marvel's 'Fantastic Four,' both out later this month. He'll also be reprising his role as the titular helmeted hero in the 'Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu' film next year. Outside of being one of the most sought-after movie and TV stars of the time, Pascal, like Bailey, is an outspoken advocate for LGBTQ+ causes. In April, Pascal set the internet abuzz when he attended Marvel's 'Thunderbolts*' premiere in London wearing a white t-shirt that read 'protect the dolls' to show support for the transgender community, including his sister, Lux Pascal, who came out as a transgender woman in 2021. The t-shirt was designed by London-based designer Conner Ives. All profits from the shirt benefit Trans Lifeline, a charity that offers emotional and financial support to transgender people. The Pascal craze came to a boiling point last month when a lookalike contest was held in New York City, as part of a growing trend that brings out doppelgängers of our most sought out celebs. 'It's the Pedro takeover,' Emma Stone, who stars alongside him in 'Eddington,' gushed about Pascal during an appearance on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' last week. 'He's so wonderful. He's talented, he's gorgeous, he's nice, he's funny.' We can see it, too, Emma. Even Robert Downey Jr., who will appear alongside Pascal in Marvel's upcoming 'Avengers: Doomsday,' can't get enough of Pascal. 'Pascal's slow trajectory to becoming a household name who is on a wildly hot streak kind of reaffirms my faith in our industry,' Downey said in a Vanity Fair interview published last week. Pascal celebrated his milestone 50th birthday in April and spoke playfully and modestly about the renaissance he's currently having at this age. 'Stepping into my 40s felt adult and empowered,' Pascal told the publication. 'Fifty felt more vulnerable—much more vulnerable… What a silly thing for a 50-year-old man—to have all this attention!' 'Silly'? Not quite. More like superb. CNN's Dan Heching contributed to this story.
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kenneth Colley, Admiral Piett in a Pair of ‘Star Wars' Films, Dies at 87
Kenneth Colley, the British actor who appeared in seven features for director Ken Russell and portrayed the Darth Vader underling Admiral Piett in the Star Wars films The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi, has died. He was 87. Colley died Monday at his Ashford home in Kent, England, of complications from COVID and pneumonia, his agent Julian Owen announced. More from The Hollywood Reporter How Jamaal Fields-Green Took Charge of the Tony-Favorite 'MJ the Musical' and Made It His Own Why the John Garfield Retrospective at Karlovy Vary May Seem More Political Than Intended Paolo Sorrentino's 'La Grazia' Set to Open Venice Film Festival For Ken Russell, Colley played dramatist Modest Ilyich Tchaikovsky, younger brother of the famed composer, in The Music Lovers (1971), and he did six other features with the director: The Devils (1971), The Boy Friend (1971), Mahler (1974), Lisztomania (1975) — as Frédéric Chopin — The Rainbow (1989) and Prisoner of Honor (1991). In a career that spanned more than 60 years, Colley also enjoyed a fruitful association with Monty Python and its members; he worked with director Terry Gilliam in Jabberwocky (1977) and with Michael Palin and Terry Jones on a 1977 episode of the BBC's Ripping Yarns and played Jesus in Life of Brian (1979). He had a stutter that he said disappeared whenever he was onstage or in front of a camera. Colley's Firmus Piett served as first officer of the flagship Star Dreadnought Executor under Admiral Kendal Ozzel (Michael Sheard) in The Empire Strikes Back (1980), then assumed command of the ship after Ozzel's death at the hands of Vader. He wasn't expected back for Return of the Jedi (1983). 'But I got a call from my agent saying there's been a lot of fan mail about this character and George [Lucas] has decided to put him in the next one, do you want to do it?' he recalled in a 2008 interview. 'I said sure, yeah. Who wouldn't?' He returned to play Piett once more in the 2012 animated telefilm Lego Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Out. Born in Manchester on Dec. 7, 1937, Colley began his professional acting career in 1961 and went to perform for London's Old Vic, The Royal Court Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company. Also in the 1960s, he showed up on episodes of The Avengers, Coronation Street and Emergency-Ward 10 and in such films as How I Won the War (1967) and Oh! What a Lovely War (1968). Other notable roles included the Duke of Vienna in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure for the BBC in 1979; a Soviet colonel in Clint Eastwood's Firefox (1982); Adolf Eichmann in the 1985 NBC telefilm Wallenberg: A Hero's Story; a Nazi in the 1988-89 ABC miniseries War and Remembrance; the pirate Ben Gunn on the 1986 Disney Channel miniseries Return to Treasure Island; and a crime boss on the BBC's Peaky Blinders in 2016. Colley's work as Piett made him a popular figure at Star Wars conventions and events all over the world. 'If you let it, it becomes a way of life,' he said in that 2008 interview. 'I think we're now into the third generation of people, who were not born, and it keeps it alive. For me, the personal experience is a very long time ago, but this kind of secondary experience is going on all of the time. I've just signed a picture for someone just a minute ago. I think it may outlive me.' Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
William ‘Demanding Something Be Done' About Camilla's Health as Charles' ‘Final Wish' Is For Him to Save Her
Queen Camilla's health is apparently at the top of the conversation for Prince William and King Charles. The heir has reportedly talked extensively about the state of Queen Camilla and what happens to her after his father passes. According to RadarOnline, Queen Camilla's drinking habits are the subject that they touch upon the most. 'William is laying down the law and demanding something be done. He's pushing his dad to act,' a source said. The site called her a 'sloppy gin-soaked drunk' after Prince Harry and Meghan Markle left their royal duties. A royal courtier told the site that William ordered his father 'send Camilla to rehab – or else.' More from StyleCaster Meghan's 'Cruel' Behavior Toward Princess Diana Striking 'Specific Nerve' With William-'It Felt Like a Betrayal' Jeff Bezos & Lauren Sánchez's Wedding Accused of Copying William & Kate's Ceremony After Reports Meghan Was 'Seething' to Not Be Invited The site also emphasized that there's tension between the heir and his stepmother. 'William has made it clear that he doesn't love her,' a source dished. 'Charles' final wish to William is to take care of Camilla, and he's willing to carry that out – as long as she isn't getting drunk.'Things have been tense between William and Camilla in recent times. 'Over the years, Camilla has berated Kate for her parenting style, insisting William's wife is raising the future king and his siblings like commoners,' a source said. 'It drove Kate to tears.' RadarOnline also claimed that Camilla's health is on the decline. 'Camilla really is on her last legs – literally. Along with all her other health issues, she can now hardly walk.' A source also told the site that she has a complicated health routine. 'She gets these Sole Bliss shoes made by a company in London shipped into the palace by the truckload as she is trying to cover up her feet deformities on royal engagements,' the source said. 'She has the shoes hand-tooled to cover up the bony looking growths on the sides of her feet and totters around in them trying to pretend like there's nothing wrong.' According to royal writer and associate editor of the Daily Telegraph, Camilla Tominey, there are now reports that Charles' cancer is incurable. 'The talk now is that he may die 'with' cancer, but not 'of' cancer following a rigorous treatment program,' she wrote. The comment comes after Prince Harry's urge to reconcile with his family. 'I would love reconciliation with my family…Life is precious,' the Duke of Sussex told the BBC. 'I don't now how much longer my father has. He won't speak to me because of this security stuff. But it would be nice to reconcile.' Best of StyleCaster The 26 Best Romantic Comedies to Watch if You Want to Know What Love Feels Like These 'Bachelor' Secrets & Rules Prove What Happens Behind the Scenes Is So Much Juicier BTS's 7 Members Were Discovered in the Most Unconventional Ways