logo
Oasis star Bonehead's one-word response to fan's Heaton Park setlist claim after rumours

Oasis star Bonehead's one-word response to fan's Heaton Park setlist claim after rumours

Yahoo2 days ago
Oasis guitarist Bonehead gave short shrift to a fan's claim over the Heaton Park setlist on Saturday night.
The legendary Manchester band played the fourth date of their five-night residency in the city.
Despite rumours that fan favourite Gas Panic, from the album Standing on the Shoulders of Giants, had been given a surprise airing, they played the same 23-song setlist that they have played at all the shows so far on their huge comeback tour (full setlist below).
READ MORE: Oasis Heaton Park RECAP after huge penultimate Manchester gig with 'thousands' on PACKED Gallagher Hill
READ MORE: Bonehead has just four words for fans after triumphant fourth Oasis Heaton Park gig
Bonehead, real name Paul Arthurs, who has rejoined the band for the tour, tweeted immediately afterwards: "Phew."
Stay connected with our City Life newsletter here
Adding just a few minutes afterwards: "It's gettin better man."
That prompted one fan to reply: "Same setlist as every other night."
And Bonehead simply replied saying: "And????"
Join our Oasis WhatsApp group HERE
The fan said: "Wasn't expecting a response from you. Setlist's amazing, I'm just telling people that Gas Panic wasn't played."
Later adding: "I was there last Saturday with my brother and I loved it. I was just saying the setlist hasn't changed which it hasn't."
Some other fans did question if the setlist may change for the rest of the tour.
Following their final show at Heaton Park tomorrow (Sunday, July 20) the tour moves on to London's Wembley Stadium.
Oasis setlist at Heaton Park on July 19, 2025
Hello
Acquiesce
Morning Glory
Some Might Say
Bring it on Down
Cigarettes and Alcohol
Fade Away
Supersonic
Roll With It
Talk Tonight
Half the World Away
Little by Little
D'You Know What I Mean
Stand By Me
Cast No Shadow
Slide Away
Whatever
Live Forever
Rock 'n' Roll Star
Encore
Masterplan
Don't Look Back in Anger
Wonderwall
Champagne Supernova
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ted Lasso's Richmond Family Visits Kansas City in Season 4 Photo — Find Out Who's Returning (and Who's Not)
Ted Lasso's Richmond Family Visits Kansas City in Season 4 Photo — Find Out Who's Returning (and Who's Not)

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ted Lasso's Richmond Family Visits Kansas City in Season 4 Photo — Find Out Who's Returning (and Who's Not)

Production is officially underway on Ted Lasso Season 4. Apple TV+ marked the start of principal photography Monday with the release of a first-look photo that features returning cast members Jason Sudeikis (Ted Lasso), Juno Temple (Keeley Jones), Hannah Waddingham (Rebecca Welton) and Jeremy Swift (Leslie Higgins). More from TVLine Casting News: Friday the 13th Prequel Casts Young Jason, an SVU Promotion and More Casting News: Jack Lowden Leads Berlin Noir Series, Matthew Rhys Is Invincible and More Platonic's Season 2 Trailer Features Several SNL Vets and a (Bloody!) Freaks and Geeks Reunion - Get Apple TV+ Premiere Date The following photo shows the foursome seated at a barbecue joint in Ted (and Sudeikis') hometown of Kansas City, Mo.; additional filming will take place in London. Apple has also released the following logline for Season 4, which confirms what Sudeikis previously let slip — that Ted (eventually) will return to Richmond to coach a women's team: Ted returns to Richmond, taking on his biggest challenge yet: coaching a second division women's football team. Throughout the course of the season, Ted and the team learn to leap before they look, taking chances they never thought they would. Apple TV+ Scroll down for additional intel on who is and is not returning to the pitch, then leave a comment with your hopes for Season 4. Ted Lasso Season 4 Returning Cast Confirmed The cast of Ted Lasso Season 4 will include returning series regulars Jason Sudeikis (Ted Lasso), Hannah Waddingham (Rebecca Welton), Juno Temple (Keeley Jones), Brett Goldstein (Roy Kent), Brendan Hunt (Willis Beard) and Jeremy Swift (Leslie Higgins). Ted Lasso Season 4 Cast Changes Confirmed The cast of Ted Lasso Season 4 will include a new face in a familiar part: Grant Feely, best known to TV audiences for his turn as Obi-Wan Kenobi's young Luke Skywalker, will take over the role of Henry Lasso. He succeeds Gus Turner, who portrayed Ted and Michelle's son in Seasons 1-3. Also new to the ensemble are Tanya Reynolds (Sex Education), Jude Mack (I Hate Suzie), Faye Marsay (Andor, Adolescence), Rex Hayes, Aisling Sharkey (Heirs of the Night) and Abbie Hern (My Lady Jane). The Ted Lasso Season 4 cast list excludes previous series regulars Phil Dunster (Jamie Tartt), Nick Mohammed (Nathan 'Nate' Shelley), Sarah Niles (Dr. Sharon Fieldstone), Anthony Head (Rupert Mannion), Toheeb Jimoh (Samuel 'Sam' Obisanya), Cristo Fernández (Dani Rojas), Kola Bokinni (Isaac McAdoo), Billy Harris (Colin Hughes) and James Lance (Trent Crimm). No word yet on who may return in a guest capacity. Hit PLAY on the video above for a TVLine refresher on where everyone's story left off in Season 3. Ted Lasso Season 4: Everything We Know View List Best of TVLine 'Missing' Shows, Found! Get the Latest on Ahsoka, Monarch, P-Valley, Sugar, Anansi Boys and 25+ Others Yellowjackets Mysteries: An Up-to-Date List of the Series' Biggest Questions (and Answers?) The Emmys' Most Memorable Moments: Laughter, Tears, Historical Wins, 'The Big One' and More

Music Review: Elton John's 'Live From the Rainbow Theatre With Ray Cooper' spotlights a rich catalog
Music Review: Elton John's 'Live From the Rainbow Theatre With Ray Cooper' spotlights a rich catalog

Associated Press

timean hour ago

  • Associated Press

Music Review: Elton John's 'Live From the Rainbow Theatre With Ray Cooper' spotlights a rich catalog

On Elton John's new concert album, the songs steal the show. Deep cuts from John's rich catalog are given the spotlight on 'Live From the Rainbow Theatre With Ray Cooper.' The 13-song set was culled from a six-show residency in London in May 1977, with John at the piano and his longtime percussionist, Cooper, joining him for the second half of the show. The album initially received a limited release on vinyl for Record Store Day and will be available digitally and on CD for the first time beginning Friday. While John, of course, performed his biggest hits during the residency, the album wisely focuses on often overlooked material, pointing to the astounding quantity of quality songs John produced early in his career. That includes 'Cage the Songbird,' a lilting tribute to Édith Piaf from the underrated 1976 LP 'Blue Moves.' Another highlight from that album is the cabaret jazz ballad 'Idol,' which shows John could have thrived in a lounge had the rock star thing not worked out. The piano man's playing here is closer to Liberace than Little Richard, because ballads predominate, and Cooper's role is tastefully restrained. Even when the tempo gets brisk on 'Better Off Dead,' the song is delightfully hammy operetta rather than rock 'n' roll. From start to finish, John sings with relish: He knows how good these songs are. 'Where To Now St. Peter?' features an especially vigorous vocal, including full-throated falsetto. 'Live From the Rainbow Theatre' underscores John's lyricist Bernie Taupin's vital role in their songwriting partnership. The album opens with 'The Greatest Discovery,' a pairing of sweet sentiment and a charming melody, while 'Ticking' is a gripping tale set in Queens that anticipated America's epidemic of gun violence. John introduces 'Ticking' and two other songs by noting he doesn't perform them often, or often enough. Banter elsewhere is mostly brief and stiff, but his droll wit does surface in one exchange with a spectator. 'How are you tonight? Nice handkerchief,' John says, before telling the rest of the audience, 'He hasn't washed that in three years.' The 1977 performances took place as punk and disco were knocking John off his pop pedestal and ending his years-long reign as a consistent hitmaker. 'Live From the Rainbow Theatre' offers a reminder that not all of his superb songs were singles. ___ More AP reviews:

Fast And Furious Mazda RX-7 Sells For Record $1.2 Million At Auction
Fast And Furious Mazda RX-7 Sells For Record $1.2 Million At Auction

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Fast And Furious Mazda RX-7 Sells For Record $1.2 Million At Auction

The RX-7 Veilside Fortune fetched $1.2M. Since the first Fast and Furious movie landed in theaters in 2001, titled simply 'The Fast and The Furious,' the money-making franchise has generated a combined total of over $7.2 billion. That makes this 11 movie franchise (so far) one of the most popular, biggest earning and most successful in history. So it stands to reason that the cars appearing in these action flicks might generate intense interest and some serious coin as well. How about over seven figures? The RX-7 fetched twice the previous record of $550,000 Last weekend at Bonham's Goodwood auction in Sussex, England, the heavily modified 1992 Mazda RX-7 (with a Veilside Fortune body kit) from 'The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift' saw the hammer come down on a winning bid of more than $1.2 million. That is a record for a Mazda road car and is twice the $550,000 paid for the previous record-setter for the 1994 Toyota Supra driven by Paul Walker in the first Fast and Furious movie. The RX-7 starred in Tokyo Drift Interesting, however, it's not the most expensive movie car. A blue Nissan Skyline GT-R R34, driven by Paul Walker in Fast and Furious 4, sold at a Bonhams' auction in 2023 for $1.3 million. The fact that a car from Tokyo Drift, which was actually the worst performing of all Fast and Furious flicks, with a record-low box office of $157 million, should reach such a high price just goes to show that the third movie in the franchise has some hardcore deep pocketed fans. Even though it barely features the two original lead characters and has a lackluster script, in the flick's defense, there is some superb stunt work and cinematography and the combination of cars—including a Nissan Silvia, a Mitsubishi Lancer Evo IX, a Nissan 350Z, a Mazda RX-8 and a Ford Mustang Fastback—is one of the best in the whole franchise. Justin Lin, Director, Nathalie Kelley, Keiko Kitagawa and Keiichi Tsuchiya (Photo by Nathan ... More Shanahan/FilmMagic) But even though Tokyo Drift may not have been as big a hit as all the others, the cars in this installment are hugely impressionable and hard to forget. Just about any casual fan would recognize the RX-7's black-and-orange paintwork as the hero car driven by actor Sung Kang's character Han Lue in Tokyo Drift, and as one of only two said to have survived filming, it crossed the finish line just past the seven-figure mark. Japanese customizer Veilside is well-known in motoring circles for its aerodynamic kits, and the brand has become part of the Fast and Furious landscape. This modded-out RX-7 dons the company's Fortune widebody body kit, which added nearly seven inches of width, in addition to a huge rear spoiler and massive side vents. Apparently the reason it survived in such pristine condition is because this RX-7 was almost exclusively used for still shots and driven sparingly.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store