CD - CRESCD 190
01: Cigarettes & Alcohol
02: I Am The Walrus (Live)
03: Listen Up
04: Fade Away
7" - CRE 190
01: Cigarettes & Alcohol
02: I Am The Walrus" (Live)
12" - CRE 190T
01: Cigarettes & Alcohol
02: I Am The Walrus (Live)
03: Fade Away
Cassette - CRECS 190
01: Cigarettes & Alcohol
02: I Am The Walrus" (Live)
Release Date: October 10th 1994
Highest UK Singles Chart Position: 7
Cigarettes & Alcohol is a song by Oasis, written by Noel Gallagher. It was the fourth single to be released from their debut album Definitely Maybe, and their second to enter the UK Top Ten in the United Kingdom, peaking at number seven, eventually spending thirty five weeks on the charts, re-entering the Top 75 on several occasions until 1997.
Whereas earlier singles Supersonic and Shakermaker had used psychedelic imagery, and Live Forever used softer chords and tender lyrics, Cigarettes & Alcohol was the first real taste, among their singles, of the wilder attitude that Oasis appeared to be promoting. The song showcases the appeal of cigarettes, alcohol, drugs and partying as a remedy to the banality of working class life.
Lyrics such as "Is it worth the aggravation to find yourself a job when there's nothing worth working for" tapped into the mood of British working class youth in the mid-1990s. However, the song does not set out to hold up these minor releases of work-a-day life as some ideal. They are, rather, a compromise – "You could wait for a lifetime," they sing, "to spend your days in the sunshine/(so) you might as well do the white line".
Upon first hearing the song, the man who discovered the band, Alan McGee, claimed that the song was one of the greatest social statements anyone had made in the past twenty five years, such was his view on the song.
Another notable element of this song is Liam's unique pronunciation of many of the words. Most rhymes end in "-tion," and Liam draws these out into "-sheeyion," for almost every line. Noel has said that he writes many lyrics to fit Liam's extremely unique vocal style.
The song was one of the first cases when Oasis was accused of musical plagiarism, a reputation of the band that would later grow. The main riff of the song is supposedly "borrowed" from Get It On (Bang a Gong) by T-Rex and also bears a similarity to the opening of Humble Pie's cover of C'Mon Everybody from the album Smokin'.
Rod Stewart covered the song on his 1998 album When We Were The New Boys.
The song is included on Oasis' compilation album Stop The Clocks.
Contrary to the sleevenotes, which claimed it was recorded at the Glasgow Cathouse in June 1994, I Am The Walrus was actually recorded at a soundcheck for a gig at the Gleneagles Hotel, Scotland on February 6th 1994, as part of a Sony Music seminar. The reason why this wasn't mentioned on the original sleeve notes was because Noel thought mentioning the fact that it was recorded at a corporate event would look bad. The crowd noises at the beginning and end of the track are from a Faces bootleg of Noel's.
All three B-sides were featured on The Masterplan, although I Am The Walrus and Listen Up both appear as edited versions.
The Father Ted episode Cigarettes and Alcohol and Rollerblading is named after this song.