Win Tickets To Oasis Legend Bonehead & Pete Macleod Acoustic Tour

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Acclaimed singer-songwriter Pete Macleod and Oasis legend Bonehead are touring together this autumn.

Brave Music Agency have given us three pairs of tickets to the gig of your choice at the following locations.

31 Oct - The Mill Mansfield
01 Nov - Brixton Jamm -London
08 Nov - Thyme & Spirit - Carlisle
14 Nov - The Attic - Accrington
15 Nov - The Ironworks - Oswestry
21 Nov - Academy 2 - Newcastle
22 Nov - Pivo Pivo - Glasgow

All you have to do to win a pair of tickets, is email scyhodotcom@gmail.com with the answer to the following easy question.

Who is Bonehead touring with in the autumn?

Important Info:
Deadline - All Entries must be received by August 16 2008.
All entries must be over 18
When sending your entry please title your email as 'Bonehead Competition'
Please include your name in your email.
Also include what gig you would like tickets for
Send all entries to scyhodotcom@gmail.com

Tickets and more information are available at www.myspace.com/petesolomusic

For more information on booking Bonehead visit www.brave-music-agency.co.uk

Thanks To Damn Morgan @ Brave Music Agency

Russell Brand's Show Last Night

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Noel Gallagher features on the Viddycast from last week's Russell Brand Show.

The show this week was a selection of the best bits from previous shows.

Needless to say, Noel Gallagher features a lot during the show.

Click here to listen again or download the podcast (from Tuesday).

Oasis Will Play Three Scots Dates In World Tour

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Man the barricades and put your crash helmets on...the Gallaghers are coming to Scotland.

Email can exclusively reveal Oasis will play their first gigs here for three years.

Details of their eagerly awaited UK tour - to promote new album Dig Out Your Soul - are still shrouded in secrecy.

But we can confirm the band will play at Aberdeen Exhibition Centre on November 2 then Glasgow's SECC on November 4 and 5. Tickets go on sale on August 20.

It is the first time they have played shows in Scotland since headlining a massive 40,000-capacity open-air gig at Hampden Park, Glasgow, in 2005.

The group - led by guitarist Noel Gallagher and singer brother Liam - release new single The Shock Of The Lightning on September 29.

Dig Out Your Soul follows on October 6. It is their seventh studio album and was recorded at the legendary Abbey Road.

Noel said: "If The Shock Of The Lightning sounds instant and compelling it's because it was written and recorded dead fast.

"It's basically a demo and has retained its energy. There's a lot to be said for that - the first time you record something is always the best.

"On the album I wanted a sound that was more hypnotic, more driving. Songs you would maybe have to connect to...to feel."

Noel also paid tribute to the songwriting efforts of brother Liam on the new CD.

The fiery singer penned three tracks including I'm Outta Time, which features a speech sample by his hero, John Lennon.

Noel said: "Liam's songs are really personal. What's his favourite subject? Himself. He's really good.

"If he could be bothered to finish some of the songs he started...they're amazing."

Source: www.sundaymail.co.uk

Recent Pictures Of Liam Gallagher

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Recent pictures of Liam Gallagher from today's Times Magazine.

Scans thanks to Elias from L4E

Oasis Puts Bourton-On-The-Water In A Trance

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Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher swaggered into the Cotswolds to shoot a surreal video for the band's new album.

The rock 'n' roll star, sporting a dark suit sprinkled with white dust and a matador's hat, filmed at Bourton's model village – a miniature replica of the village as it was in 1937.

The bad boy of pop greeted Cotswold Farm Park owner Adam Henson with an 'Alright geezer' before wading through a stream and being strapped to a parachute as cameras rolled.

Liam was shooting for the track I'm Out Of Time for the new Dig Out Your Soul album, to be released on October 6.

Oasis, whose hits Wonderwall and Don't Look Back in Anger made them the biggest band of the 1990s, release the album's preview track The Shock Of The Lightning on September 29.

A 20-strong freelance film crew, working for one of London's leading music video production companies Factory Films, descended on Bourton.

The video was the vision of director Wiz, who has worked with the Kaiser Chiefs and Kasabian.

Oasis fan George Atherton, 18, son of Old New Inn landlords Julian and Vicki who own the model village behind their pub, said: "They had big 650 watt lights and lots of dry ice for a smoky effect and filmed from 11pm to 2.30pm.

"They set up four different shots. Liam walked down Bourton's main street, leaned with his back against St Lawrence Church, lay down behind Victoria Hall and walked over the bridge in front.

"It sounded like a typical Oasis song, with a bit of guitar and good lyrics."

Sister Melissa, 16, added: "Liam seemed like a nice guy, shook my hand and was quite polite.

"It's good news for the pub – Oasis are really big and the Model Village is just a little tourist attraction."

Adam Henson, who runs the rare breeds Cotswold Farm Park, said: "Having a grade A celebrity on the farm was really exciting.

"I introduced myself and said 'I'm the farmer here' and he said in his Mancunian accent 'Alright geezer'.

"My partner Charlie was his chauffeur.

"Having to walk through a stream up to his knees in mud Liam said 'I wish I hadn't written this music now'."

Location scout Tim Blair said: "A model village was part of Wiz's vision so we were drawn to Bourton. Everyone in Bourton looked after us very well."

Source: www.thisisgloucestershire.co.uk

It's also being reported on several forums that the premiere for the new Oasis single 'The Shock Of The Lightning' will be on August 25th on Channel 4 at 11:30pm (UK).

Liam Gallagher On Celebrity, Fatherhood And Hating Coldplay

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Liam Gallagher prefers being a stay-at-home dad these days, but he’s not lost his rock’n’roll swagger

Liam Gallagher says he and his brother “are two totally different people and the sooner people realise that the less we can go on about it”. Fair enough, but, having interviewed Noel several years ago, I can report the Gallagher boys have more in common than being in the same band and having the same mum and dad: extreme candour, for one thing. You asked Noel a question, you got a straight answer. If anything, his kid brother is even more straight-talking. Also (and I didn’t think this could be possible), Liam swears even more.

When I ask Liam what he thinks the public thinks of him, for instance, he says: “Loudmouth blagging gobshite from Manchester…and they’d be totally correct.” Or here he is on the subject of Wayne Rooney’s wedding to Coleen McLoughlin, which had taken place, and subsequently appeared in OK! magazine, not long before we met. “You’ve got this kid who’s fucking 19 [22] or whatever the fuck he is, who 20 minutes ago was playing for Everton, having a five million pound wedding! How do you fucking grasp that?”

“All right,” Liam continues, “he earned his fucking money, do what you want, but I couldn’t live with meself. That to me is just fucking ridiculous. There’s ways of doing it. In fact, what did mine cost? I got married at Marylebone station, er, Marylebone registry office. In and out, no fucking about, it cost £18. Reception over the road, it was nice, we drank champagne, but I’ve still got a lid on it.”

Would anything have induced him to sell the photographs? “Absolutely fucking nothing. It smells funny, it doesn’t sit right. I’d have to be well and truly fucking desperate. I’d have to be homeless. It’s like, haven’t you got e-fucking-nough, you little ****? I find that hard to fucking take. But that’s famous people for yer. When they’re not on the fucking telly they want to be in a fucking magazine and when they’re not in a magazine they want to be on a fucking bottle of water. It’s like, fucking chill the fuck out, you can’t do one fucking job right let alone fucking trying to do fucking five, you *****!”

It’s not just footballers “spending 100 grand on fucking Rolexes” that Liam objects to; he doesn’t have much time, any time, for celebrities per se. “I’m not one of them that walks around town like I’m the king of London. If I need to get milk I go out and get milk, but most of the time I’m indoors.” Noel, he says, “loves being famous. He adores it. I don’t think about it. I don’t do what famous people do. I don’t go to famous-y events. As long as I’m in a band and making music and playing gigs, I couldn’t give a fuck.”

Oasis are soon to release their seventh studio album. “We should have made more, we should be on our tenth or summat,” thinks Liam. “We don’t struggle for songs.” Besides Noel’s output, Liam now writes as well, contributing three (one good, one bad, one indifferent, in my opinion) of 11 tracks on the new album. What’s I’m Outta Time (the good one) about, I ask. “Ain’t got a clue, man. Didn’t sit down to write about being out of time, in time, on fucking time, it wrote itself.” He finds melodies easy, he says, but “I find it hard with words”.

He can be inarticulate in person, too, yet he is one of those people, like John Prescott, whose meaning is crystal clear despite verbal infelicity. Oasis’s publicists are nervous at letting Liam loose in a full-blown one-on-one. He is uncompromising. He doesn’t try to be your friend. His conversational style is combative. He gives an answer, then juts his chin up and stares you out with those unblinking blue eyes. Liam doesn’t trouble with the usual niceties of shifting product either. “Buy it [the new record] or don’t fucking buy it, I’m not mithered either way.”

We’re in a photographic studio in East London, sitting on facing sofas, the publicity team out of sight behind a wall but in earshot. The biggest surprise comes right at the outset. Liam, now 35, is off the fags, off the booze, off “the other stuff” (cocaine) as well. He’s been off them for nine days at any rate. And he has taken up jogging. “Not jogging, man, running. Get up early, live right on the heath [Hampstead], pair of trainers on and away I go. Beautiful.” (I’m going to edit out most of the expletives from here on, I’m sure you’ve got the general idea.)

He covers ten miles in an hour and a half. (That’s a shade over 6.5mph which, sorry Liam, is jogging, not running, speed. But well done anyway.) He comes home, walks his kids to school, has a bath, chills out, watches TV, does “whatever’s on the menu for the day”. When we met, that meant rehearsals for the new tour (now under way in Canada), hence his abstemiousness.

“Last week me voice was a bag o’shite, I had to have a word with meself. I want this to be a success, I want this to be great, I thought I’m going to have to tone it down a bit. Load of big fat lines, load of cigarettes, staying up late talking the same shit you talked the night before and the night before that, that’s not good for it [his voice]. It’s not a big deal. I’ve got willpower.” When his voice is good, he says, “no one can touch me”. (Many would agree.) “And when it’s bad, it’s a bit better than Pete Doherty’s.”

When he does drink, he says, he might “do a bottle of tequila in a couple of hours, no problem. The good stuff, Patrón.” Doesn’t that make him ill? “No, I feel all right. Red wine I can’t handle, just want to batter everyone. On tequila, I’m Bob Monkhouse. I’m a good drinker, but it’s dominos, isn’t it? Get pissed, smoke, do the other…”

I ask if he’s mellowed with age. “I can still go pound for pound with any clown at any time,” he says. “I’m not on about fighting, I can still have it drinking or whatever. But yeah, I’ve mellowed, but not in the sense of liking Radiohead or Coldplay. I don’t hate them. I don’t wish they had accidents. I think their fans are boring and ugly and they don’t look like they’re having a good time.” Liam doesn’t like any contemporary bands. “Not interested. I play the Beatles, the Stones, the Kinks, Neil Young, the Pistols. Maybe a bit of the Roses. Don’t like modern bands. Topman music, innit?”

These days, he says, “Family’s the most important thing. The kids are just the bollocks, I enjoy their company more than some idiot in a band or some actor. That’s how I’ve changed. Years ago I was in the pub.” Did he always want to be a dad? “No, not really. Just wanted to get off me tits and do music, but once you get your missus pregnant, you’ve got to step up to the plate.”

He has two boys, Lennon, almost 9, who lives with his mum, Liam’s ex-wife Patsy Kensit, and Gene, just 7, who lives with Liam and his second wife, Nicole Appleton of All Saints. The boys attend the same school. Private or state? “Private.” Was that an issue for him? “Not at all. Not a-fucking tall. They’ve got every right to be there as much as some banker’s son. When I pick me kid up, I feel amazing.” Liam left his own school, Catholic, all-boys, at 15. “Had no time for it. Got a job creosoting fences. Fifty quid a week.”

I mention that when I had interviewed Noel, he said he worried he wasn’t a good dad to Anais, then 2, his daughter by Meg Mathews. “He shouldn’t get hung up about it,” says Uncle Liam. “She’s only 8. If any bad days have gone down you make it up to her, don’t you?” As for his own paternal ability: “I’m the bollocks at being a dad. I’m top. We have a lot of fun.” Who’s stricter, him or Nicole? “Me. I’m the bad cop, she’s the good cop. I’m not Hitler, but they’re getting older, they make a mess, they tidy it up.” What if they swear? “I give ’em a medal! Nah, they don’t swear.”

He and his wife don’t go out much, he says. “Done all that, seen it, didn’t like it.” Did you get anything out of it? “Might have had a couple of lines out of it, couple of scraps, lot of earache.” If he and his wife do venture forth, they usually take Gene with them. “Go out at 6, out of there by 7.” Babysitters are not an issue. “Nicole’s mam is round the corner.” The Gallaghers do not employ a nanny. “Don’t need one.”

Liam’s own mother is still in Burnage, the suburb of Manchester where the Gallaghers grew up. He phones her every day. “I enjoy speaking to her.” He offered to buy her a new house. “She said, ‘What would I move for? You can get us a new gate.’ Noel bought her a little cottage in Ireland. She goes there a bit.” Despite his Irish roots, Liam considers himself typically English. “I hate that plastic Paddy thing. I’m into the English thing, music, football, clothes.”

The brothers’ estranged father lives in the house they grew up in. Liam was closer to his dad than were Noel or the eldest boy Paul (“He never beat me up, he beat the other two up”) but even so, he has no contact. “Not interested. Not angry, not sad, just nish.” Have his father’s shortcomings made him try harder as a dad himself? “Nah. I think you’ve got to do it right, not because he didn’t, but because they deserve it. I don’t dwell on it.”

Liam and Nicole have a second home in Henley-on-Thames. “Try to get there every weekend. Watch TV, play with the kids, sit in the garden, get in the pool, get out of the pool, go for a run, normal stuff.” How have the good people of Henley reacted to his arrival? “This lady walked past, she said, ‘You’re the coolest person I’ve seen in Henley since George Harrison.’ They’re pretty much the same as us really, they get a bad rap.” His house in Henley has its own bar, but he only stocks it with booze for special occasions.

I ask Liam if he still feels working class. He pauses. “I’m not one of them that harp on about it like Billy Bragg. I was born on a council estate, we had no money, me mam and dad split up. Now I live in a nice area, kids go to private school, few quid in me pocket, so what? I am what I am. I’m just me. I’m not a flash **** if that’s what you’re saying. And I’m not the other one, whatever that is.” Middle class? “Right. The kids are middle class though, I suppose.”

I say when I asked Steven Gerrard the same question last year, about class, he got shirty. Liam’s interest picks up. “Oh aye, Gerrard got shirty, did he? Did I get shirty then?” Not especially, I reply, and, dropping another name, tell him how Paul Weller described resisting his partner’s attempts to lure him to middle-class dinner parties. “Well, he should have a working-class party, shouldn’t he?” says Liam. “Invite all of them, they won’t come again, will they? ’Cos apparently we’re scum.”

Kids and clothing aside, a lot of our conversation is about what Liam doesn’t like or doesn’t do. He has a Mini and a Range Rover but doesn’t drive, has never learnt. He doesn’t read, apart from to his children. “It’s Grizzly Dad today, about a dad that turns into a bear. Don’t like Dr Seuss, too smart.” He hasn’t got the patience for other books, “and it’s a form of people telling you how it is, isn’t it? I like to make my own mind up.” He doesn’t want to make new friends. “Quite happy with what I’ve got.”

He tends to go to the same pub. “Read the paper, have a beer, someone says ‘Mind if I join you?’, I might shoot the breeze, depends what mood I’m in.” He doesn’t go back to Manchester much, has stopped going to Man City, “just get mithered. Noel goes. He likes signing autographs.” He doesn’t socialise with his brother. “All we need to do is make music together.”

He’s tried golf a few times – “Bit of exercise, spliff, whack fuck out of the balls, beer afterwards, it’s good” – but doesn’t sound as if he’ll be taking it up regularly. Still, if he hadn’t made it as a rock star, he’d have fancied a job “cutting grass on a golf course. Nice and chilled. Outdoors, not inside, walls and that.”

He isn’t interested in politics, although he’ll watch Prime Minister’s Questions. “I like the noises they make.” When his brother went to Downing Street to meet Blair in 1997, he isn’t sure whether he was invited or not, but “I wouldn’t have gone.” He’s lost interest in feuding with other bands. “I’m cool with Damon [Albarn]. That was only a bit of a laugh.” How about Robbie Williams? “Funny how he says a couple of things then moves to LA, know what I mean? Gives it all that and packs his bags.”

He insists he is “a passionate man”, however, and there are three other subjects he becomes passionate about. One is the paparazzi. “See me coming out of a pub with five million birds, charlied out me head, they’ve every right to take a picture. Get in my way when I’m going about me business, freak my kid out, then they get a slap.”

Another is being in Oasis. “We’ve no competition, none at all.” He knows many people, including all critics and his own brother, think the band’s form dipped after the first two electrifying albums, but he isn’t having it. “Just ’cos Noel and a couple of divvy journalists think that doesn’t mean it’s right. I think all our records are great.”

And the other subject is religion. “I don’t pray and I don’t go to church but I’m intrigued by it, I dig it. I’m into the idea that there could be a God and aliens and reincarnation and some geezer years ago turning water into wine. I don’t believe when you die, you die. All the beautiful people who have been and gone, Lennon, Hendrix, they’re somewhere else, man. Whether it’s here or whether it’s there, they’re doing some musical thingummyjig. They got to be somewhere else, haven’t they? I’d like it if everyone were all right at the end of it.”

And shortly after that, Liam, by now a little late to pick his son up, bounces to his feet. He’s taking his lad to the cinema, or, as he puts it, “I’m off to fucking ’ave it with Kung Fu Panda.” Does it feel strange, I ask, to do a big interview for The Times? “No,” he says, staring coolly back, “it’s about fucking time.”

The new Oasis single The Shock of the Lightning is released on September 29, and the album Dig Out Your Soul a week later on October 6, both on their Big Brother label .

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Ex-Oasis Man Launches New Band

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Zak Starkey make Penguins a family affair

Former Oasis drummer Zak Starkey launched his new band Penguins at an intimate gig for close friends - and invited NME.COM along to witness it.

The son of Ringo Starr, who is currently touring sticksman with The Who, has been writing songs with his girlfriend, Penguins lead singer Sharna Liguz, and impressed the gathered crowd road testing a set of harmonica infused pop-rockers.

Much like Oasis, Penguins is a family affair and Zak was joined on stage by his daughter Tatia, who also plays in London outfit Belakiss, on bass.

Playing to a packed out Saint Moritz in central London on one of the hottest days of the year, the band's debut show went sweatily but smoothly. apart from a few dud starts at the beginning of tracks.

The quartet even mixed up their own tracks, such as 'Jet Engines' and 'Space Invader', with some covers including 'Swamp Snake' by Seventies rockers The Sensational Alex Harvey Band.

Speaking to NME.COM after the show Starkey said, "It was great. It was packed, great vibe, audience participation, alcoholism, paranoia, laughs, tears, bullshit, snot and bad jokes - and that was just the front row!!

"The first night of many more good times to come, here's hoping. Penguins is about having a good time, and that's what we're doing."

There are no confirmed plans for any record releases as yet.

Source: www.nme.com

30 Things You Never Knew About Oasis

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Contrary to the sleevenotes, which claimed it was recorded at the Glasgow Cathouse in June 1994, 'Cigarettes & Alcohol' B-side "I Am the Walrus" was actually recorded at a soundcheck for a gig at the Gleneagles Hotel, Scotland on February 6, 1994, as part of a Sony Music seminar. Noel thought mentioning the fact that it was recorded at a corporate event would look bad.

29 more Oasis Factoids here at NME.com

Liam Gallagher Interview In The Times Magazine Tomorrow

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Married with kids, Liam Gallagher has rejected the wild life in favour of domestic bliss. He runs, he swims and he's been off the booze and fags for nine days at least. Enter his world in The Times Magazine tomorrow. Plus there's a free Rough Guide Mandarin phrasebook for every reader. Then Jemima Khan opens the family scrapbook and examines the outrageous events that shaped her personal history, in The Sunday Times Magazine.

The party life is behind him now. These days, Liam Gallagher is serious about his family, his music and his clothes. But that doesn't mean he's any less forthright in his opinions. The Oasis frontman gives Robert Crampton an earful of Wayne Rooney, the paparazzi and weekends in Henley. Read the full, asterisk-spattered interview in The Times Magazine tomorrow

Dig Out Your Soul Versions

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Found these today via various forums and via the official Oasis sites store.

Dig Out Your Soul (CD)
price: £12.99

Dig Out Your Soul: limited (CD/DVD)
CD/DVD in hardback book style package with 24 page booklet, suspended wallets at the front & back to hold cd & dvd, shrinkwrapped & stickered.
price: £50.99

Dig Out Your Soul (limited super deluxe version)
CD + DVD + Vinyl Limited Super Deluxe Version
Super Deluxe Version: Shoulder box to hold large quarter bound hardback book style package inc. 24 page book, 2 x cd, 1 x dvd, 4 x heavyweight LP, shrinkwrapped.
price: £100.00

Dig Out Your Soul (gatefold sleeve)
Double Vinyl LP
price: £19.99

Find these items here

Liam Gallagher's Tribute Song To John Lennon

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Liam Gallagher has written a tribute to his hero John Lennon on the new Oasis album.

And even brother Noel admits it’s brilliant.

I’m Outta Time is a beautiful ode to the late, great musician. It features a segment of Lennon talking in an old interview.

Liam isn’t exactly known as the sensitive type. He makes sure of that.

But he has now written two top songs for the greatest loves of his life — Lennon and wife Nicole.

Fans were stunned by the snarling frontman’s tender touch in his track for his missus, Songbird, which went to No3 in 2003.

Moody new ballad I’m Outta Time continues down that gentler path.

It will appear on the band’s seventh studio album, Dig Out Your Soul, out on October 6.

The track is his best yet and is a top candidate for a single.

Lennon is Liam’s second favourite subject — after himself. For many years The Beatles were the only thing he would put on his stereo.

Liam has even claimed he got into music after an out-of-body experience featuring the great man. And he still thinks he is being haunted by his ghost.

A source revealed: “Liam has so much passion for the subject.

“He’s obsessed. That’s why the song is so brilliant and poignant.”

Liam and Noel have never been the sort to shower each other with praise. But Noel has admitted his little brother is turning into a real songwriting force.

He told the NME: “He’s really good. The thing about Liam is you haven’t heard the half of it.

“If he could even be bothered to finish some of the songs he started.

“Honestly, they’re amazing. But he suffers the curse of the Gallaghers. It’s like: ‘F*****g hell, can’t finish it.’

“I’ve got demos of his at home with about 40 tunes which, if he could be bothered, would be amazing.”

I’m hearing good things about all three of the Liam-penned tracks on the upcoming album.

He’s come a long way from Little James.

Source: www.thesun.co.uk

Liam Gallagher 'Vanity Fair' Cover Up For Award

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Classic shot included in 'best magazine cover' shortlist

The issue of Vanity Fair from 1997 – featuring Liam Gallagher and Patsy Kensit (pictured) – has been nominated to be crowned the best magazine cover of all time.

The Great Cover Debate awards are a part of Magazine Week and celebrate the diversity of the UK magazine industry. Magazine editors have made nominations for their favourite cover of all time and a judging panel of industry experts have whittled these entries down to a shortlist.

Cast your vote by clicking here.

Jay-Z Raps About Oasis' Noel Gallagher Glastonbury Spat

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BLUEPRINT 3 from kwest on Vimeo.

Jay-Z has rapped about Oasis' Noel Gallagher live on stage - dissing the guitarist and mocking his hit, 'Wonderwall'.

The rapper delivered the lines during a show at New York's Madison Square Garden last night (August 6).

During the show Jay-Z rapped: "That bloke from Oasis said I couldn't play guitar/Somebody should have told him I'm a fuckin' rock star".

He then reprised a line from Oasis' 1995 hit 'Wonderwall', rapping, "Today is gonna be the day that I'm gonna throw it back to you".

A public spat has blown up between the pair since Noel Gallagher said Jay-Z was \"wrong\" for Glastonbury earlier this year. Jay-Z then opened his headline slot on June 28 this year with a cover of 'Wonderwall'.

However speaking in this week's issue of NME, out now, Gallagher played down any feud.

"I wasn't saying I was better than Jay-Z as a person or rock was greater than hip-hop," he said. "I said what I said, and it was wrong, or it was taken wrong, and now all this [media furore]."

Gallagher also claimed that Jay-Z liked 'Wonderwall', despite his mock version. "Jay-Z said recently 'Wonderwall' is always the last song of the night at his restaurant in New York," he said. "I'll have a beer with him one day and it will be fine."

To read the full interview with Noel Gallagher get the new issue of NME, on sale now.

Source: www.nme.com

Noel Gallagher: I Considered Making Oasis Tour Free

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Oasis rocker Noel Gallagher says he was toying with the idea of making their world tour free.

He explained to NME: "They're free to get in, but you've got to pay 75 quid to get out. That'd be great at Wembley, wouldn't it? I didn't spend a year in a recording studio to go 'Yeah, you can f****** have it.'"

Noel, who tells the mag that Grease star Kenickie pulled a knife on him in LA, also said he didn't want to keep going on about his rumoured criticisms of Jay Z before Glastonbury.

He said: "I never dissed him. There's no point in going on about it, because you end up sounding like Heather Mills."

Source: www.dailyrecord.co.uk

Noel Gallagher: I Didn't Diss Jay-Z

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Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher says his comments about Jay-Z performing at this year's Glastonbury festival were taken the wrong way.

The singer/songwriter created a stir in the lead up to the famous festival when he criticised Jay-Z appearing at the festival as its headline act.

At the time Noel, the older of the two brothers Gallagher, said: "I'm sorry, Jay-Z? No chance.

"Glastonbury has a tradition of guitar music...I'm not having hip-hop at Glastonbury. It's wrong."

But in this month's NME, the rocker - in a reference to John Lennon's explanation for comments relating to The Beatles being more popular than Jesus Christ - says: "I wasn't saying I was better than Jay-Z as a person or rock was greater than hip-hop as a thing or whatever it is.

"I said what I said and it was wrong, or it was taken as wrong, and now all this."

He then added: "My single went back in the charts, Jay-Z's profile went through the roof. Everyone's a winner.

"He knows that I was misrepresented, as I guess he was, so let's move on."

Noel also admitted that we watched Jay-Z's Glastonbury performance of Oasis' Wonderwall.

He said: "For my own part I can sit here and say I never dissed that guy. I never would.

"But there's no point in going on about it, because you end up sounding like Heather Mills: 'I said this! I meant that!'"

Mr Gallagher added that he was sure he would "have a beer" with Jay-Z at some point and that "it'll all be fine".

Oasis headlined the Pyramid Stage at the festival in 1995 and 2004, with tickets selling out on both occasions.

Source: www.sky.com

Watch Out For The Curse Of Oasis

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If the Gallaghers ever ask you to be on the cover of one of their records, think twice - you could end up being struck by the curse of Oasis.

Weston-super-Mare's Grand Pier is just the latest to have fallen foul of the dreaded hoodoo.

The 104-year-old iconic landmark that appeared on the Oasis cover of their 1995 single burned down last month. Days later, infamous London record shop Sister Ray went into administration - 13 years after appearing on the front of (What's the Story) Morning Glory?

Football legend George Best was pictured on the band's debut album Definitely Maybe in 1994. The Manchester United ace later died of liver failure. And New York's Twin Towers featured on Standing on the Shoulder of Giants, released in 2000 - 18 months before they were destroyed by terrorists.

A source close to Oasis said: "It is a bit of a coincidence."

Luckily, no building or person can be struck by the curse over the band's new album Dig Out Your Soul - the cover is a psychedelic collage.

Source: www.mirror.co.uk

Manc Singer Is Liam Galloper

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Liam Gallagher even jogs like a Rock ’N’ Roll Star – with a bit of swagger and a lot of gobbing.

The snarling Oasis frontman was snapped going for an early morning lung-burner near his north London gaff.

He’s trying to get match fit for the forthcoming world tour.

Word reaches me that he has even managed to knock the fags on the head so his pipes are in top form for the marathon tour.

A wise move when you consider he might have to roar out the band’s classics twice a week for the next 18 months.

He’s no Haile Gebreselassie but if he carries on like this it won’t be soul he’ll be digging out, it’ll be his 32in Levi jeans from 1995.

Source: www.thesun.co.uk

Oasis Tour Dates TBA August 19th

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Radio One DJ Zane Lowe said on his show tonight, that Noel Gallagher will be joining him in the studio on August 19th.

To talk about the new album 'Dig Out Your Soul' and that he will be announcing the tour dates on his show for the Oasis tour.

Source: Radio 1:thanks to shakermaker

More On The New Oasis Album

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A track by track description from this week's NME.

01: Bag It Up (Noel-written) - Mid-paced stomp featuring the repeated line "Everything I believe in/Is telling me that I want more."

02: The Turning (Noel written) - Floats along on a drum beat similar to The Zombies 'Time Of The Season.'

03: Waiting for the Rapture (Noel-sung) - Almost White Stripes heavy. Lyric ("revolution in the head")

04: Shock of the Lightning - like a massively improved version of It's Getting Better Man. Chorus (Love is a litany/a magical mystery)

05: I'm Outta Time - Beautiful, beautiful Liam balled (complete with Lennon sample) that pips Songbird has his finest songwriting hour.

06: Get Of Your High Horse Lady (Noel-written) - Brief Wild Honey Pie-esque Noel curio.

07: Falling Down - Lyrics: (I tried to talk to God/But to no avail.)

08: To Be Where There’s Life (Gem-written) - Where the new found love of 'The Groove' is most apparent.

09: Ain't Got Nothing - Indeed the track we all heard a few months back. Says it features a. all-new chorus, but the lyrics it prints are ones in the early version.

10: The Nature Of Reality (Andy-written) - Strung out psychedelia.

11: Soldier On - (Liam-written) - Final marching band mantra.

Thanks to Mr Monobrow

Noel also tells a story about meeting and slagging off the bassist from Maroon 5 and how he ended up at his house, the Marylin Manson story and then spends 3 quarters of a page defending himself over Jay Z gate...

The NME watched their rehearsal where they did Supersonic, The Importance Of Being IdleI and The Shock Of The Lightning.

Noel says they were contemplating allowing free entry into their gigs for the whole tour, but then you'd have to pay £75 to get out of the gig.

Read the full interview in this week's magazine.

Noel Gallagher: Guardian Spotty Herberts Piss Me Off

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After backing down from his Jay-Z dissing, Noel Gallagher has found a new name for his pain - and it's Guardian and Observer journalists whose parents 'voted for Thatcher'

I'm not having the Guardian in my newsagents. No way. It's wrong."

Ok, so they're not exactly the words that tumbled out of the Oasis man's mouth in today's interview with NME, but he's undoubtedly got a new target to mouth off about. And this time it's, er, us lot at the Guardian and Observer.

Here's what Noel did say, when asked about the Jay-Z debacle: "If people in the fucking Observer and the Guardian wanna get on their high horse about it, there's not a great deal I can do."

He then realises that he's overstepped the mark and backtracks with a nervous apology. Only joking. "It really pisses me off," he continues, "all these spotty herberts whose mams and dads voted for Margaret Thatcher all those years are now sitting on some moral fucking high chair."

Ouch! A quick email circular around the Guardian/Observer music desks provoked a (mild-mannered) storm of protest.

"My parents were fully active members of the Labour party, and I had to go out bloody canvassing with my dad, but if Noel Gallagher wants to get on his high horse about it, there's not a great deal I can do about it," said the associate editor of the Observer Music Monthly.

"My family come from Wales, so the chance of them voting for Thatcher is roughly the same as a cat in hell," came the response from a Guardian subeditor.

"Um, I've always had pretty clear skin," was my contribution. Take that, Noel!

Actually, it's not the only time I've encountered the wrath of the Gallaghers. The first time I met them, Noel told Radio 1's Zane Lowe that he'd been tricked into making a series of outrageous comments because NME had sent "an edgy kid" to interview him. The second interview, meanwhile, ended with Liam staring at me for a good full minute before deciding "You're a fookin' weirdo you are ..." He then went on to list a series of music videos he'd seen me appear in, which was a surreal experience to say the least.

Now, we could go on about Noel's rather Thatcherite ideas here ("If you want [our album] for nowt, you can have it - but you're paying £70 to come and see us live," froths the multi-millionaire at one point).

But really, if he's prepared to back down on his Jay-Z dissing (and let's face it, that's what he's doing here, what with referencing the time he went to see the Def Jam tour in the 90s), we'd like to call a truce, too. After all, phrases such as "moral high-chair" would instantly earn Gallagher a job on these desks. And if we could see a bit more of that, and a little less "True perfection has to be imperfect/I know that that sounds foolish but it's true" on the next Oasis record, the world would be a better place.

Source: www.guardian.co.uk
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