New Oasis Book Out In Sept.'08

Oasis - A Year On The Road (Sept., 2008, $24.95) An evocative photo book of Oasis during their first, traumatic and wildly exciting year together.
Photographer Paul Slattery captured them on film every inch of the way, in the UK, on their first tours of the US & Japan, on video shoots, and on radio and TV appearances.
For more information click here.
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Liam Gallagher On 'Rockin'on' Japanese Magazine Cover

Liam Gallagher is on the front of 'Rockin'on' magazine in Japan this month, if anyone has any scans or pictures of the magazine please let me know.
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Chris Sharrock - The New Oasis Drummer

Born on the Wirral in 1964, Chris Sharrock cut his percussive teeth with '80s Scouse combo The Icicle Works, before beating the skins for The La's,World Party and, for the last 12 years Robbie Williams's backing band. Then Noel called...again.
This is the second time you've been offered the job of drummer in Oasis, isn't it? Noel says you were the original choice in 2004 before Zak Starkey joined...
Yeah. Noel phoned me four years ago and said "What do you think [about joining Oasis]?" and I was like "Yeah, interested, ring us back on Friday." And I waited four years for him to phone me back, basically. This time he phoned up and I was in bed watching Bargain Hunt. I hadn't done anything for 15 months. It was a bit of an uneventful time, so it was great to get a call.
Have you always been an Oasis fan?
Oh yeah. I've loved Oasis since they kicked off. I'm a fan, course. They're f***ing great, aren't they? Best rock'n'roll band in the world in my opinion.
Talk us through your drumming history...
The Icicle Works were my first real band. Everyone talks about me being in The La's but I was only there for about eight months. I left after the Mike Hedges session [the original 1990 version of the band's sole album] was scrapped and I ended up in the practice room on the Monday, just me playing drums and Lee [Mavers] reading a book on African drumming. I just didn't turn up the next day. I went straight from that to World Party. That was weird,cos it was like going from early Beatles with The La's to the White Album. And now I've joined the mid-period Beatles.
Have Liam or Noel ever taken the piss because you'd played with Robbie Williams for 12 years?
No! It's weird, no one's mentioned it. No one's taken the piss. Yet.
As a drummer you're quite a showman, throwing the sticks around...
Well I won't be doing any of that. When you've got Liam standing in front of you, it doesn't seem appropriate. I'm just clinging onto the sticks for dear life at the moment, never mind tossing them around. I'm just trying to get the drums as strong as possible. All 20 songs in the set are classics.
How will you cope if there are any rucks?
[Laughs] I dunno. I'll probably go and polish me drums or something.
Source: Q Magazine
This months edition has 50 pages of interviews, photos with the band.
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Oasis Gig Edmonton Setlist

01.- Rock & Roll Star
02.- Lyla
03.- The Shock Of The Lightning
04.- Cigarettes & Alcohol
05.- The Meaning Of Soul
06.- To Be Where Theres Life
07.- The Masterplan
08.- Songbird
09.- Slide Away
10.- Morning Glory
11.- Ain't Got Nothin
12.- The Importance Of Being Idle
13.- Wonderwall
14.- Supersonic
15.- Don't Look Back In Anger
16.- Falling Down
17.- Champagne Supernova
18.- I Am The Walrus
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Noel Gallagher On The Russell Brand Show Again

There was a short phone call with Noel in Calgary towards the end of last night's show. He was in the dressing room with the rest of the band, the BBC suddenly lost the line and he disappeared.
The "technical" problem might have been deliberate, because Noel was just about to hand the phone to Liam and I suspect Russell's producer panicked about Liam's potential use of language on what was a live to air show.
This is how the conversation went, until the "technical" problem.
Russell Brand: Hello Noel
Noel Gallagher: Alright mate? How are you doing?
Russell Brand: We are all OK, we missed you a bit you alright, were are you Seattle?
Noel Gallagher: No I'm in, hang on a minute were are we?....Calgary.
Russell Brand: You clique, you don't even know were you are? Your a rock cliche it's Wednesday it must be Calgary or Saturday whatever this day is actually called.
Noel Gallagher: I'm in Calgary in Canada, which is officially in the middle of nowhere.
Russell Brand: Do you like? it are you happy?
Noel Gallagher: Not really it's a bit creepy to be honest.
Russell Brand: Why what have you seen? What's happened to you mate?
Noel Gallagher: Nothing it's just a bit like that place in The Shining, you know what I mean?
Russell Brand: You want to turn your telly off or something mate, there something on in the background. It ain't half noarsing up our radio show, more then usual when you come on.
Noel Gallagher: Something in the background, that's them in the dressing room with the rest of the guys.
Russell Brand: From the band Oasis you are in, the rest of the guys.
Noel Gallagher: That's right, Shall I go outside? Is that any better for you?
Russell Brand: We are not letting Liam on this radio show, he'll ruin it
Matt Morgan: Go on.
Russell Brand: No.
Matt Morgan: Pass it to Liam.
Noel Gallagher: Liam , Liam wears a Geordie (a funny noise then silence.)
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Oasis Let Music Do The Talking
Renowned bad boys deliver rock-solid show
Oasis performed a sold-out show Saturday at Pengrowth Saddledome.
Attendance 12,000.
Belligerent brats.
There's a description that immediately comes to mind when we think of a concert featuring sneering Brit-pop kings Oasis and cranky folk-rocker Ryan Adams in the opening slot.
Approaching such rock delinquents there's always a certain air of both apprehension and expectation.
Will they act like creeps? And, if they don't, if they just show up, behave and play, without storming off halfway through, might we be just a bit let down?
Saturday's Oasis show at the 'Dome went down free of any stormy incidents at press time but there wasn't much about it that disappointed.
That has little to do with any bad-boy expectations either. It's down to the quality of the tunes, and Oasis rolled out plenty of those.
The Brits kicked off their set with the brash bluster of Rock & Roll Star, singer Liam Gallagher, 35, taking his trademark fighting stance at the mic.
Liam was reportedly struggling with throat problems Saturday night and that seemed to be the case. He definitely ducked the high notes in a few instances, as on Lyla and the raucous Cigarettes & Alcohol.
Still, his delivery maintained its Lennon-cum-Rotten snarl and that's the important thing with this kid.
OK, maybe attitude is an important ingredient in an Oasis gig.
Either way, there's an odd sweetness to Liam's dirty-faced approach and this proved especially true on the lovely Songbird.
As for the rest of the group, led by the band's guitarist Noel Gallagher, 41, they played with muscle and energy that couldn't be denied.
Storming versions of Slide Away and Morning Glory drove the crowd into a state of pure joy, shouting along with every word.
The show lost its momentum in a few instances as Oasis played new tunes off their yet-to-be-released Dig Out Your Soul disc, as well as songs from albums not as universally favoured as their first couple. But for the most part, those were strongly sold.
All had been forgiven at press time as the crowd responded with glee to the vicious Supersonic and two of the most rallying rock ballads of the '90s, Wonderwall and Don't Look Back In Anger, on which a very capable Noel took the lead.
As for Ryan Adams, his set was not to be missed.
Adams' band The Cardinals, are certainly meant to be the Crazy Horse to his Neil Young with their scrappy folk-rock approach. That ragged glory infused tunes like Off Broadway, Goodnight Rose and This Is It, and the band's approach was largely appreciated.
As for his notoriously ugly demeanour, well, Adams grumbled half-heartedly in between songs for the most part, but he did show a bit of enthusiasm when he dedicated a new number to a special someone for whom he had a message. "I want to suck your face off," he said. "You make me feel like I'm riding on an electric unicorn."
Yep, he's an odd cat.
Actually, Adams was not the night's only warm-up act.
Kicking off the evening was California folk singer Matt Costa, a promising songwriter with a real knack for sweet pop hooks and a wry turn of phrase who made an excellent impression during his short set.
Source: www.canada.com
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New Oasis Tour Programme
Here is a few photographs I found on ebay, of the new Oasis Tour Programme.
Source:

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Pictures Of Oasis In Edmonton


The first pictures from visitors to the site have started arriving in my inbox, from last night's Oasis show in Edmonton, Canada.
Thanks to the people who have sent in pictures so far, and I hope it continues for the full tour.
I will add all the pictures to the Fan Photo Archive here, as and when I get them.
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Oasis Talk About The New Album 'Dig Out Your Soul'
The Meaning of Soul
Your complete guide to the new Oasis album, by the band themselves.
BAG IT UP
Driving psychedelic opener. Inspired by the track Baron Saturday, from The Pretty Things' 1968 concept album SF Sorrow.
Noel Gallagher: "Slow pounding acid rock, The Pretty Things vs The Pink Floyd on glue".
Andy Bell: "One of the first three tracks that Noel recorded at Gem's place (Archer's home studio) they were done in a very quiet, very basic way and they became the blueprint".
THE TURNING
Dreamy piano lead-verses explode into euphoric choruses featuring Liam inciting the listener to 'shake, your reptile baby'.
Noel Gallagher: "The Roses doing The Stooges with a nod to The World Of Twist. RIP Tony O".
Gem: "Liam's vocal is mega, strong but he's not caning it".
WAITING FOR THE RAPTURE
Riff-heavy number featuring Noel's most passionate vocal yet as he exhorts an unknown female to 'get me off the merry-go-round'
Noel Gallagher: "A love song inspired by the meeting of an Angel in Ibiza"
Andy Bell: "I think its about Sara, Noel can put things in a down-to-earth way that goes right to the core".
THE SHOCK OF THE LIGHTNING
Propulsive rocker with addictive 'Come in, come out' refrain that wouldn't have sounded out of place on Definitely Maybe.
Gem Archer: "Noel literally just played it the night before [it was recorded]. Did a little one-man-band job, played the drums, the bass, the guitar, sung it and came back up the stairs".
I'M OUTTA TIME
Beatles-esque Liam ballad with vulnerable lyric (''If I'm to fall/ Would you be there to applaud?''). Samples John Lennon from a radio interview done two days before his death.
Noel Gallagher: "Deceptively brilliant, one for the ladies".
Gem Archer: "It's really hearfelt, theres a melancholy there and that's whats Liam's showing".
(GET OFF YOUR) HIGH HORSE Lady
Bluesey acoustic stomp supported by handclaps and slammed drawers. Distorted vocal effects initially disguises identity of singer (it's Noel).
Noel Gallagher: "The oldest song on the album, originally demoed for Heathen Chemistry. Wouldn't have made the album, but the bass is so heavy, it forced its way onto the final cut".
FALLING DOWN
Tumbling acid soaked drone-pop, akin to a less electronic take on Setting Sun, Noel's 1996 excursion with The Chemical Brothers.
Noel Gallagher: "Three chords, one note Krautpop! The kind of song I've wanted to write for years".
TO BE WHERE THERE'S LIFE
Hypnotic Gem Archer song with rubbery bassline and a promise to lead the listener out into the big wide world.
Gem Archer: "It was just a groove, a bassline and Noel was like 'that's the one, write some words for it'. It's a stream of consciousness . And there's no guitars on it which is another thing I like as well".
AIN'T GOT NOTHIN'
A trippy take on late 60's Who, written by Liam following Liam's infamous hotel bar brawl in Munich in 2002.
Noel Gallagher: "Heavy metal Motown. Bang"!
Gem Archer: "Liam wanted it to sound like The Who with Ginger Baker on drums, playing while a fight was happening".
THE NATURE OF REALITY
Lysergic Andy Bell rocker, featuring the lyric ''The nature of reality/ Is pure subjective fantasy''
Andy Bell: "It was written at an odd time in my life, when my marriage had run its course. I taught Noel the guitar parts and then let him roll with it. Gem played bass on it. I don't play on it at all. I wanted to make sure that it sounded right in the control room where it was being played.
SOLDIER ON
Herbal-scented, trancey closer, discovered by The Coral on a hard drive at Oasis's old studio, Wheeler's End. None of the band could remember it until Andy Bell found it on his iPod.
Gem Archer: "The Coral said to Noel 'that's a top tune' so Noel said 'What's this?' and I said I haven't got a clue. It was an old Liam song I demoed with him around 2004 or 2005 and couldn't remember".
Noel Gallagher: "A metaphot for ones-day-to-day existence, the legendary General Dred [Noel's reggae style alter ego]floats out some melodica in the outro".
Source: Q Magazine thanks to risingsign
The current issue of Q is an Oasis special, with a 50 page special on the band.
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Liam Gallagher's Mouth Roars Once More

He's still crazy after all these years. Older, at 35, and perhaps a little wiser, Oasis' Liam Gallagher remains very much the uppity Manchester lad with a tree-sized chip on his shoulder.
It has been exactly 14 years since Oasis barged onto the charts with its smash debut, Definitely Maybe, on Aug. 30, 1994, leading the charge for the genre known as Britpop. Oasis returned in 1996 with (What's the Story) Morning Glory? Those first two albums took the top two spots in a recent poll by Q Magazine and HMV to determine the top 50 British albums of all time (with two other Oasis albums landing in the top 25). The band has sold more than 50 million albums over the course of its career.
On Oct. 6, Oasis will release its seventh studio album, Dig Out Your Soul, leading one to wonder if the group has finally turned the page on the media-saturated roller-coaster ride of fights, expletives, drink and drug-fuelled tirades that have made it one of the most notorious British bands of the last two decades.
And after a recent conversation with singer Liam Gallagher, half of the band's battling brothers alongside songwriter Noel, it seems loudmouth Liam is still living up to his nickname. This should whet your appetite for tonight's Saddledome gig:
- On his ego: "People think we're loudmouths. We probably are loudmouths. A lot of Mancunians are very self-confident."
- On songwriting: "I don't know what any of my songs are about. I don't sit down to write about anything. They're about whatever you want. I don't pick subjects, I just start."
- On his relationship with brother Noel: "We do hang out, we're just not buddy-buddies. We're not little (naughty word removed) nerds. We're men. We don't go to the pictures. We'll have a beer, but we don't sit together eating popcorn.
"There are things I don't like about him, and things he doesn't like about me. He wants to be me. I don't want to be him."
- On his new (somewhat) clean living lifestyle: "I was just bored of drinking and going to pubs and clubs. I'd rather hang with the kids and the missus."
- On new bands: "No one's writing big songs, classics. It's fast-food music. I'm glad the Verve got back together. And Kasabian is all right. Otherwise I'm not interested."
- On Oasis' future: "I love being in this band. There are loads of people in bands, and loads who don't love it. I love it.
"If the Stones and Neil Young are still out doing it, I don't see why we shouldn't."
Source: www.canada.com
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Liam Gallagher Hates Wonderwall

Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher confesses he feels sick every time he sings the band's smash hit Wonderwall.
The rocker is bored of the hit and believes the band's new album, Dig Out Your Soul, offers better tracks.
He says, "At least there's no Wonderwall on there.
"I can't f**king stand that f**king song! Every time I have to sing it I want to gag. Problem is, it was a big, big tune for us."
The singer also dislikes being known as "Mr Wonderwall" in the U.S.
He adds, "You just want to chin (punch) someone."
Dig Out Your Soul is released next month (Sep08)
Source: www.contactmusic.com
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Oasis On Top Form In Edmonton

For years, Edmontonians and other denizens of the various hinterlands have watched and listened to the exploits of a little band called Oasis, whose behaviour often got more attention than their overproduced recordings.
Oh, how we laughed at the hooliganism, the public drunkenness, the arrests, the fights, the endless bad-mouthing of fellow musicians (which continues to this day, while other antics have been toned down). And now, at least a decade after "Britpop" was officially declared dead, they finally deign to come to our little town? Guys, where were you when it mattered?
This is the uncharitable view of the "greatest band in the world" (declared by the enthusiastic and fickle British music press). But now that we've seen them live - in front of a sold-out crowd at Rexall Place last night - my new attitude is definitely "better late than never."
For their first Edmonton appearance, the lads delivered a fantastic rock 'n' roll show for 11,400 fans. I've always maintained that the vast majority of rock stars are not famous by accident, not because of some fluke of nature, not because they staged some corporate con game on a gullible public. No, they're famous because they're great - and in every respect, Oasis lived up to their reputation. The musical part, at least. By press time, there were no fights, cursing fits or storming off the stage. It was a businesslike concert from a band known for screwing up their business. Last night, Oasis was as tight as a rock band can get.
Just so we knew who we were dealing with, they opened with an old one, Rock 'n' Roll Star. The crowd rose to their feet as one and stayed there, a few fans near the front draped in the Union Jack. Evidently saving the big hits like Wonderwall for later, the bulk of the first part of the show was newer material, with a lot from the upcoming album, Dig Out Your Soul, songs few were familiar with. Did this matter? It did not. The stuff stands up just fine next to "classic" Oasis.
The band is a lot of fun to watch, too, never mind the expected battery of state-of-the-art video screens and special effects.
Singer Liam Gallagher was a mesmerizing presence, singing his parts with passion, then striking some cool pose and remaining there, looking stalwart, tamborine clutched in his hand, as the band rocked behind him.
He didn't say much, and when he did, it's anyone's guess what it was. No subtitles were available. Brother Noel - who wondered aloud if everyone in Edmonton was at this show (no, a few of us had to stay home and tend the elk) - also got his time in the spotlight, his higher voice perfect for The Masterplan, a wonderful power ballad if there ever was one.
The show proceeded more or less at full throttle, a little touch of the Beatles here, a bit of T-Rex there, a smattering of Rolling Stones almost everywhere, the Oasis sound a hodge-podge of every British rock band that mattered. It works a lot better live than it does on record.
Let's hope it doesn't take another 13 years for these guys to make it back here -- but at least by then we'll be ready for "Britpop nostalgia."
Now what better act to open for the bad boys of British rock than the bad boy of American alt-country - Ryan Adams?
It was a perfect fit. Adams and his Cardinals specialize in the same sort of jammy, jangly tunes where every available space is stuffed with riffs. Call it the "wonderwall" of sound, if you want. The only thing that identified the band as country - a genre Adams is on record for hating - was a pedal steel in the band, just another riffing source for a thick, three-guitar sound.
The singer - a polite and humble fellow not at all like he's depicted in interviews - led his guys through a succession of solid, satisfying grooves, fortified with plenty of sweet back-up vocals and generous helpings of noise. Subject matter tended to be introspective - with lines like "all my life I've longed for forgiveness" or "down in a hole feeling so small" or "trying to find a peaceful song to sing when everything goes wrong" in a song that ironically wasn't peaceful at all. Excellent stuff.
Well, it ain't country. I'm not even sure it was alt-country. At least Adams doesn't have to worry about hating himself.
---
SOUNDCHECK
MAIN EVENT
Oasis
IN THE SEATS
11,400 in Rexall
NOTE PERFECT
A decade after Britpop is declared dead, it lives again in Edmonton
Sun Rating: 5 out of 5
Source: www.edmontonsun.com
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Oasis Gig Edmonton Setlist
01.- Rock & Roll Star
02.- Lyla
03.- The Shock Of The Lightning
04.- Cigarettes & Alcohol
05.- The Meaning Of Soul
06.- To Be Where Theres Life
07.- The Masterplan
08.- Songbird
09.- Slide Away
10.- Morning Glory
11.- Ain't Got Nothin
12.- The Importance Of Being Idle
13.- Wonderwall
14.- Supersonic
15.- Don't Look Back In Anger
16.- Falling Down
17.- Champagne Supernova
18.- I Am The Walrus
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On This Day In Oasis History...

Definitely Maybe is the debut album by English band Oasis, released on August 30th 1994. It was an immediate commercial and critical success in the UK, having followed on the heels of singles "Supersonic", "Shakermaker" and particularly the popular "Live Forever".
Definitely Maybe went straight to number one and 7x platinum in the UK Album charts on initial release. It was the fastest selling debut album of all time in the UK when released. Definitely Maybe marked the beginning of Oasis' success in America, selling over 1 million copies there, although only reaching #58 on the Billboard 200. The album went on to sell over 7.5 million copies worldwide.
In 1997 Definitely Maybe was named the 14th greatest album of all time in a 'Music of the Millennium' poll conducted by HMV, Channel 4, The Guardian and Classic FM. In 2005 Channel 4's '100 Greatest Albums' countdown placed the album at number 6. In 2006 NME placed the album third in a list of the greatest British albums ever, behind The Stone Roses and The Queen Is Dead. In a recent British poll, run by NME and the book of British Hit Singles and Albums, Definitely Maybe was voted the best album of all time with The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band finishing second and Revolver third. Q magazine readers placed it at five on their greatest albums of all time list in 2006 and in that same year NME hailed it as the greatest album of all time. It is frequently referred to as the greatest debut album of all time.
Album History
In 1994, Oasis were seen as a distant echo of the moribund 'Madchester' scene which had exploded in the early 1990s. Unlike other Madchester bands who indulged in experiments with funk, dance or hip-hop, Oasis presented themselves as a relatively straightforward rock and roll band. Along with bands like Blur and The Verve they seemed to encapsulate a new wave, one which did not yet have a name. By the end of the year the media coined the term Britpop, of which Definitely Maybe retrospectively became one of the pivotal albums.
Many of the songs had originally appeared on Oasis' "Live Demonstration" demo recorded in Liverpool the year before with Chris and Tony Griffiths of The Real People. The main recording sessions took longer than expected, with the bulk of the album having to be recorded three different times with Mark Coyle producing, before Owen Morris came up with a mix that everyone was satisfied with. The album cost nearly £85,000 to produce, a huge amount of money for a debut album at the time.
The album title, according to Noel Gallagher, comes from a poster he saw in a pub, although he cannot remember what the poster was advertising.
Track Listing
All tracks written by Noel Gallagher.
01: "Rock 'n' Roll Star" – 5:22
02: "Shakermaker" – 5:08
03: "Live Forever" – 4:36
04: "Up in the Sky" – 4:28
05: "Columbia" – 6:17
06: "Sad Song" (extra track on the UK LP version, and the original Japanese version of the album) – 4:27
07: "Supersonic" – 4:43
08: "Bring It on Down" – 4:17
09: "Cigarettes & Alcohol" – 4:49
"Digsy's Dinner" – 2:32
This was misspelt as "Digsy's Diner" upon its North American release.
10: "Slide Away" – 6:32
11: "Married with Children" – 3:11
Singles
"Supersonic"
Released: 11 April 1994
Writer: Noel Gallagher
Producers: Oasis & Mark Coyle
Video Director: Mark Szaszy (UK) / Nick Egan (US)
Chart positions: # 31 (UK)
"Shakermaker"
Released: 13 June 1994
Writer: Noel Gallagher
Producers: Oasis, Mark Coyle & Owen Morris
Video Director: Nick Egan
Chart positions: # 11 (UK)
"Live Forever"
Released: 8 August 1994
Writer: Noel Gallagher
Producers: Oasis, Mark Coyle & Owen Morris
Video Directors: Carlos Grasso (UK) / Nick Egan (US)
Chart positions: # 10 (UK) # 2 (US Modern Rock)
"Cigarettes & Alcohol"
Released: 10 October 1994
Writer: Noel Gallagher
Producers: Oasis, Mark Coyle & Owen Morris
Video Director: Mark Szaszy
Chart positions: # 7 (UK)
Personnel
Liam Gallagher – vocals
Noel Gallagher – lead guitar, vocals
Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs – rhythm guitar
Paul McGuigan – bass guitar
Tony McCarroll – drums
Additional Personnel
Anthony Griffiths – vocals
David Batchelor – producer
Mark Coyle – producer, engineer, mixing
Anjali Dutt – engineer
Owen Morris – producer, mastering, mixing, production concept
Roy Spong – engineer
Dave Scott – engineer
Brian Cannon – art direction, design, concept, cover design
Michael Spencer Jones – photography
Source: Wikipedia
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Cast Your Votes For Us At The BT Music Awards

Voting is well under way at the annual BT Digital Music Awards 2008
The BT Digital Music Awards 2008 will take place on 1st October at the Roundhouse in London.
The People's Choice award is now open. It's your chance to nominate the Best Music Blog on the web in the past year.
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Oasis Special In This Months Q Magazine

Q's October issue is a 50 page Oasis special, celebrating the boys' return after a long three years away. We have two spectacular covers to collect - one Noel, one Liam - plus a host of stars such as Lars Ulrich, John Simms and Alex Turner among others to comment on their favourite ever Oasis tracks.
Meanwhile, in our online edition, you can vote for your own favourite ever Oasis song, view the best Oasis photographs in our gallery and test your knowledge in our Oasis - themed music quiz.
You'll also find the Gallagher's in fiesty mood in our classic interview with Michael Odellfrom 2005.
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Opentape: 17 Covers Of Oasis' 'Wonderwall'

Remember when Jay-Z covered the Oasis song "Wonderwall" at Glastonbury as a means of retaliation/tribute after Noel Gallagher made statements in the press to the effect that a hip hop act should not headline the rock-oriented Glastonbury? The controversy resulted in an entire mash-up album combining Jay-Z's rapping with Oasis songs.
As it turns out, many others have chiseled their names onto Oasis's "Wonderwall." Roni Brunn from Brand Records assembled an Opentape mix consisting of 17 versions of the song including covers by Thom Yorke and The Posies, Cat Power, Metallica (comedic style), Pavement and a particularly rousing live rendition from The Beastie Boys. The mix also contains a few mash-ups of the song, with The Jackson Five LCD Soundsystem, Green Day and, of course, Jay-Z.
A karaoke version of the song caps off this Opentape compilation so you can easily record your own version. It's all very worthwhile, especially on a Friday.
Source: www.blogwired.com
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Support Bands Confirmed For Oasis' UK Tour

Oasis have picked a cross section of bands to be their opening act on their upcoming UK Arena Tour in October/Nov.Depending on which City, there will be one of the following: 16 Tons, Alberta Cross, Twisted Wheel, The Hours and Sergeant.
Source: www.oasisinet.com
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Register For Eden Project Gig

To register for the draw to purchase tickets for Oasis's exclusive gig at the Eden Project on Saturday 27th September, click here!
This will mark the band’s first ever gig in Cornwall and will be filmed for global broadcast by MTV.
Registration closes at midday on Friday 5th September.
Source: www.oasisinet.com
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