Oasis Belfast After Parties & Bonehead Irish Acoustic Tour Information

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Last Night's Setlist and Videos From Oasis In Bournemouth Day Two

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F**king In The Bushes
Rock N Roll Star
Lyla
The Shock Of The Lightning
Cigarettes And Alcohol
Meaning Of Soul
To Be Where There's Life
Waiting For The Rapture
The Masterplan
Songbird
Slide Away
Morning Glory
Ain't Got Nothing
The Importance Of Being Idle
I'm Outta Time
Wonderwall
Supersonic
Don't Look Back In Anger (Acoustic)
Falling Down
Champagne Supernova
I Am The Walrus

Did you go to last nights gig or future gigs or even past gigs?

Send in your pictures to scyhodotcom@gmail.com and I will add them to tour archive.

Some superb images from Monday's gig can be found here.

The 'Oasis UK Arena Tour' now moves on to Cardiff with shows in the 'Cardiff International Arena' on Thursday and Friday.

\o/ /o\ \o/ /o\\o/ /o\ \o/ /o\\o/ /o\ \o/ /o\

Oasis At The BBC Electric Proms TV And Radio Times

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Sunday 26th October, times are for the UK.

BBC Radio 1, 21:00 to 22:30 'Oasis Live at the BBC Electric Proms'
Radio 1 comes direct from the Camden Roundhouse in London for the finale of this year's BBC Electric Proms, featuring Oasis performing with the Crouch End Festival Chorus.

You can listen online at www.bbc.co.uk/radio1

The Electric Proms 2008: Oasis

BBC HD, BBC 2 Scotland, BBC 2 England and BBC 2 NI are all at 2310
BBC 2 Wales at 2355

Edith Bowman presents the grand finale of the Electric Proms 2008. Oasis front a night of anthems with accompaniment from the 50-strong Crouch End Festival Chorus.

Source: bbc.co.uk/radio1 and Sky EPG.

New Oasis Video On Channel 4 - 5th November

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Oasis: 4Music Video Exclusive
Channel 4 (UK)
5th November
11:35pm

Source: www.channel4.com
Thanks to Mr Monobrow

It could be for 'I'm Outta Time' but Oasis do have one for 'Falling Down' completed as well.

Oasis Add The Prodigy To Slane Line-Up

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Oasis have just confirmed that they will be inviting the Prodigy to perform with them as "very special guests" at Slane castle in June

Formed in 1990, The Prodigy have gone on to become the most successful electronic act of all time in terms of chart success and critical acclaim.

Emerging from the dance scene of the early 1990’s The Prodigy quickly crossed achieved massive chart success with the release of their debut album Experience in 1992 followed up with the critically acclaimed Music For The Jilted Generation in 1994, 1997’s The Fat Of The Land and 2004’s Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned. An as yet untitled album is due for release in March 2009.

Oasis with special guests the Prodigy come to Slane on June 20. Further acts for are still to be announced.

Tickets for Slane 2009 are priced €76.50 including booking fee, limited to eight per person and will go on sale this Friday, October 24 at 8.00am from Ticketmaster outlets nationwide.

Source: www.hotpress.com

Oasis To Play Amsterdam

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Oasis have just added a Dutch date to their biggest ever European Tour. The band have announced they will be playing the Heineken Music Hall in Amsterdam on the 21st January 2009

Tickets go on sale Saturday the 1st November at 10.00am (local time) through Ticket Post Services, Free Record Shops. GWK Offices and the VVV's as well as www.livenation.nl/oasis. In Holland only tickets can be ordered by telephone on 0900 3001250

Oasis last played the HMH in November 2005. On that occasion the tickets sold out within hours of going on sale so fans are advised to get their tickets early.

For more information about the band's forthcoming Western Europe tour, click here.

Source: www.oasisinet.com

Fizzing Performance By Champagne Oasis

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As loyalty goes in rock ’n’ roll, it doesn’t come much more devoted than an Oasis crowd.

Checking for a moment the arms-aloft, mile-wide grinning mob singing along to Champagne Supernova during the band’s encore last night it’s hard not to hear it as a national anthem for a credit-crunched generation.

And while those glad smiles and wet eyes may have more to do with euphoric recollection these days than anything else, there were some emotional moments shared between thinning-haired men comfortable for once in their middle-aged spread.

Even as the venue does its best to suck the sonic subtleties out of a roundly accomplished set, the audience feels more like a football crowd than anything else – ready to go through the highs and lows as personnel come and go safe in the knowledge the object of their devotion will always be there with them.

And the latest to be clasped to the collective bosom, new drummer Chris Sharrock propelled the whole affair with reliably beefy beats. More flamboyant than his predecessor Zak Starkey, but never gaudy, he’s a class act that suits the more musicianly, groove-filled songs from Oasis’s new album Dig Out Your Soul and adds new dimensions to old favourites.

Talking of which, it’s the big hitters that inevitably get the biggest reactions. Opening with Rock ’n’ Roll Star – still the band’s inch-perfect statement of intent – the set unfolds like a recently updated family photo album. Lyla, The Shock Of The Lightning, Cigarettes And Alcohol, even the under-rated Meaning Of Soul from their previous album, Don’t Believe The Truth, are given a robust yet surprisingly agile treatment.

With Liam’s countenance divine still commanding constant attention, Noel looks studious to one side, possibly still feeling the effects of cracked ribs after being attacked onstage in Canada last month, while Gem and Andy stand implacable to the other, and keyboards wiz Jay Darlington makes telling contributions from the shadows.

The extensions to the timeworn Oasis sound can be found in the raga thrum of the Gem-penned To Be Where There’s Life and the rapturous chords of Noel’s Falling Down, while Liam’s heartfelt Outta Time travels well from record to stage.

At times some of the older tunes (Wonderwall, Songbird, Slide Away) sound unwieldy, but a truly awesome Supersonic closes the set before the band reassemble for a touching acoustic take on Don’t Look Back In Anger and we’re sent buzzing into the night after a ravaging assault on I Am The Walrus just like the way they used to do it.

And only a fool would bet on them being any less supersonic tonight.

Source: www.bournemouthecho.co.uk
Picture Credit: Allan Jones

Oasis Rock Crowds As UK Tour Reaches Bournemouth

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Oasis refused to take their foot of the accelerator pedal as their UK tour called in Bournemouth last night (October 20th).

The band showcased tracks from their new album 'Dig Out Your Soul' during a raucous show at the International Centre.

The gig, the first of two at the venue, also featured songs from the band's expansive back catalogue.

Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher appeared to be over his recent rib injury as he took to the mic during songs such as 'Don't Look Back In Anger'.

You can see a selection of Gigwise's exclusive shots from last night's concert here, or click here for more photos.

Source: www.gigwise.com

Did you go to last nights gig or future gigs or even past gigs?

Send in your pictures to scyhodotcom@gmail.com and I will add them to tour archive.

Ticket Site Closed On Fraud Fears

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Thousands of people have been warned they may not receive concert tickets from a website that has been shut down by the Metropolitan Police.

The site - Paperticket.co.uk - sold tickets for gigs ranging from Barry Manilow to the The Killers.

It was closed down last Friday on suspicion of fraud.

Consumers who purchased tickets from the site have been advised to contact the government's advice service Consumer Direct for more information.

Those who used credit and debit cards to buy their tickets may be able to obtain a refund from their card issuers.

Sinead O'Connell, 26, bought tickets for Kings of Leon at the beginning of October.

"I went onto Paperticket, and it looked like it was all okay," she said.

"It showed exact seats and they said they'd send an email confirmation of the purchase.

"I didn't receive anything. The money has come out of my account.

"I was really really worried as I hadn't received any email from them and no tickets have arrived."

Representatives for Paperticket were unavailable for comment.

However, a message on its website read: "On 16 October, the Metropolitan Police Service's Computer Crime Unit requested the dehosting of the www.paperticket.co.uk website under the Proceeds of Crime Act.

"People who have bought tickets from this site are encouraged to call Consumer Direct for advice on 08454 04 05 06."

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Bonehead Acoustic Set With Pete Macleod

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Bonehead (Oasis) Acoustic Set with Pete Macleod

TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW AT WWW.BRIXTONJAMM.ORG (Limited availability so book now)

Bonehead needs no introduction, rising to fame as one of the original members of Oasis. He returns to Brixton Jamm for a rare acoustic set alongside Alan McGee championed Pete Macleod, as part of his first UK tour.

Pete Macleod is a Scottish singer/songwriter who has a musical diversity that no-one could question. While Pete isn't quite rubbing shoulders with Madonna, he has certainly shared the limelight with her. He features in the new issue of Q Magazine which has the Pop Queen on the cover and has been given the prestigious accolade of one of the top 50 artists to download. The recognition has now prompted the singer/songwriter to give a little back to his fans and he hits the road for his end of year tour with fellow comrade Bonehead.

With live bands supporting on the night:
The Exiles
The Eloquents
New Archean
Mizaria
Vespa
The Debris
The Chromatic

And our resident DJ's SoulBoyMystic Collective

Location: Jamm, 261 Brixton Road, Brixton, London, SW9 6LH
Closest tube: Brixton / Oval
Website: www.brixtonjamm.org
Tickets: £8 in advance available from website

Date: Sat 1st Nov
Time: 8pm-3am

Last Night's Setlist and Videos From Oasis In Bournemouth Day One

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F**king In The Bushes
Rock N Roll Star
Lyla
The Shock Of The Lightning
Cigarettes And Alcohol
Meaning Of Soul
To Be Where There's Life
Waiting For The Rapture
The Masterplan
Songbird
Slide Away
Morning Glory
Ain't Got Nothing
The Importance Of Being Idle
I'm Outta Time
Wonderwall
Supersonic
Don't Look Back In Anger (Acoustic)
Falling Down
Champagne Supernova
I Am The Walrus

Source; Emails from various visitors & YouTube

On This Day In Oasis History...

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"Lord Don't Slow Me Down" is a song by English rock band Oasis. The song was released as a download-only single on October 21, 2007 in promotion of the release of Oasis' rockumentary of the same name, Lord Don't Slow Me Down. On October 29, the song debuted at number ten in the UK Singles Chart, becoming Oasis' 21st UK top 10. It is also their 21st top ten single in a row. It is also the first single by Oasis not to reach the top 4 since 1994's Cigarettes & Alcohol.

In October 2006 the first part of the song was used in a preview of the band's movie. Written and sung by Noel Gallagher and recorded during the Don't Believe the Truth sessions, Gallagher described it as being "one of the best things, like The Who, The Yardbirds and the Jeff Beck Group combined, and it's got two drum solos on it!" The entire song leaked into the internet just a few days before the video was uploaded on YouTube and the song was played on the radio, on 1 October. The song was a probable track to be included on the band's last album, 2005's Don't Believe the Truth, but was removed from the final track list by Noel Gallagher, as he thought he sang on too many songs on the record. In May 2008 an unreleased studio version with Liam Gallagher on lead vocals was leaked over internet fansites.

This song is included on Dig Out Your Soul bonus CD.



Track Listing

1. "Lord Don't Slow Me Down" - 3:17
2. "The Meaning of Soul" (Live at City of Manchester Stadium '05) - 2:32
3. "Don't Look Back in Anger" (Live at City of Manchester Stadium '05) - 5:38

Source: Wikipedia

Dannii Minogue Shuns Noel Gallagher's 'X Factor' Feud

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Dannii Minogue has insisted that she isn't interested in extending her feud with Noel Gallagher.

The Oasis lyricist last week slammed the X Factor judge, saying that she "wouldn't know talent if it kicked her in the a***".

Minogue suggested to Closer that Gallagher's comments were a publicity stunt.

She said: "I think he's just looking for publicity! I'm hoping he said it as a joke - I hate celebrity feuding!"

Source: www.digitalspy.co.uk

Liam Gallagher Joins The Choir

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Oasis are often criticised for being as adventurous as a bunch of six-year-olds at the salad bar — so it's surprising to learn that their latest collaborators are a group who have previously grappled with the sounds of Britten, Glass and Stravinsky.

This afternoon, fresh from last night's show at Wembley Arena, the Gallagher brothers will be joined on stage at the venue by 50 members of in-demand choir the Crouch End Festival Chorus. It's their only full rehearsal for a special show at the end of the month, part of the BBC Electric Proms season, that will finally see the band doing the unthinkable and trying something a bit different.

The Electric Proms have nothing in common with the Albert Hall pomp of the real thing, but since 2006 they have hosted some fascinating concerts that encourage rock bands to be a bit more experimental. Oasis were asked if there was another band they would like to work with, or if they would prefer to be joined by a choir.

Perhaps inspired by Crouch End's backing of Kinks star Ray Davies during last year's season, they opted for the choir.

Last week a dozen members met Noel Gallagher and guitarist Gem Archer in the Muswell Hill front room of Steve Markwick, who has been charged with arranging choral parts for six songs in the finale of the gig. They thrashed out ideas for taking old favourites such as Don't Look Back In Anger and The Masterplan to new heights of singalong elation. “Noel seemed really delighted with the beauty and power of the sound,” CEFC musical director David Temple tells me.

Also planned are a couple of compositions by Liam, presumably including his much-praised ballad from the new album, I'm Outta Time. Most excitingly, they'll sing on an overpowering climax of the band's traditional Beatles cover, I Am the Walrus.

“They do this extended cadenza at the end which is mindblowing. We're hoping to do some surreal improvisation in there, lots of different noises, like a collage of dreams,” Temple says. First they suggested throwing in a blast of Handel's Hallelujah chorus at the peak but that was rejected in favour of Beethoven's Ode to Joy.

It sounds like a lot of fun for a choir that has a reputation far weightier than the occasional pop collaboration would suggest. The night before the Oasis show, all 140 members will be singing Bach's Mass in B minor at the Barbican. On 1 March next year, again at the Barbican, they perform a major premiere — The Tension of Opposites by Chicago composer Matthew Ferraro.

CEFC began life in 1984 performing mainly in Hornsey Town Hall and are now known for being game for anything. They'll soon be heard singing on a collection of reworked Kinks classics by Ray Davies, the new album by Welsh opera babe Katherine Jenkins and the soundtrack to a forthcoming comedy horror Britflick, Lesbian Vampire Killers.

But for now, it's the Oasis gig that they're looking forward to. “I love Liam Gallagher's voice,” Temple asserts with passion. “He can hit top As that a classical tenor would die for.”
Oasis are at the BBC Electric Proms at the Roundhouse, NW1 on 26 October. Apply for
£5 tickets in a ballot at www.bbc.co.uk/electricproms.

Source: www.thisislondon.co.uk

Soul Brothers

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It's a sunny day in north London and over at Oasis HQ, guitarist Gem Archer is talking on the phone to a group of Australian journalists.

“It’s really late over there, and they’d clearly been out. They were trying not to sound drunk,” he says, laughing after the call. “Anyway, come in, man,” he adds, in his unmistakeable accent, part gentle north-east, part hippie.

Gem is excitable today, enthusiastic about Oasis’ new album, Dig Out Your Soul, which they’re back on the road to promote (the band take in the Bournemouth International Centre on Monday and Tuesday.) It’s their seventh studio album, and the third with the involvement of Gem. He and former Ride and Hurricane #1 guitarist Andy Bell joined Oasis around 1999 after the departure of original members Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs and Paul “Guigsy” McGuigan.

“I still love it,” beams Gem when asked how he feels about the album. “The cliche is normally that bands can’t wait to get away from their music once it’s recorded, but I nearly listened to it again last night.

“In the past, if you’d been out with Liam (Gallagher) at night and you ended up back at his house after the pub had shut, he’d play you the new album 15 times, but this time around, you might get it 30 times. That says it all!”

Dig Out Your Soul was recorded in Abbey Road studios, the spiritual home of The Beatles and unsurprisingly, given their track record for homage to the Fab Four, Oasis’ latest offering comes with no short supply of Beatles references. There’s even a snippet of an interview with John Lennon used in the Liam-penned track I’m Outta Time.

As always, the bulk of the songs on the album were written by Gallagher Snr, Noel, with Liam adding three songs. The new boys – Gem and Andy – supply one apiece, To Be Where There’s Life and The Nature Of Reality, respectively.

“To Be Where There’s Life started as a jam in my house with my son,” explains Gem. “He’s only 12, but he’s a top drummer, already in his second band.

“I had the demo, which was just an instrumental at the time, and played it to the lads. Noel asked if I’d got any lyrics. I hadn’t, so then I had to stay in and write some.”

Considering Noel has written such widely loved songs as Wonderwall, Don’t Look Back In Anger, Live Forever and Cigarettes And Alcohol, competing with him for space on a new Oasis album can’t be easy.

Gem says he thrives on the competition and thinks it’s healthy for the band.

“I kind of relish the challenge,” he admits. “The very fact Noel is even asking what songs I’ve got is incredible, even though he’s the guy who wrote three songs just while we were in Abbey Road. That’s a bit galling, but come on, it’s Noel. Everyone can fluke one good song, but he’s written a lot of very, very good songs.”

Noel has continued that trend this time around, too. Kicking off with Bag It Up, Dig Out Your Soul starts with a Stone Roses-esque groove, before Liam’s sneering vocal chimes in, leaving you in no doubt who you’re listening to. Among the album’s many highlights is Falling Down, incidentally Gem’s current favourite.

“That song was one of the ones Noel demoed by himself in Abbey Road, the night before we recorded it properly,” explains Gem.

“It was totally fresh when we did it because we’d not recorded it over and over making demos.

“Not only is it one of the best songs he’s written, but the production of it is mega. If we’d recorded demos of that song, we would have spoiled it.”

That formula – of capturing fresh takes of each song – worked across the album. The version of a song you hear on a finished album could be the 10th, 15th or 20th take, and while the method might ensure a refined, polished sound, often a lot of the life from earlier takes is lost.

This time around, the band wanted to avoid that happening and, as a result, Dig Out Your Soul is their most live-sounding album since 1995’s (What’s The Story?) Morning Glory.

Away from music, the band are in fine spirits too, leaner and healthier-looking than ever before. In recent interviews, Liam, once the bad boy of Britpop, has been telling of his new-found love for cooking salmon, jogging and getting an early night.

Gem too says the whole band are “into their fitness” but is keen to point out “We’re not like Sting or anything.

“I was one of those guys who could eat rubbish all day long and didn’t know what hangovers were,” he begins. “I don’t want to be 50 and doubled up. We’ve got a responsibility to keep it together, and it’s not even for the thousands of people coming to see us.

“If we’re going to put ourselves in line with The Beatles and The Rolling Stones and The Kinks and The Who, Led Zeppelin – the pantheon of great British rock and roll – then you can’t let the side down.

“We’re thinking ahead here,” he adds.

“Liam invented Stillism – there’s no jogging around on stage like Mick Jagger in this band – so we could be doing that until we’re 90.”

With that, Noel walks in. He’s been absent from today’s interview because of the recent incident in Toronto, Canada, when he was attacked and pushed over on stage, breaking three ribs.

He’s walking with obvious discomfort still, but says he hopes to be healed enough for the forthcoming UK tour dates to go by painlessly. Gem, too, can’t wait to get back on the road.

“I’m looking forward to Liverpool so much,” he beams.

“There’s something about the city that’s been ingrained in me from being a childhood Beatles fan. The architecture, the street signs, everything.

“I love playing live full stop, but we’re playing in Britain, indoors to the perfect number of people for it to still be intimate. It’s going to be insane.”

Source: www.bournemouthecho.co.uk

Oasis To Play Zurich

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As part of the band's biggest ever European Tour Oasis will be playing the Hallenstadion in Zurich on 1st March 2009.

Tickets go on sale Wednesday 22nd October at 8:00am (local time) through www.ticketcorner.com or 0900 800 800.

'Dig Out Your Soul', the first album to be released internationally on the band's own Big Brother Recordings label, entered the Swiss charts last week at number 2.

For more information about the band's forthcoming Western Europe tour, click here.

Source: www.oasisinet.com

The Enemy: Oasis Support Is Dream Come True

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Coventry heroes The Enemy have been confirmed to support Oasis during their UK stadium tour next summer, along with Kasabian.

The tour includes two Oasis homecoming shows at Manchester's Heaton Park and culminates with two prestigious nights at Wembley Stadium.

And frontman Tom Clarke couldn't be happier. Speaking on the band's website he said: "Oasis, Kasabian and The Enemy on one bill.

"Prepare yourself for the greatest rock and roll show in the world. Proper!"

Drummer Liam Watts added: "Something I've always wanted to happen has just become a reality. Buzzing!"

Source: www.coventrytelegraph.net

Oasis' Noel Gallagher, A Modern Role Model

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Being sensible, cultured types, you have better things to do with your Saturday night. But recently I was listening to Russell Brand's show on Radio 2. And suddenly, breaking through the seamless verbal solipsism of the host, a sharp, clear, witty voice emerged. It was someone talking sense with humour. I recognised the Mancunian twang, but couldn't initially place it. Then, roughly about the time Brand called him by his Christian name, it came to me: it was Noel Gallagher.

The founder and driving force of Oasis has developed into a shrewd commentator on subjects as diverse as the credit crunch, English football and the absurd condition of Brand's hair. So quick-witted was he that I thought, as I listened, what a fine contributor he would be to Question Time. But it is about his own output that he sounded particularly - and unusually - self-aware. Gallagher is a man who appears to have come to terms with his own limitations.

In 1994, Definitely Maybe, his first record with Oasis, promised huge things. Exciting, passionate, raw, it was stuffed with memorable tunes. Back then Gallagher, chippy about the long dark evening that preceded his success, seemed conditioned to blow his own trumpet. He was almost Brand-like in his self-esteem. His most frequent boast was to encourage comparison with the Beatles. Mind, he wasn't the only one who believed he might have a thesis: to many, his group appeared to have the capacity to develop creatively as their mentors had.


An Oasis of stability in these troubled times
Fourteen years on, Oasis's new album Dig Out Your Soul has just been released. It is a record that suggests they have moved about as far as a car left overnight outside the Gallaghers' family home in Burnage, south Manchester, its wheels removed by hospitable locals. While in seven short, hectic years the Beatles grew from Please Please Me to Let It Be, Oasis have been stuck for twice that time in neutral. Their latest is a record about as cutting-edge as Jeremy Clarkson's wardrobe.

But here's the important thing: it doesn't appear to affect Oasis's record sales. This latest album, already shipping out huge numbers, promises to match the sales of everything they have done since their debut. And Gallagher - smilingly cheerful about his continued financial, if not cultural, relevance - admits he has accepted his role in life. Since his album titles tend to reach for aphorism, his next might be best called "If It Ain't Broke, Don't Fix It".

Yet when it comes to remaining precisely where you are, even Gallagher is a novice compared to AC/DC, a group formed in Sydney in 1973. In their early days, the band's unique selling proposition was that Angus Young, their lead guitarist, dressed like a prep-school boy, in blazer, tie, cap and corduroy shorts, his socks gathered round his ankles. Given that he was 17, it was a nicely ironic comment on rock and roll rebellion.

Thirty-five years on, the Aussies have launched their latest work, Black Ice. Apparently sealed in aspic, it is a shameless revisiting of their finest moment - 1980's Back in Black - with the notes arranged in marginally different order. The deal is that in two-and-a-half decades, nothing whatsoever has changed, including Young's stage attire. With his leathery complexion and thinning scraggle of hair, the be-shorted 52-year-old now has the unsettling appearance of Jimmy Clitheroe in his latter days. But this is seemingly of no worry to the band's widening army of fans. The probability is that the only act who can prevent AC/DC from having the number one bestseller in the pre-Christmas rush is Gallagher's Oasis.

A riposte to those self-styled pioneers such as Madonna who strive to remain at the forefront of innovation, the two static caravans of musical progress continue to sell by the lorry-load. Their success is a vivid demonstration of this central economic truth: in hard times, we fall back on the familiar. But it has wider implications for those who wish to steer us through the turmoil ahead: if you have a winning formula, don't let it go in vain pursuit of something - anything - new. At this point of the cycle, we are all anxious to keep hold of what we know. Gallagher's is a lesson that anyone engaged in business, education, the media and above all politics would be well advised to heed.

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Vote Now Greatest Indie Anthems Of The Millenium

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The Best Tracks 2000-2008

No Smiths, Sex Pistols or Nirvana - we just want to find out the greatest anthems of the last eight years.

Cast your vote for Oasis by clicking here.

Source: www.nme.com

Oasis: Lord Don't Slow Me Down (Blu-ray)

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Due for release on 27/10/2008 (UK) Other countries check local stockist.
RRP: £24.99

Special Features
Live Concert
Commentary from the Band



Review

What happens when a film maker follows one of the world's biggest bands on a year long world tour? What happens when the film maker is granted unique access to that band, is present for the ups and downs, the moments of greatness and the periods of the same interview in 10 different languages in as many days? What happens when that band is Oasis, travelling across 26 countries on their biggest world tour to date playing to a total of over 2 million people?

The answer is Lord Don't Slow Me Down, a Blu-Ray set that not only gives you the definitive feature length documentary seen in selected cinemas last year, but also the option of voice over commentaries from the band, a Noel Gallagher Q & A session with fans from New York City and out takes from the film.

Directed by Baillie Walsh who has previously worked with Massive Attack (he made 'Safe From Harm'), Spiritualised, New Order and Kylie's Slow, and is now working on a film with Daniel Craig, this Blu-Ray is a compendium of Oasis entertainment par excellence.
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