Oasis Tour Fan Archive Update

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I have recieved even more pictures from visitors to the site, from all over the world.

Are you planning on going to future Oasis gigs or even been to past gigs?

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

We still have a few gigs missing, so any photos you have please send them in...

Visit the album and check out all the photos by clicking here.

Noel Gallagher: We Are Often Accused Of Plagiarism

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We spoke with singer, guitarist and author of lyrics of the British group Oasis, Noel Gallagher, about their new album, the relationship between the two brothers and other interesting subjects.

Noel – how is your relationship with Liam lately - do you enjoy watching him work in the studio and giving him pointers?


I’m not allowed to give him direction even though I write the songs. I have to say to Dave, ‘Why’s he not singing it that way?’ ‘Cos if I say it to him, what he hears, in his headphones, is just pure insults. You know, when I say, ‘Liam old bean. You could awfully, awfully use a bit of diction on that second verse.’ And he’ll just say, ‘What did you call me?’ And it’s like, ‘I didn’t say anything!’ ‘What did you say about my kids?’ So I have to pretend I’m at the chippy, and I kind of sneak back in and say to Dave, ‘He’s not doing it right. Tell him he’s doing it wrong.’ And when we did Let There Be Love off the last record, and Dave, obviously he’s an American producer, Liam started singing the song and Dave was going, ‘I think you can beat it man’. So the tune starts and Dave goes, ‘Pretend you’re telling a story.’ And the song starts, and Liam’s going, ‘There was an old woman who lived in a shoe...‘ And starts singing it like he’s telling some nursery rhyme. Dave didn’t’ get it for about twenty seconds. He was going, ‘What’s he doing?’

Do you bother much about tracks of yours leaking onto the internet before release?

If it’s out there, and you can get it, you know, go ahead, I don’t wanna get into Lars Ulrich mode about this. You know, it’s well documented, I don’t have a computer, I don’t get involved in any of that kind of gear. But if people are willing to have faceless CDs like that in their collection, good for them. You know, it would be ludicrous for a rock star to demand that people pay money for albums, ‘cos maybe kids ain’t got that much money to pay for an album, and if they can find it for free, go ahead. Don’t do it on Oasis records though, ‘cos that’s against the law. Pinch as many Kaiser Chiefs as you like, get The Pigeon Detectives. Don’t nick any Oasis. I need to keep the Evian water topped up in my swimming pool.

How would you describe the new album?

The reason that this album sounds the way it does is that we had a lot of songs left over from the last record. Which were written for Don’t Believe The Truth. And they were kind of in that same British sixties kinda vein. And we had seven, I think, done. To fill in the gaps I wrote three songs. Not really thinking about whether they would go on the album, they were just gonna fill in the gaps. They were in a certain tuning, dropped D if any nerds are listening. Grunge tuning. And I played drums on the demos, and I’m not really a Keith Moon kinda drummer, I’m a Neanderthal, I’m a basher. We sent them to Dave Sardy. And he was like, ‘Wow have you got any more songs like this? This is what, we should make a record like this.’ And then going back to all the stuff that we ditched in the past, was like, yeah, I suppose we could do something with that, or we could do something with this. And slowly but surely it all started to change from a traditional British rock album to whatever one would describe it as now.

You’re in the middle of a big tour at the moment – after so much success, it’s a surprise you’re not doing a sponsored tour.

People kind of cotton on to that pretty quickly, they know when you mean it and when you don’t, you know what I mean. They know when you’re tour is sponsored by Kleenex and when you know, you’re getting out and you’re doing it for yourself and the fans that buy the records. There’s the Staple Centre and there’s the you know, the Budweiser arena or some other thing. But we won’t be playing the 02, I can assure you of that. Went to see Led Zeppelin there and somebody kind of nudged past me to get to their seat, and they had like chicken in a basket and some nachos, as they were going in to Black Dog. And I was like, you know what, there a people that would have given their left arm to be here. And this big dude is like, “Hey mate I think you’re sat in me seat”. ‘Cos he wanted to sit down and eat his dinner. It’s like, Jimmy Page is up there man, and he’s gonna bleed it out for you, you know what I mean, and all you’re bothered about is your Doritos and your Fanta. Other drinks are available. A security guard digged Liam in the ribs and told him to stand behind the yellow line. And Liam was out, Liam said if I have to pour petrol over my children rather than play in this gaff. And it was like, that was it.

The new album is called Dig Out Your Soul – that’s a very typical Oasis sounding title.

I ran out of ideas for album titles. It was gonna be, originally it was gonna be called Bag It Up. And then it was gonna be called Shock Of The Lightening. And then it was gonna be called Standing On The Edge Of The Noise. We’re in bands to fire people’s imagination about stuff. Not to call your album, Untitled or Oasis or something ridiculous. But it’s like, so I couldn’t think of any ideas, and then somebody had written, just taken bits of the lyrics out. And Dig Out Your Soul. I was like, you know what, titles become themselves, you know. Definitely Maybe’s not a great title, but it’s kind of, if the album’s good enough it’ll become itself. So I was, Dig Out Your Soul’s not the best one, but it was the best one of that day where we had to choose one. And it’s done. But it’s actually, it’s a bit of lyrics in one of Gem’s songs, but it’s not as a Japanese interviewer asked me today, was it about the birth of mankind and how one tries to dig one’s soul from the earth, mother nature and I was like, it’s actually referring to djing when you’re putting on some Motown. It’s a DJ digging out his soul.

How do you feel when you look back at your first three albums?

I don’t know. The first one is just a moment in time that was, that record had to come along at some point by somebody. I’m just glad that it was me and it was our band and it still gets great reviews. But the thing about the third album is you know, we’d gone from playing the Water Rats to playing Knebworth in under two years, and nobody was saying no to anything. It’s like, you could phone anybody, from anywhere, phone your manger, it’s seven in the morning in Hong Kong and just say, ‘Marcus, it’s Noel.’ ‘What do you want?’ ‘I’ve got a whim… I’ve forgotten what it was though… Can you send me one red chocolate shoe and one green apple to this suite number in Hong Kong by this evening.’ You know it’s kinda like that. And you know, the first single off Be Here Now was eight and half minutes long. And everyone was going, so there’s gonna be an edit. And I was like, I’m not editing anything, everyone’s like great. Brilliant. Yeah. Great, that’ll sound great that on Capital that when they play eight and half minutes of feedback in the morning. And we were kinda being a little bit, I was being a little bit more difficult than I would be these days. ‘Cos we were living the dream. I had a fur coat man. I actually remember I was out once, watching Paul Weller in the BBC theatre downstairs here, and I had this fur coat on and some journalist from the Guardian said, ‘is that a real fur coat?’ And I went ‘yes it is a real fur coat.’ He said ‘what fur?’ I said ‘it’s rabbit fur.’ She said, you know, ‘rabbit fur. That’s a bit odd.’ I said, ‘this is skinned from one rabbit, it’s been in my back garden for the last eight months. I’ve grappled this beast in my own hands and I’ve made a coat of it and I’m proud to wear it.’ And she thought I was being serious.

Do music prizes such as the Mercury mean much to you?

Music is like beauty right, it’s all in the eye of the beholder. There’s nobody to say that the next Franz Ferdinand record means more than the next Klaxons record because it doesn’t matter what you think. If it speaks to you, then that’s the end of it. There is no such thing as… You can get awards for record sales, so I guess that’s a physical thing. You’ve sold the most records. Here. Like, you know a washing-up liquid bottle. Go away. That kind of thing right. But to say that, and anyway, who are this panel? Every time we see this panel they look like the biggest bunch of squares in England. I mean I’m sorry, it’s just like, I don’t want you sitting in judgement on my record, you’ve not had a boyfriend for twenty five years. Who’s to say that you know, the Klaxons are greater musical exponents just because someone from The Guardian says so. You know, the curse of the Mercury’s now isn’t it, if you win it you’re automatically disappear.

So, making the new album, did you have a great time partying throughout?

I mean we had a good time out there, do you know what I mean, but we don't mess about when we work. We never drink in the studio or anything like that. All those days are over, you know. We used to bring the party into the studio, but it doesn't really make for great records. We had such a fantastic time kinda making and touring that album… Be Here Now, we lost the plot in those two years. If you've never lost the plot, it's amazing. You know, you end up waking up with midgets and dogs in sun glasses and it's just like, I don't know how I got here but I really really like this! That lasted into kinda 1998, and then it was kind of, you know, doing, having Red Stripe for breakfast was like, can't go on any more. I think I'm gonna bow out gracefully before me teeth fall out or summat. But it was, they were great times, but when you listen back to the music, now it's kinda, it could've been better, you know what I mean?

What is so special about the north of England and music, because you've got so many great bands from Manchester and Liverpool as well.

Liverpool's an island, and I think it's something that's been passed down through generations of the boats coming back from America with all the early… like the Beatles said that they could get records off the sailors that you couldn't even get in London, so I guess that kind of thing is passed down. But, if you go round the bars and the pubs in Liverpool and see anybody playing a guitar or jut getting up and doing like acoustic stuff. They've just got it. They've just got… and not, and I've gotta say there's not, I mean I'm kinda biased towards, no I just get it. I don't know what it is, they've just got such passion for great music, and they're all into the same kind music, you know, and it's all kind of obscure '60s stuff that you've never heard of you know. And then there was Frankie Goes To Hollywood.

You're often accused of stealing ideas from other bands.

Yeah, you see people accuse of being, sitting there and listening to the Beatles all day and all that, but I mean we don't, you know, there's moments of our records and on b-sides where we kind of stretch it a little bit. But it's not a conscious thing where we're like, 'right we must write something avant-garde here.' You know what I mean? It's kind of if it happens naturally then we'll do it. If it doesn't then we won't, you know, we do like sitting around strumming acoustic guitars. The biggest criticism that the music press have against us is that we're not Radiohead. But, correct me if I'm wrong, they've been making the same record since Kid A, have they not? I like them. Every time I see them live they blow me away, but you know, it's kind of, we make very accessible rock and roll music, you know, and they constantly make difficult electronic records. It's not a criticism of them, and it shouldn't be a criticism of us.

You've written songs for the band for the last four albums – when you started, did you ever think you wouldn't write for Oasis?

No. I can do what I want in this band, do you know what I mean. It's just if they're good enough, you know what I mean. And they seem to be getting better. I'm easy man, whether a song of mine goes on the album or not. I don't put a gun to anyone's head. It's if they like it then it goes on. If it doesn't go on I'm equally buzzing off it, singing the songs, you know what I mean. I'm a happy chap after singing songs. I sit there. I've got a guitar in me house, once the ironings done, if there's nothing on TV I sort of have a little play around, got me Dictaphone, bosh, something happens it happens, if it doesn't it doesn't. Ain't got a clue what it's about though. That word went with that word. That's the way it is man. And that's the way it sort of, like me and Andy Bell was going, 'well that's like being honest and being right', and that's how it comes because you're not thinking about it. If I didn't write another song I really really wouldn't be that arsed, you know what I mean. It's like, as long as I'm singing songs, that's my main, that's where I get my kicks, that's where I'm at.

You're singing well lately. How are you coping on the road?

I mean the last couple of rehearsals that we've been doing I've been singing like a proper proper geezer. So at the moment it's sounding good, so I've just got stay in and keep the door locked and not go out.

Do you remember your first gig with Oasis?

I think it, I tell you what, the first gig I think was, I think the first gig was in London in some like college. Like Dartford, or wherever Mick Jagger was from, it's round that way. In like some like, I think it was like a toga party? With all the students. But the first serious gig I think was like the King Tut's I think or I remember playing the Boardwalk and all our mates were there, about twenty lads just going like that. And it was just like a proper weird moment. I tell you the gig that, I think it was the one that really, when I sort of sat back and went, 'wow, this is, this is more like it. This is proper' was the T in the Park gig. I remember that one in the tent. And I sort of went, 'this is good!'

Finally are you looking forward to touring?

Love touring. Love making music. Love talking about it. Playing it. Touring. I adore it man. I adore it. I adore Oasis man. I'm its biggest fan. I do. I love it.

The interview was taken from the show “Backstage” on Zagreb’s Plavi Radio.

Source: www.javno.com

Photo Credit to friend of the site Ceri Davies

Oasis In Glasgow Day Two

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Setlist from the last nights gig in Glasgow.

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
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.

Noel Gallagher Celebrated Store Bargains By Giving Staff Tickets To Glasgow Gig

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Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher popped into Cruise designer store to buy two pairs of shoes before his SECC gig and gave staff 30 tickets.

As well as purchasing the Guccis at £225 in Glasgow, he bought a pair of YMC trainers for £150 - both in the shop's sale. A chuffed Noel then added 30 of the store's staff to the band's guest list for last night's gig.

An insider said: "Noel was so thrilled at getting his bargain, he asked staff how many would like to come to last night's show."

Source: www.dailyrecord.co.uk

Oasis Tickets For Gig At Ricoh Arena For July 2009 To Sell Out By End Of The Week

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Tickets for next year’s Oasis gig in the Ricoh Arena are likely to sell out by the end of the week.

The rock group will be playing at the Coventry stadium on July 7 supported by city band The Enemy.

Tens of thousands of people have already snapped up tickets to the gig, with some die-hard Oasis fans camping outside the Ricoh to make sure they weren’t disappointed.

Fans have been putting on pressure for the band to add an extra date in Coventry but a spokesman for the Ricoh Arena said any plans for a second Oasis gig at the stadium were just rumours.

Rock legend Noel Gallagher said the band is looking forward to playing in Coventry, the only gig in next year’s tour in the Midlands. He said. “I’ve never been to the Ricoh before but apparently it’s really nice so I’m really looking forward to it. We’ve been to Coventry before though – we played at Coventry Uni in 1993.”

He also said he was looking forward to The Enemy supporting the band and said the Coventry trio have the sound of “early Oasis about them”.

Noel, who is the older of the two Gallagher brothers, said: “I’ve never actually met The Enemy – they came to see us at Birmingham but didn’t come backstage.

“I love their album and I actually bought it in a supermarket.”

The Enemy are currently recording their follow up album to their hit We’ll Live and Die in These Towns.

Oasis’s new album Dig Out Your Soul is now available and their latest single I’m Outta Time will be released on December 1.

Daniel Gidney, chief executive of the Ricoh Arena, said: “A number of keen Oasis and The Enemy fans queued overnight at the Ricoh when tickets went on sale on Thursday.

“There are still some tickets available so we urge anyone who wants to come to the gig to get their tickets quickly before they sell out.”

Tickets cost £45 each subject to a booking fee and are available via See Tickets at www.seetickets.com or at 0871 230 7137, or by logging on to www.ticketmaster.co.uk or www.oasisnet.com. There are a limited number of tickets available from the Ricoh box office but they are expected to have sold out by the end of the week.

Source: www.coventrytelegraph.net

Oasis 'Standing On The Edge Of The Noise' Later This Month On 4Music

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There seems to be an Oasis night on 4Music (UK) on Sunday 23rd November.

It starts at 6PM with a load of Oasis videos and ends with the TV edit of Lord Don't Slow Me Down.

In between that, though, is this:

MUSIC: Oasis
On: 4Music
Standing On The Edge Of The Noise.
Date: Sunday 23rd November 2008
Time: 7:45 pm to 8:45 pm (UK)

Anyone want to take any guesses as to what this could be?

Highlights of the rehearsal? Exclusive behind the scenes footage on tour? An exclusive set for Channel 4?

By the way, 'Standing On The Edge Of The Noise' was one of the considered titles for the album.

Source: MrMonobrow

Oasis - I'm Outta Time

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Oasis - I'm Outta Time


Description: Check out the video for the new Oasis single 'I'm Outta Time', which sees Liam on a surreal journey through a moon-lit English landscape. Subtly psychedelic! Enjoy!

'I'm Outta Time' is released December 1st on the band's Big Brother Recordings label. The single is taken from their number one album, 'Dig Out Your Soul'.

I'm Outta Time Video

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Oasis fans in the UK can watch the Television Premiere tonight on Channel 4 at 23:35.

For fans outside the UK the video will be on the Oasis' MySpace page sometime tonight visit it here, you can also add us to your friends on the sites MySpace page by clicking here.

Tales From The Middle Of Nowhere

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Taken from Noel's tour diary from oasisinet.com

Aberdeen? Bloody hell! Them kids was crazy!! A pleasure to have been there, etc.

Where are we? Glasgow, that's where.

Spent the day in my adopted 2nd city yesterday, Edinburgh. Went to see the in-laws. My boy's up there visiting with his mam. God, it's peaceful in that city. Haven't been up there since New Year's Eve. If you haven't done NYE in Edinburgh, then you haven't done NYE. It's some piss-up let me tell you.

It's all about that American election today. I guess we'd all like Obama to win, no? The other fella's rhetoric is just laughable (not that it's any of our business).

I'm going shopping. I need some dancing shoes.

See you at the S.E.C.C., if you're coming.

In a bit.

GD.

Source: www.oasisinet.com

Oasis Doesn’t Care What People Say About Album

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British rock superstars Oasis are finding renewed commercial and critical success with their latest album ``Dig Out Your Soul.'' But Oasis is not concerned about what the people say about their music.

``It's interesting to see what people say but at the end of the day I don't care. We're so far beyond people making a difference with a review. So it doesn't really matter to me what people think about it,'' Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher told The Korea Times in an email interview.

Oasis returned with their seventh album ``Dig Out Your Soul,'' which many critics say is the best Oasis album in a long time. Noel and his younger brother Liam have written songs that show a more mature side of Oasis. Most of the songs still show strong influences from The Beatles, something Oasis is always known for.

Gallagher describes the music as ``driving, pounding, acid rock, added with much more groove.'' He wrote the first single ``The Shock of the Lightning," which was released last month.

``We don't really like setting out ground rules about how we're going to approach a record. I'm sick of bands that are always telling you the concept. We just go in and record the songs that we think are the best and the rest of it will look after itself,'' Gallagher said.

When asked about the album's enigmatic title, which was taken from a lyric on guitarist Gem Archer's song, Gallagher just said, ``You know what? Titles become themselves.''

Oasis shot to stardom with their first album ``Definitely Maybe'' in 1994, quickly followed by an even more successful album ``(What's the Story) Morning Glory?'' in 1995.

Gallagher and his younger brother and Oasis vocalist Liam sold millions of albums, and racked up number one hits and music awards, but they also gained a reputation as the ``bad boys'' of British rock.

Their third album ``Be Here Now'' became the fastest-selling album in U.K. chart history in 1997. Through the years, they've released albums ``Standing on the Shoulder of Giants'' (2000) ``Heathen Chemistry'' (2002) and ``Don't Believe the Truth.''

Oasis kicked off their current world tour in Seattle in August.

However, several tour dates were cancelled after Gallagher was injured at a music festival in Toronto in September. A drunken fan went on stage and attacked Gallagher, who suffered three broken ribs.

Now, Oasis is back on their world tour, which Gallagher promises is Oasis' ``biggest'' and ``boldest.'' ``The tour is bigger than anything we've done before and the tour will be our boldest yet,'' he said.

Unfortunately for fans in Korea, there's no word on an Oasis concert in Seoul.

Source: www.koreatimes.co.kr

Oasis Roll With It For Another Night Of Glory

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It may have been the day before Bonfire Night but Oasis certainly delivered some fireworks as they swaggered into the SECC last night.

And although the mouthy Manchester rock gods have been going for 14 years now, they still had the sold-out crowd in the palm of their hands from the opening blast of Rock N Roll Star, a song that was once a statement of intent but is now simply a matter of fact.

The Gallagher brothers didn't let the pace slack early on, with a raucous sing-a-long Lyla, before the classic guitar intro of Cigarettes And Alcohol saw the entire building shake.

Liam was his usual self, casually moving about the stage with a confident, cocky air. He didn't say much, but did find time to direct a sarcastic, foul-mouthed dedication before one number to Lorraine Kelly!

His brother Noel was quiet too, preferring to let the music do the talking.

The one hour and 40-minute set mixed in old classics, new material and a few rarities, with a storming Morning Glory highlighting the drumming prowess of new sticksman Chris Sharrock, while The Masterplan offered a nice change of pace.

Of the material from new album Dig Out Your Soul, the psychedelic tinged To Be Where There's Life fared best, letting Liam's famed full-throated roar shine. Unfortunately, the same couldn't be said of Ain't Got Nothin'.

But a superb Wonderwall and Supersonic had plenty of punch, before the encore was highlighted by an acoustic run-through of Don't Look Back In Anger and the inevitable closing cover of I Am The Walrus.

Oasis return to the SECC tonight, but the gig's sold-out.

Source: www.eveningtimes.co.uk

Pictures: Marc Turner

Brit Gay Mens Most Desirable Date

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OUR Kid won’t like this! Bad boy rocker Liam Gallagher has been voted a top pin-up ­by Britain’s gay men.

The Oasis frontman, 36, has been named as one of the most “lovable rogues”.

The results of a survey by dating website Gay-Parship.co.uk will come as a surprise to many, especially after Liam’s well publicised “gay-bashing” of footballers and fellow singers.

In the past the singer has labelled the England football team “gay boys” and told rival music star Robbie Williams, 34, he is a “f***ing drama queen”.

But now it seems his wild ways have struck a chord with gay men in Britain.

Or could it be because the former hellraiser has tamed his wild ways and is said to be opting for a more “metrosexual” lifestyle.

Earlier this year Liam was reported to have enjoyed a day of pampering in LA’s Four Seasons Hotel, including eyebrow and chest waxing.

And last month he admitted people were calling him gay after he calmed his behaviour.

It came after the singer chose to call it a night at 10.30pm and head home to bed with his wife Nicole Appleton, 33, following his gig at London’s Electric Proms.

Meanwhile older brother Noel, 41, boozed until 4.30am on a massive bender in Camden.

Liam said: “People who’ve got any soul will realise there’s a day when you go home, put your feet up and cuddle your kids.

“But when you do show a bit of caring, they call you a poof.”

OASIS GAY TOP 10 Some Might Gay, Be Queer Now, Not Married With Children, Morning Gloria, Frock ’n Roll Star, Pink Champagne Supernova, Fags And Alcohol, Wonderballs, He’s Electric, Don’t Look Back In Angora.

Source: www.dailystar.co.uk

Oasis Star's Fundraiser Speech

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Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher dropped his hardman image to help raise cash for a cancer charity.

And bosses said their new hero was "a lovely young man".

Liam, 36, was spotted in a bar at Aberdeen's exclusive Marcliffe at Pitfodels hotel on Friday, the night before the band's gig in the city.

A dinner for charity Clan was being held in the hotel.

Organisers spotted the star and decided to chance their arm and ask him to appear as a special guest at the dinner.

Clan's managing director Debbie Thomson said yesterday: "We started with a drinks reception downstairs before going up for the charity dinner.

"We happened to notice Liam in the bar and wondered if he would join us.

"Forbes Shand, of manufacturing company RB Farquhar, went over and chatted to him and, fortunately, Liam agreed to come up and say a few words.

"It was fantastic.

He wished Clan well with our fund-raising.

"He knew a bout the necessity for support because of a recent cancerrelated death in the family.

"His best wishes for our fundraising was greatly appreciated particularly as our cause is so close to his heart.

"He came across as a lovely young man. It had a wonderful affect on the audience.

"It really was a wonderful ending to a fantastic event.

"An appearance from someone like Liam Gallagher was just the icing on the cake."

The dinner raised more than £40,000 towards Clan's target of £3million for a new cancer support centre.

In September, he donated a signed guitar to a silent auction to raise money for Breast Cancer Care.

Oasis play the final Scottish date of their Dig Out Your Soul tour in Glasgow tonight.

Source: www.dailyrecord.co.uk

Oasis In Glasgow Day One

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Setlist from last nights show in Glasgow.

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
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.

Oasis Live From Cologne

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Friday 7th November @ 7PM (UK)

JENNY GREENE WITH OASIS LIVE FROM COLOGNE FROM 8PM (UK).

At last Oasis play that date that was cancelled due to Noel's onstage injury. Originally scheduled on September 29 to tie in with the release "Dig Out Your Soul" , Oasis play a special show at the intimate Gloria Theatre in Cologne before 600 fans.

Jenny introduces the live and exclusive show from 8, the full show is also live on various radio stations all over Europe.

Recorded by WDR Eins live for the Eurosonic Partnership of the EBU.

Listen live on the night by clicking here.

Source: www.rte.ie

Win Some Oasis 'Dig Out Your Soul' Artcards

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Pre-order the bundle at recordstore.co.uk and you will be entered into a prize draw to win one of 15 exclusive 'Dig Out Your Soul' 12" x 12" artcards.*

This multi-buy offer pack contains the following products:
Oasis: I'm Outta Time - 7 inch single - normal price £2.99
Oasis: I'm Outta Time - 7 inch single - normal price £2.99
Oasis: I'm Outta Time - CD Single - normal price £3.99

*no purchase necessary. Alternatively enter by post to: 'Oasis Competition', The Manager, recordstore.co.uk, Unit 5 Waldo Works, Waldo Road, London NW10 6AW

Click here for more information.

Free Oasis Posters Inside This Weeks NME Magazine

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The votes have been cast and the results are in - no, it's not the Presidential Election - it's the 2008 NME Cool List in this week's mag, on sale Wednesday November 5. Plus, get your hands on exclusive Oasis posters with pictures from their tour.

WHAT 'Access All Areas' treats and revelations did NME uncover on the Oasis tour?

Source: www.nme.com

NME Cool List 2008 Announced

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Find out who made the cut and have your say on this year's run-down

Crystal Castles frontwoman Alice Glass has topped the NME Cool List 2008.

The crowd-surfing singer beat the likes of Jay-Z, Arctic Monkeys' Alex Turner and MIA to the top spot.

The full run-down of the top 50 is available to check out now on the NME Office Blog.

Jay-Z topped off a year in which he defied his deriders to headline Glastonbury by bagging the Number Two spot ahead of MGMT's Andrew VanWyngarden and Turner, who are third and fourth, respectively.

Late Of The Pier's Sam Dust, Ladyhawke, Caleb Followill of Kings Of Leon and MIA came in fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth respectively, with Oasis' Liam Gallagher returning to the Top Ten at Number Nine.

Liam is one place ahead of Glasvegas' enigmatic drummer Caroline McKay – who supported the Manchester legends at the Gallaghers' recent London Roundhouse gig and pipped bandmate James Allan to make the cut.

See the NME Office Blog for the complete NME writer's Cool List 2008.

Plus have your say about who you think should have made the list at the NME readers' Cool List page.

Watch NMETV on Wednesday (November 5) for a special Cool List countdown programme from 9pm (GMT) on Sky Channel 382 (repeated on Saturday, November 8 at 9pm).

The top 20 entries in the NME Cool List 2008 are:

01. Alice Glass, Crystal Castles
02. Jay-Z
03. Andrew VanWyngarden, MGMT
04. Alex Turner, Arctic Monkeys/The Last Shadow Puppets
05: Sam Dust, Late Of The Pier
06. Ladyhawke
07. Caleb Followill, Kings Of Leon
08. MIA
09. Liam Gallagher, Oasis
10. Caroline McKay, Glasvegas
11. Pink Eyes, Fucked Up
12. Guy Garvey, Elbow
13. Lil Wayne
14. Dave Sitek, TV On The Radio
15. Johnny Marr, The Cribs
16. Ezra Koenig, Vampire Weekend
17. Santogold
18. Ed MacFarlane, Friendly Fires
19. Florence Welch, Florence And The Machine
20. Dev Hynes, Lightspeed Champion

Source: www.nme.com

Liam Makes Surprise Charity Appearance

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Rock superstar Liam Gallagher made a surprise appearance at a north-east charity event before his band Oasis played two nights in Aberdeen.

The band played at the Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre on Saturday and Sunday, but they stayed at the Marcliffe at Pitfodels hotel last Friday, where a dinner was being held for north-east cancer charity Clan.

Mr Gallagher talked to guests, and made a speech adding his support.

Clan’s managing director Debbie Thomson said: “Mr Gallagher’s impromptu visit really enthused the audience. The event as a whole was a great success with some fantastic entertainment, and an appearance from someone with as high a profile as Liam Gallagher was just the icing on the cake.

“His best wishes for our fundraising were also greatly appreciated, particularly as our cause is so close to his heart after a cancer-related death in his family.”

The dinner – hosted by Aberdeenshire-based company RB Farquhar – raised more than £40,000 towards Clan’s target of £3million for a new centre and also included entertainment from comedian David Copperfield.

Source: www.pressandjournal.co.uk

Oasis Fan In Stage Invasion

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Oasis almost had deja vu in Aberdeen when a Scots fan took to the stage.

Noel and Liam Gallagher had played their final song when the fan invaded the stage at the Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre.

The fan had to be wrestled off as Liam and Noel departed - in a move which echoed Oasis's onstage onslaught in Toronto, Canada, in September.

A spokesman for the venue said: "A fan got on the stage at the weekend at the very end of the set.

"The band were making their way off the stage and the fan was caught before they could do anything."

Grampian Police say no one has been charged over the incident.

Source: www.dailyrecord.co.uk
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