Beady Eye
Liam Gallagher
Noel Gallagher
Oasis
Liam Gallagher has done his second U-turn in a month.
He poured p*** on talent shows then appeared on The Voice.
Now he is heading for Glastonbury this weekend with Beady Eye.
Liam and the band will play a surprise gig at the festival on Somerset’s Worthy Farm — after he vowed never to go back.
I know what day and stage their midday set will be on but am NOT giving away the secret.
Oasis headlined at Glasto in 2004 but the event really wound up the frontman Noel once described as “the man with a fork in a world of soup”.
Liam later said: “The sound is s*** and really quiet. You can hear the crowd talking while you’re playing. They don’t put any money into the PA and it’s just full of f***ing idiots.
“Now it’s like Bond Street with mud, with loads of celebrities walking around in their boots and umbrellas.
“I’m not having it.”
Source: www.thesun.co.uk
Beady Eye To Play At This Weekend's Glastonbury Festival?
Liam Gallagher has done his second U-turn in a month.
He poured p*** on talent shows then appeared on The Voice.
Now he is heading for Glastonbury this weekend with Beady Eye.
Liam and the band will play a surprise gig at the festival on Somerset’s Worthy Farm — after he vowed never to go back.
I know what day and stage their midday set will be on but am NOT giving away the secret.
Oasis headlined at Glasto in 2004 but the event really wound up the frontman Noel once described as “the man with a fork in a world of soup”.
Liam later said: “The sound is s*** and really quiet. You can hear the crowd talking while you’re playing. They don’t put any money into the PA and it’s just full of f***ing idiots.
“Now it’s like Bond Street with mud, with loads of celebrities walking around in their boots and umbrellas.
“I’m not having it.”
Source: www.thesun.co.uk
Beady Eye
Kanye West
Liam Gallagher
Noel Gallagher
Oasis
Paul Gallagher
Robbie Williams
Liam Gallagher does not even have his brother Noel’s phone number, the Beady Eye singer has revealed.
The feud between the former Oasis bandmates has raged unabated since Noel walked out of the group in 2009 after claiming he “could not go on working with Liam a day longer”.
In an interview with Radio 5 Live’s Phil Williams, Liam was asked why he did not simply call his brother to talk things through.
“I haven't got his number,” he replied, adding that he doesn’t have a number for his older brother Paul, despite the fact they are still speaking.
“I haven’t got me other brother’s number that I talk to, either. I haven’t got many people’s numbers,” he said.
Liam went on to talk about his bitter relationship with Noel.
“I’ve got nothing to say to him. Not interested in the slightest right now,” he said.
“I’ve not banished him. He hasn’t seen my kids, I haven't seen his kids, and that happens when two people who are stupid talk s**** about each other.
“It's not like Noel’s knocking at my door with a box of chocolates and a bunch of flowers going ‘Speak to me’ and I’m going ‘No’. We’re just not getting on at the moment.”
In a recent interview with the Independent on Sunday, Liam claimed that Noel had been planning Oasis’s split “for years”.
Other promotional engagements for Beady Eye’s new album BE have seen Liam hurl insults at rapper Kanye West and old enemy Robbie Williams.
But Williams hit back this week, saying: “The interviews are better than the records at the minute. I really enjoy the interviews. Liam is like an episode of Star Stories.”
Source: www.independent.co.uk
Liam Gallagher Reveals He Doesn't Have Any Of His Brothers Phone Numbers
Liam Gallagher does not even have his brother Noel’s phone number, the Beady Eye singer has revealed.
The feud between the former Oasis bandmates has raged unabated since Noel walked out of the group in 2009 after claiming he “could not go on working with Liam a day longer”.
In an interview with Radio 5 Live’s Phil Williams, Liam was asked why he did not simply call his brother to talk things through.
“I haven't got his number,” he replied, adding that he doesn’t have a number for his older brother Paul, despite the fact they are still speaking.
“I haven’t got me other brother’s number that I talk to, either. I haven’t got many people’s numbers,” he said.
Liam went on to talk about his bitter relationship with Noel.
“I’ve got nothing to say to him. Not interested in the slightest right now,” he said.
“I’ve not banished him. He hasn’t seen my kids, I haven't seen his kids, and that happens when two people who are stupid talk s**** about each other.
“It's not like Noel’s knocking at my door with a box of chocolates and a bunch of flowers going ‘Speak to me’ and I’m going ‘No’. We’re just not getting on at the moment.”
In a recent interview with the Independent on Sunday, Liam claimed that Noel had been planning Oasis’s split “for years”.
Other promotional engagements for Beady Eye’s new album BE have seen Liam hurl insults at rapper Kanye West and old enemy Robbie Williams.
But Williams hit back this week, saying: “The interviews are better than the records at the minute. I really enjoy the interviews. Liam is like an episode of Star Stories.”
Source: www.independent.co.uk
Beady Eye
Click here for a number of pictures of Beady Eye who were at Radio Deejay in Italy earlier today.
Thanks to AG
Gallery: Beady Eye At Radio Deejay
Click here for a number of pictures of Beady Eye who were at Radio Deejay in Italy earlier today.
Thanks to AG
Kasabian
Miles Kane
Paul Weller
The Cribs
This Feeling
What with KASABIAN playing the very first EVER gig at the Olympic Park it seemed only right we put on the very first THIS FEELING warehouse party afterwards!
THIS FEELING's first ever warehouse party shall be taking place after KASABIAN, PAUL WELLER, THE CRIBS and MILES KANE have destroyed the HARD ROCK CALLING festival. It's around 20 minutes door to door on the tube from the Olympic Park to This Feeling (Stratford to Bethnal Green nearest tube stations) and goes on till 6am...
£8 adv tickets available HERE.
This Feeling First Ever Warehouse Party
What with KASABIAN playing the very first EVER gig at the Olympic Park it seemed only right we put on the very first THIS FEELING warehouse party afterwards!
THIS FEELING's first ever warehouse party shall be taking place after KASABIAN, PAUL WELLER, THE CRIBS and MILES KANE have destroyed the HARD ROCK CALLING festival. It's around 20 minutes door to door on the tube from the Olympic Park to This Feeling (Stratford to Bethnal Green nearest tube stations) and goes on till 6am...
£8 adv tickets available HERE.
Beady Eye
Listen below to Beady Eye's interview that was broadcast today on The Breakfast Club.
Thanks to AG
Listen Again To Beady Eye On The Breakfast Club
Listen below to Beady Eye's interview that was broadcast today on The Breakfast Club.
Thanks to AG
Beady Eye
Gem Archer
Liam Gallagher
Oasis
Robbie Williams

Former Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher says his new band Beady Eye should be playing big stadiums like the Etihad rather than "fat idiot" Robbie Williams.
Hear the rest of the interview, including Liam talking about his brother Noel, on Monday 24 June from 22.30 (UK Time).
Click here to listen live.
Listen To Beady Eye's Interview With '5 Live' Later Today

Former Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher says his new band Beady Eye should be playing big stadiums like the Etihad rather than "fat idiot" Robbie Williams.
Hear the rest of the interview, including Liam talking about his brother Noel, on Monday 24 June from 22.30 (UK Time).
Click here to listen live.
Andy Bell
Beady Eye
chris Sharrock
Dave Sitek
Gem Archer
Liam Gallagher
Steve Lillywhite
On Beady Eye’s new album, BE, Liam Gallagher takes the biggest risk of his career.
For two decades, the former Oasis frontman has done what he knows best – sing straight-up ‘60s-influenced rock ‘n’ roll songs.
When Oasis imploded in 2009, Liam – and latter-day Oasis members Andy Bell, Gem Archer and drummer Chris Sharrock – saw no reason to stray from that formula.
While Noel, the man behind the band’s biggest hits, went out on his own as Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, the remaining three formed Beady Eye.
Their first offering was the solid-but-safe, Steve Lillywhite-produced debut, Different Gear Still Speeding. Featuring the catchy Instant Karma-sounding single “The Roller” it was, like Liam, ‘60s-obsessed.
However, after a muted response to Different Gear, which was critically and commercially overshadowed by Noel’s album, Beady Eye began to rethink.
According to drummer Chris Sharrock, it was time for a change. Enter TV On The Radio guitarist and trailblazing indie producer, Dave Sitek.
“We didn’t really know much about him,” Sharrock says. “His name was put to us, as in, you know, this guy could be interested.”
Sitek is best known for his production work with hip New Yorkers Yeah Yeah Yeahs. He’s also worked with Foals, Liars and Santigold, and so it would be fair to say, at least on paper, Dave Sitek and Beady Eye have little in common.
“We thought we’d meet him and check him out,” Sharrock continues. “Well, actually we kind of met him 20 minutes before we started recording. And we didn’t really listen to anything he’d done before because we didn’t wanna go in with any … if he’d done something that we didn’t like, you know, it would have been all over.”
Unsurprisingly, working with the experimentally-minded Sitek was vastly different to making their debut.
“He challenged us more,” Sharrock explains. “He said, ‘here you are guys, what about this?’ and ‘why don’t you try that?’”
According to Sharrock, Different Gear Still Speeding producer Steve Lillywhite “didn’t stick it out to the end anyway”, and left the band “running around like headless chickens”. On the other hand, Sitek became like Beady Eye’s “fifth member”.
“He had his little corner of the studio going on and we had our corner. We’d meet in the middle over the coffee machine.”
In the lead-up to the release of this album, Liam Gallagher was typically bold. BE, he said, was the album Oasis should have made after their mega-selling magnum opus, (What’s The Story) Morning Glory?
In production terms, at least, he’s right. BE is the sound a band freed from the shackles of commercial expectations – out of their comfort zone, but loving it.
Take the futuristic album opener, “Flick Of The Finger”, with its aggressive horns, thumping Velvet Underground-like drums, and seize-the-moment lyricism. The same goes for the modern-sounding “Soul Love”, a dark, brooding song Oasis would never have recorded in their pomp. That sense of musical adventure is further explored on spacey tracks like “Don’t Brother Me” and the closing ballad, “Start Anew”.
Essentially, BE showcases a band hungry to carve out their own creative path, an opportunity afforded to them by the departure of Noel.
“Everyone has to step up and bring more songs in as opposed to just learning them,” Sharrock says. “There’s a lot of creativity going on, we’re always jamming. We’ve got three or four new tunes already – they’re very rough sort of jams but there’s something there. There’s three writers in the band so there’s never a shortage of songs.”
Sharrock continues: “After the last gig on the last tour we said, ‘right we’re gonna have three months off’. After about a week and a half everyone was like, ‘should we do something, should we get together?’ We can never leave it alone for too long, this is just what we do.”
Their unshakable enthusiasm is impressive given that, for part of 2011, the band was like a “rudderless ship”.
“The last management bailed in the middle of that tour,” Sharrock explains. “We went a couple of weeks without management. It was a shit thing to do but I didn’t really look at them as management anyway. They were just people who booked my cab and train. There was no love lost for me.”
Either way, things are well truly back on track now. The band is getting set to hit the road for a string of UK shows and festivals. Having missed Australia on their previous world tour (and on the last Oasis tour), Sharrock confirms that the band is “definitely” coming here this time around.
Not only that, they’ll coming with a couple of Oasis songs up their sleeves – they’ve been rehearsing “Morning Glory” and “Rock ‘n’ Roll Star” – and with new touring bassist and former Kasabian member Jay Mehler.
“He’s a great guy,” Sharrock says. “We were sorry to lose Jeff [Wooten] because he was kind of there from the start, but Jay’s doing a great job. We know him anyway, we’ve known him a few years through Kasabian and it’s great having him around.”
Meanwhile, with the album and tour cycle in full swing, Liam has been whipping up a storm in the British tabloids. Notable stories include his claim he could’ve written Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky” in an hour, and reports he tried to ride a dog during a particularly boozy night at the pub.
“I wasn’t with him that night but I heard him talking about it,” Sharrock says, already laughing. “He was like, ‘fuckin’ hell this is a load of bollocks. It wasn’t a dog, it was a pig’. You never know with him. You never stop laughing, laughing or crying.”
And as for the constant ‘will they, won’t they?’ Oasis reformation rumours, Sharrock says he’s not the man with the answer.
“I’m kind of last on the list,” he laughs. “I’ll go with the flow. We never speak about it and we never think about it amongst ourselves. Especially me, it’s got nothing really to do with me.” But if they’re getting back together, I’m available.”
Beady Eye might always be known as Oasis minus Noel Gallagher, but as they’re now proving, that needn’t be a disadvantage. Instead, it can be an exciting point of difference.
Source: www.tonedeaf.com.au
Beady Eye On Dave Sitek, Oasis And More
On Beady Eye’s new album, BE, Liam Gallagher takes the biggest risk of his career.
For two decades, the former Oasis frontman has done what he knows best – sing straight-up ‘60s-influenced rock ‘n’ roll songs.
When Oasis imploded in 2009, Liam – and latter-day Oasis members Andy Bell, Gem Archer and drummer Chris Sharrock – saw no reason to stray from that formula.
While Noel, the man behind the band’s biggest hits, went out on his own as Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, the remaining three formed Beady Eye.
Their first offering was the solid-but-safe, Steve Lillywhite-produced debut, Different Gear Still Speeding. Featuring the catchy Instant Karma-sounding single “The Roller” it was, like Liam, ‘60s-obsessed.
However, after a muted response to Different Gear, which was critically and commercially overshadowed by Noel’s album, Beady Eye began to rethink.
According to drummer Chris Sharrock, it was time for a change. Enter TV On The Radio guitarist and trailblazing indie producer, Dave Sitek.
“We didn’t really know much about him,” Sharrock says. “His name was put to us, as in, you know, this guy could be interested.”
Sitek is best known for his production work with hip New Yorkers Yeah Yeah Yeahs. He’s also worked with Foals, Liars and Santigold, and so it would be fair to say, at least on paper, Dave Sitek and Beady Eye have little in common.
“We thought we’d meet him and check him out,” Sharrock continues. “Well, actually we kind of met him 20 minutes before we started recording. And we didn’t really listen to anything he’d done before because we didn’t wanna go in with any … if he’d done something that we didn’t like, you know, it would have been all over.”
Unsurprisingly, working with the experimentally-minded Sitek was vastly different to making their debut.
“He challenged us more,” Sharrock explains. “He said, ‘here you are guys, what about this?’ and ‘why don’t you try that?’”
According to Sharrock, Different Gear Still Speeding producer Steve Lillywhite “didn’t stick it out to the end anyway”, and left the band “running around like headless chickens”. On the other hand, Sitek became like Beady Eye’s “fifth member”.
“He had his little corner of the studio going on and we had our corner. We’d meet in the middle over the coffee machine.”
In the lead-up to the release of this album, Liam Gallagher was typically bold. BE, he said, was the album Oasis should have made after their mega-selling magnum opus, (What’s The Story) Morning Glory?
In production terms, at least, he’s right. BE is the sound a band freed from the shackles of commercial expectations – out of their comfort zone, but loving it.
Take the futuristic album opener, “Flick Of The Finger”, with its aggressive horns, thumping Velvet Underground-like drums, and seize-the-moment lyricism. The same goes for the modern-sounding “Soul Love”, a dark, brooding song Oasis would never have recorded in their pomp. That sense of musical adventure is further explored on spacey tracks like “Don’t Brother Me” and the closing ballad, “Start Anew”.
Essentially, BE showcases a band hungry to carve out their own creative path, an opportunity afforded to them by the departure of Noel.
“Everyone has to step up and bring more songs in as opposed to just learning them,” Sharrock says. “There’s a lot of creativity going on, we’re always jamming. We’ve got three or four new tunes already – they’re very rough sort of jams but there’s something there. There’s three writers in the band so there’s never a shortage of songs.”
Sharrock continues: “After the last gig on the last tour we said, ‘right we’re gonna have three months off’. After about a week and a half everyone was like, ‘should we do something, should we get together?’ We can never leave it alone for too long, this is just what we do.”
Their unshakable enthusiasm is impressive given that, for part of 2011, the band was like a “rudderless ship”.
“The last management bailed in the middle of that tour,” Sharrock explains. “We went a couple of weeks without management. It was a shit thing to do but I didn’t really look at them as management anyway. They were just people who booked my cab and train. There was no love lost for me.”
Either way, things are well truly back on track now. The band is getting set to hit the road for a string of UK shows and festivals. Having missed Australia on their previous world tour (and on the last Oasis tour), Sharrock confirms that the band is “definitely” coming here this time around.
Not only that, they’ll coming with a couple of Oasis songs up their sleeves – they’ve been rehearsing “Morning Glory” and “Rock ‘n’ Roll Star” – and with new touring bassist and former Kasabian member Jay Mehler.
“He’s a great guy,” Sharrock says. “We were sorry to lose Jeff [Wooten] because he was kind of there from the start, but Jay’s doing a great job. We know him anyway, we’ve known him a few years through Kasabian and it’s great having him around.”
Meanwhile, with the album and tour cycle in full swing, Liam has been whipping up a storm in the British tabloids. Notable stories include his claim he could’ve written Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky” in an hour, and reports he tried to ride a dog during a particularly boozy night at the pub.
“I wasn’t with him that night but I heard him talking about it,” Sharrock says, already laughing. “He was like, ‘fuckin’ hell this is a load of bollocks. It wasn’t a dog, it was a pig’. You never know with him. You never stop laughing, laughing or crying.”
And as for the constant ‘will they, won’t they?’ Oasis reformation rumours, Sharrock says he’s not the man with the answer.
“I’m kind of last on the list,” he laughs. “I’ll go with the flow. We never speak about it and we never think about it amongst ourselves. Especially me, it’s got nothing really to do with me.” But if they’re getting back together, I’m available.”
Beady Eye might always be known as Oasis minus Noel Gallagher, but as they’re now proving, that needn’t be a disadvantage. Instead, it can be an exciting point of difference.
Source: www.tonedeaf.com.au
Beady Eye
Gem Archer
Liam Gallagher
Listen to an interview with Beady Eye's Liam Gallagher and Gem Archer on 'The Breakfast Club with Chris Bell & Colin James' tomorrow morning.
The show is broadcast from 7am till 10am (UK Time) to listen to the show live click here.
Join Beady Eye On The Breakfast Club Tomorrow Morning
Listen to an interview with Beady Eye's Liam Gallagher and Gem Archer on 'The Breakfast Club with Chris Bell & Colin James' tomorrow morning.
The show is broadcast from 7am till 10am (UK Time) to listen to the show live click here.
Beady Eye
Liam Gallagher
Noel Gallagher
Oasis
Robbie Williams
Take That
Singer slams Beady Eye album BE after ex-Oasis frontman's foul-mouthed rant.
Robbie Williams has had a pop back at Liam Gallagher after the ex-Oasis frontman reignited their bitter feud.
Liam called him a “f***ing fat f***ing idiot” in jealousy over Robbie playing four nights at Man City’s Etihad Stadium this week.
But the Take That star has retaliated by saying he wished Beady Eye’s music was as good as Liam’s chat.
Robbie said: “The interviews are better than the records at the minute. I really enjoy the interviews. Liam is like an episode of Star Stories.” He then laid into some of the songs on new Beady Eye album BE, saying: “The production is really good. There are a couple of tunes that would have been f***ing amazing if they had a chorus.
“Flick Of The Finger, nearly a great tune. Start Anew, if that had a chorus, but there is no chorus.”
It’s not just Liam who’s battled with Robbie, his brother and former Oasis bandmate NOEL has too.
His most famous dig was calling Rob “the fat dancer from Take That”.
But that’s water under the bridge.
Robbie’s full of praise for Noel these days — he thinks Beady Eye would succeed if he was on board. He added: “They are missing The General. I’ve heard Second Bite Of The Apple, I don’t know why nobody said anything.
“When you listen to them (songs on the album) you think, ‘Please put a chorus in — it will be brilliant.’ They are not going to have a character brave enough to tell Liam that.”
At the Brit Awards back in 2000 Robbie offered to fight Liam on live TV for a charity purse of £100,000.
Noel should step in to try to make that a reality.
After this year’s belting run of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, Noel has experience in curating events.
Robbie and Liam going toe-to-toe with a fortune given to charity?
Silly idea.
Source: www.thesun.co.uk
Robbie Williams Slams Beady Eye's New Album 'BE'
Singer slams Beady Eye album BE after ex-Oasis frontman's foul-mouthed rant.
Robbie Williams has had a pop back at Liam Gallagher after the ex-Oasis frontman reignited their bitter feud.
Liam called him a “f***ing fat f***ing idiot” in jealousy over Robbie playing four nights at Man City’s Etihad Stadium this week.
But the Take That star has retaliated by saying he wished Beady Eye’s music was as good as Liam’s chat.
Robbie said: “The interviews are better than the records at the minute. I really enjoy the interviews. Liam is like an episode of Star Stories.” He then laid into some of the songs on new Beady Eye album BE, saying: “The production is really good. There are a couple of tunes that would have been f***ing amazing if they had a chorus.
“Flick Of The Finger, nearly a great tune. Start Anew, if that had a chorus, but there is no chorus.”
It’s not just Liam who’s battled with Robbie, his brother and former Oasis bandmate NOEL has too.
His most famous dig was calling Rob “the fat dancer from Take That”.
But that’s water under the bridge.
Robbie’s full of praise for Noel these days — he thinks Beady Eye would succeed if he was on board. He added: “They are missing The General. I’ve heard Second Bite Of The Apple, I don’t know why nobody said anything.
“When you listen to them (songs on the album) you think, ‘Please put a chorus in — it will be brilliant.’ They are not going to have a character brave enough to tell Liam that.”
At the Brit Awards back in 2000 Robbie offered to fight Liam on live TV for a charity purse of £100,000.
Noel should step in to try to make that a reality.
After this year’s belting run of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, Noel has experience in curating events.
Robbie and Liam going toe-to-toe with a fortune given to charity?
Silly idea.
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