The reunion to end all reunions is set to take place this Friday. That's when the Britpop band Oasis gets together for a five-month world tour kicking off in Cardiff, Wales, officially marking the end of the yearslong feud between bandmates and brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher.
The best way to celebrate this almost too-good-to-be-true run of shows is to dive into the band's rich catalog. Even if you know the hits and have committed their unimpeachable run of mid-'90s albums to memory â looking at you, 1994âs âDefinitely Maybe,â 1995's â(Whatâs the Story) Morning Glory?â and 1997's âBe Here Nowâ â there's so much more to dive into. And that's why The Associated Press has created a playlist of megahits and beloved B-sides alike.
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Read on and then listen to all of the tracks on our Spotify playlist.
âSupersonicâ (1994)
Where better to begin than at the beginning? Oasis' first single, âSupersonic,â what would later appear on their landmark debut album âDefinitely, Maybe," immediately establishes an idiosyncratic band's sound: Britpop that would soon grow massive. Their songs sounded like the Beatles performed with the edgy intensity of the Sex Pistols, as a popular description by the English press suggested at the time. (Remember when they called this band âThe Sex Beatlesâ? No?)
âLive Foreverâ (1994)
From the jump, Noel emerged a prolific songwriter with unrivaled talent â so much so, that when he first played âLive Foreverâ for his bandmates, even they couldn't believe he'd written such a massive tune. The song's malleable structure â and its deviation from major chords to a minor on in its last chorus â gives it an incomplete feeling. It perfectly mirrors the song's message. âMaybe youâre the same as me / We see things theyâll never see,â Liam sings. âYou and I are gonna live forever.â
âWonderwallâ (1995)
Before âWonderwallâ entered popular consciousness as the No. 1 song choice of dudes with acoustic guitars at house parties aiming to serenade the uninterested, it was a simply ... one of the best contemporary rock ânâ roll songs ever recorded. The track that appears on the mythmaking record â(Whatâs the Story) Morning Glory?â is known the world over. Stateside, it may even be more popular than the band itself. No celebration of Oasis is complete without it.
âDon't Look Back in Angerâ (1995)
It is a bar ballad that plays out, effortlessly, like the timeless classic it became. Is there a better full-throated karaoke song than âDon't Look Back in Anger,â with its fierce, self-referential spirit? âPlease donât put your life in the hands / Of a rock ânâ roll band / Who'll throw it all away," you'll sway and scream-sing with a friend, preferably with a pint in hand.
âChampagne Supernovaâ (1995)
This playlist could've been every song on â(Whatâs the Story) Morning Glory?" listed in sequential order, and it would make for a truly enjoyable and diverse listening experience. Cut to the oddly psychedelic âChampagne Supernova,â and its easter-egg inclusion of one of the Gallagher brothers' favorite guitarists, The Jam's Paul Weller.
âTalk Tonightâ (1995)
It is a story diehard Oasis fans have long committed to memory: During the band's first tour of the United States, in 1994, after a drug-addled performance at Los Angeles' infamous Whiskey a Go Go rock club, Noel decided he had enough and abandoned his band for San Francisco. Their tour manager found him by checking hotel call logs â the songwriter was hiding out with a woman he had met at their show in the Bay Area a few days prior. The experience inspired Noel to write âTalk Tonight,â on which he takes over lead vocals.
âAcquiesceâ (1995.... and 1998)
Few bands have B-sides as memorable as their singles. The Mancunian group have a number, but widely agreed upon as one of the all-time greatest is âAcquiesce,â originally released as the B-side to the 1995 hit âSome Might Say,â and later featured on the B-side compilation album, 1998âs âThe Masterplan.â It is an ascendent power pop record, a forever fan favorite, and one where Noel and Liam get along ... at least, on the mic, taking turns singing the verse and chorus.
âDâYou Know What I Mean?â (1997)
It is not all Beatles worship and transformative rock ballads for Oasis. Well, OK, there's still some Beatles worship. Enter âD'You Know What I Mean?â a 7 ½-minute detour of backwards vocals and distortion from their album âBe Here Now.â They're challenging their listeners and themselves here. And it works.
âThe Hindu Timesâ (2002)
Later Oasis â particularly the '00s albums â is often overlooked. It is understandable, but that music is not without their charms. Thatâs especially true of the psychedelic track, âThe Hindu Timesâ from âHeathen Chemistry."
âLylaâ (2005)
âLyla,â from their penultimate album âDonât Believe the Truth,â is pogo pop; a late-in-their-career arena anthem. The popular fan folklore is that Lyla is a real person, the sister to Sally from âDon't Look Back in Anger.â If that's the truth, then Lyla clearly got the better end of the deal. âShe's the queen of all Iâve seen,â as Liam sings. Compare that to âAnd so, Sally can wait,â from the better-known track and, well, who wouldn't want to be Lyla?
