One of my close friends who’s also a sound engineer worked at the Boardwalk in the 90s. He told me a story years ago that Oasis would rehearse the same song day after day for hours. One day when he was walking past the rehearsal room the band used, another band had pinned a note to the door that said “play another song! “
Trying to keep it simple: - The best rock singer/front man in history - A Genius songwriter - Huge help from an experienced band (the Real People) - A songwriter not afraid to rip off others to get where he wanted to be - Attitude and appearance
I’m amazed to learn how disciplined and dedicated they were with rehearsals in this period. Quite a contrast to the chaos and hell raising they became known for later - if only they had stuck to this level of focus throughout their success.
To be Honest, What I wonder the most is Oasis's transition between Heathen Chesmtry to Dig Out Your Soul. You have this lovely quasi comeback album Don't Believe the Truth but eventually something went wrong particularly between DBTT and DOYS.
It is always played out that Liam was or became impossible but i genuinely think he loved and looked up to his brother giving Noel the power that he ended up with ❤
Saw them play in 1994 in Liverpool and it was a perfect storm. I know they got a new drummer and made a bigger second album - I saw them at Maine Road and they were brilliant. But that first one was hard to beat and felt like a perfect storm. It was pure energy and they needed each other. I took my mate’s fiancé and as soon as Liam walked on and he said… I wanna be him. And that was it. The songs were full on, Noel had all of his talent but Liam absolutely had the crowd in the palm of his hand. I never saw them after Maine Road. I had no interest in going to Knebworth and after that I rarely bought an album. But I’ve listened to the first one and the B sides a fair bit recreantly and they have brought back a few memories. I can understand why younger generations are listening to them.
Another layer to Noel’s joining was his relationship with Mark Coyle, the Inspials sound engineer. When they were on tour Coyle spent time unpicking Beatles and early Bee Gees songs. Noel would spend sound checks playing embryonic Oasis songs on Graham Lambert’s guitar whilst sitting on the drum riser.
One of the big factors for me is that they stuck together as a unit once Liam and Noel had joined. Most bands spend half the time replacing the bass player, or finding a new drummer. If you can keep a stable lineup to begin with then you are halfway there in my opinion (obviously there has to be some talent and ability too!)
I have been looking forward to this video! I think I'm going to wait to watch it, savoring it like a fine bottle of wine until the moment is just right.
The only time I recall playing the boardwalk was in September 1992 with Blackburn band 3 men gone mad supporting Paris Angels...in the soundcheck I saw from the stage Liam walking across the room, his familiar style from having come upstairs from the rehearsal room spiff in hand with a plume of pot smoke following him. I recognized him as id seen Oasis support hooky's band revenge at Middleton hippodrome in April of the same year
@@emmahewitt3754 I though I'd replied to this comment? Seems to have disappeared...I remember the inspirals turning up and the fact that they didn't have any tunes I recognized in their later releases...not sure if they'd hooked up the real people at that point...I know Tony and Chris and their influence was huge on Oasis
It's a pretty amazing transition because without Noel they would have got nowhere near a record deal. If you listen to their early material, it is like a mediocre baggy pastiche band, even though Liam's voice is still decent. I don't mind some of that stuff, but it would never have been commercially viable.
Another factor in this period was the decline of Madchester. Happy Mondays did the Steven Wells interview in Nov 91 which torpedoed their career. The Roses had disappeared and their wasn’t much in terms of innovative groups coming up other than Northside. A year before London A&R men were being sent up to Manc to look for the next big thing, if Oasis had been coming through a year earlier they may have been signed. As it was the scene was turning its back on the city. Ironically this bought Oasis time to develop every aspect of their game.
@@Surv1ve_ThriveI am aware of that. Barbados, the inner fracturing of the band, drugs(obviously), song publishing rights and the ominous implosion of Factory all played a part. But in November 91 pop culture was turning against Manchester and in a perverse and minor way did Oasis a favour.
I saw the Inspirals twice in 1992, once in February and once in November. Both shows at the Barrowland Ballroom. We saw Noel onstage at the first gig tweaking something and a cheer went up because he was mistaken for Clint Boon. By the time of the November gig the stage show was scaled right down, with all the samples and whatnot absent. I'm guessing that Noel must have been gone by then.
Great video mate. It would be very interesting to see which stories from those early days a movie studio would pick if they ever made a biography about them.
Awesome Video James. Great work and research. It's interesting how Noel comes across as a laidback "don't give a shit' type of guy, but he must have been obviously very ambitious and highly driven. I saw an interview Noel did on Parkinson where he says they were on the road for 3 years straight, playing the toilets - from 91' to 94' - before they were signed and released their first album. This is a half truth and one of Noel's "stories". But to be fair, it would be interesting to know why, if they were signed in MAY 1993, it took so long to start recording Definitely Maybe. I heard somewhere that Alan McGee thought they needed more live work to tighten the band up and set out to get them as many gigs as possible. They probably played more gigs from June - Dec 1993 than they ever did all through 1991, 1992 and the first half of 93'.
Hey man would you be able to do a video explaining some of the tones from the first album? I’ve hit a wall trying to replicate definitely maybe and it’s driving me crazy. Mainly supersonic, Columbia and cloudburst? Love the videos keep up the great work
Have you watched Noel Gallagher on That Pedal Show? he plays through the actual Marshall valve state and WEM combo that was used all through definitely maybe.. it’s quite an eye-opener
@@Boleskinebeatz I couldn’t find anything about the amp settings or reverb or anything I think it’s mainly that and perhaps pedal settings I can’t get right
It was the presence of both that made it. No other band had that, they were just blokes stood around. Having both was what made it - the mix of the arrogance of their personalities and the sincerity of their songs
Much more interestnig than after they were signed. The dynamic of the bands relationships are more interesting - more than just Noel did it all and was the boss and they were lucky
I actually think Take Me is a good track. And generally impressed with Liam. Obviously when oasis cant out I didnt think Liam could write songs at all or play guitar (could he?). It's fucking HARD to write a song man. I'm actually impressed.
Yeah, unlikely that he'd accept a gong. Last time he got close to the 'establishment' (vocally supporting Tony Blair, then being invited to a reception at number 10), he was badly burnt.
I’d be upset if he accepted an honour. It’s usually in exchange for agreeing to toe the line when told to, like getting behind vaccination, and crap like that. I think Noel would be smart enough to realise his whole manner is about speaking his mind.
There is also an interview somewhere, I saw the video of it on a documentary, that Alan McGee was actually drunk that night and didnt even remember why he went to the club but didn't want anyone to know he was drunk so he always changed his story to make it seem like there was a reason. The most he remembered that night was a phone call from her that he should come out to hear Sister Lover perform, when he got there it was Oasis on stage but he had no clue who he was hearing and just said it sounded great to hide he was drunk. He didn't know he even asked Noel to his office a later day to discuss the group until Noel showed telling the secretary he had a scheduled meeting. For some reason he wanted people to think he was sober at that club that night so he acted like he remembered scheduling the meeting and forgot to inform his secretary. Supposedly it was this or a next meeting Noel played him Rockin Chair and said if he signed them up that'd be on the second album, which in his notebook of 93 it was.
Whenever I hear The Real Ppl mentioned w Oasis, I shudder. They shafted those guys, who gave them so much. Sad. They improved their guitar effects sounds from that liverpool 1993 demo. Muddy as on the demos..
I think that is overdone. The RP clearly had an influence early on, however, NG's tunes were that good that it allowed them to move beyond that world. Owen Morris is the key figure.
@@thescarletway3458 I disagree. Noel not giving the dude songwriter credit for Columbia, was the final insult. I’m sure the RP could use the money and it would have paid them back a tiny bit.
@@thescarletway3458 I love what Owen Morris did on Diem, but it’s worth remembering that Supersonic is the original recording and production done by the Real People, and that is as Oasis as it gets..
And along with a deep dive on the band’s history of reception in America, I just thought of a related idea for another @JamesHargreavesGuitar deep dive. A history of the Oasis, specifically Noel, vs Phil Collins rivalry, with a focus on the contrast in reception in America for both artists 👍
BRILLIANT documentary. Would love to learn what the band did after the first album release. Did they solo-performed without having much songs? 1 album is ~40 minutes. Were they a supporting band most of the time before the 2nd album release?
By 1994 they were a driven force of their own, the new thing to watch. But yet I believe they still were doing some support acts, after the summer festivals of 1994 and by August, near the date of the release of DM they already were the headline act. Up to August of 1994, the setlist consisted of like 7 songs from DM plus Fade Away and I Am The Walrus, and then from August/September 1994 the setlist was DM in full plus Fade Away and I Am The Walrus. There's a lot of Oasis gigs in youtube to check out.
“A year on the road with Oasis” by Paul Slattery is a great book of photographs and accompanying stories of Oasis throughout their 1994 gigs. It’s crazy watching the gigs get bigger and bigger and the author/photographer telling stories of how the band began to change throughout the year
Ok @JamesHargreavesGuitar you’ve confirmed at the beginning of this video that you respond to fan/follower requests for Oasis subject-specific deep dives. I’ve tried emailing, sending a message on Twitter and leaving a comment on your TH-cam video about Oasis’ rivalry with REM So once again, could you do a deep dive on the history of reception in America for not only Oasis, but Noel (and maybe Liam) Gallagher as well? I think that would be something that Oasis fans, especially in America, would appreciate. I'm not only a massive Oasis fan in America, but a massive fan of music from Northern England of the 80s and 90s, specifically artists on the Factory and Creation Records rosters Additionally, I was watching a TH-cam video of highlights from MTV's 1996 Video Music Awards, and it gave me a couple of ideas for some possible future content on your channel Watching this video made me think of a couple of things: how 1996 was absolutely the peak year of popularity for Oasis, especially in America, how the only band in America that could compete with Oasis in 96 for the title of Biggest Band in the World was the Smashing Pumpkins and how Oasis, despite their great and enduring music, never achieved a certain level of popularity in America that other massively successful British bands have achieved So I thought of a couple of fun ideas for future videos you could do. One would be doing a deep dive on the history of reception in America for not only Oasis, but also Noel (and Liam) Gallagher, and another idea could be discussing how there was a subtle rivalry between Oasis and the Smashing Pumpkins in 96, as evidenced by how the Smashing Pumpkins swept the 96 VMA's in America and Oasis were the big winner at MTV's Europe Music Awards that year Just a couple of ideas for future content, and I think nobody would do a better deep dive than you!
And I just thought of a related idea for another @JamesHargreavesGuitar deep dive. A history of the Oasis, specifically Noel, vs Phil Collins rivalry, with a focus on the contrast in reception in America for both artists 👍
I started out playing guitar two years ago and because of your video I just realised, that I had never played standing up too. so - thank you! p.s. Can someone lend me a guitar strap?
I have been playing since I was 19. im 46 now and I have now realized that I have never played standing up for more than few minutes, strappless either...
I play bass, and at the beginning I only practiced sitting down, and we had a gig and it was difficult to play standing up, I hadn’t realised. But because it was a light acoustic set, I sat on a tall stool. But I rehearse standing up now.
Hey James do you know if there is any friendship between Noel & ex Chameleons guitarist Dave Fielding ? I guess their isn’t much being I’ve never heard anything said by either but being how Fielding produced Inspiral Carpets & Noel was their drum tech or roadie along with their same home locations & all round being on the same scene at the same time etc wondered if there was any more of a Chameleons / The Reegs / Oasis connection. Love your devotion & insight re the Manc music scene 👍from woods near Bournemouth
I'm sure I've heard the peter hook sound bite on either the cd that accompanied the Benson and hedges cd singles box sets or a cassette by vox magazine called oasis whats the story from the 90's.
hey james, would you ever considering making a video about noel’s lost (well not really lost) solo songs recorded in 1989 pre any band. i think some songs in that tape are amazing and don’t get anywhere near the credit it deserves
James, please can you do a video about the story of Elastica or The Boo Radleys. I don’t care if the video is long or short, I just really want to know the whole story.
Hey James, love what you do Any chance you can document inspiral carpets from thier bogging like ya did with oasis And include how Noel came about working with them and his time in the background of cool as fuck moo!
I find it amazing how those very early tracks almost sounded at best Oasis-lite, at worst a dodgy mid 90s parody of the band. Taking the obvious jump in class in songwriting aside with Noel arriving, Liam's vocal range and delivery improved immeasurably in the space of just two years.
The brothers have proved time and again the only way this works is if they are all in. It wouldn't have worked without Noels tenacity and songwriting(Beady Eye anyone?) and it just doesn't work without Liams swagger. I love how Noel was Brian Epstein and McCartney rolled into one and Liam was pure 100% John Lennon. I am still amazed how glossed over they were in the states. Given Noels stick to it ness I am going to assume it just did NOT matter that much to him.
They were so big in Latin America, Europe & Japan, that they didn't see the States as the be and end all like a lot of other British Bands did at the time. The U.S Media didn't appreciate that as they liked dishing out but not being given anything back.
James do you think noel used liam as a scape goat becaues he had alot of ear worms (noel you would do a lot better solo (oop's) there was a rumor about sara liam was not the first mentioned it. noel used a a roumor to do what he wanted to do
They were lucky they grew up in Manchester; with all those connections so close by. If they were born somewhere like Suffolk it would've been hard to find the incentive for jamming! And for putting your all into it. (Not to take anything away from them.)
ayup, the big JH, mr lottery ticket. someone’s made a vid like this already. There’s is better cuz they haven’t made a rivalry with a fucking mobile network. cheers x ps. can I get free tickets to ur next show
Awesome video as usual! Somebody please answer me this though: How is it possible that the video of All Around The World is from '92? The band played the gear they purchased after they got signed, Liam sang with the vocal techniques he developed with the Real People and Bonehead had far less hair than on any photos from '92. They already looked and sounded the same they did in Gleneagles, and not at all like the recordings of Must Be The Music or Better Let You Know.
@@generalcustard1 Yes, before that he used a blue Strat and Noel had a cheap Epiphone EA-250. But to me - as a balding man - the ultimate proof is Bonehead's hair. Look up the band's first photo session from 1992 and see what I'm talking about :) There's no way that rehearsal footage is from the same year.
@@generalcustard1It was recorded on the 14th of September 1993. Brian Cannon mentions it was recorded before their gig at the In The City Festival in Manchester, which he was in the audience for.
James, you really need to get the ear of some of the people who were in the music industry at the time Oasis got signed. Its widely known that the myth of Alan McGee viewing Oasis on the stage of King Tut's under a beam of celestial light from heaven shining on the "Saviors of Rock" is utter nonsense. They were already on the radar of record companies, and is alleged were already signed to a development deal. I've been told this from a person who up till recently was extremely high up the ladder in the UK record business.
Hi James, I have a very unrelated question, but on your biggest bands in Britain video, the biggest key was a counter cultural message, what do you think would be counter cultural today. Whatever it is I'll do it
@@CaptainCommonsense142 He's saying the world is so boringly PC now that to be counter culture you'd practically have to become a neo-nazi as an antithesis of the liberal loving antifa culture that is prevalent now. If you didn't get what he meant you're either too young or too stupid to do anything of any cultural impact.
The songwriter wrote some decent bits and the frontman looked good on a big screen, but it was Paul and Tony that made the magic and laid down the groove and gave the best album its sound and its feel. Tony and Paul were the dogs bollocks, man.
I think Noel was just really smart - took stuff from the inspirals, real people, used contacts like Johnny Marr etc - and did similar with songwriting taking best bits from here and there. Plus having an amazing singer as a brother
Liam was pretty tone deaf on those early demos. It's hard to believe he mastered his voice so excellently just a few years later, only to lose it all, then kind of get it back again.
I can't find the interview, but Noel did say once that in their early days, a lot of the early demo's were in the wrong key when originally written/rehearsed. Once that problem was fixed, it helped the development of the band go up tenfold.
Noël brought the discipline and direction. Liam was not mature enough to hassle important people. Noel was the right fit and added guitar chops sorely required. Liam unfortunately doe not have much good to say about his mega rich brother even now Noel got the most money even in 2022, £5.4 million in royalties, net some £75 million vs Liam's £5.4 million. He's gone on to form successful bands And need not worry about Noel's sniping from the cheat sheets. On camera in interviews Noel is entertaining and mature. Liam still can't be. Too much of a gobshite which once funny, is now a bit sad. The fuck everything strut, the gratuitous put downs. I'm a late Oasis fan but it's clear Noel had the goods and further along the writer talent, well over Liam. And that must have been difficult given Liam's competitive spirit. Thanks James for another enjoyable video. Great work
Hi James. I don't agree with much of what you say regarding Noel's lyrics and I think you grant him with way more intelligence than he has. I believe the first two albums are written by other people personally. Noel lacks the vocabulary for a start. Anyway, I love your passion and your content generally. You're a class act, Bud. All the very best 😊
One of my close friends who’s also a sound engineer worked at the Boardwalk in the 90s. He told me a story years ago that Oasis would rehearse the same song day after day for hours.
One day when he was walking past the rehearsal room the band used, another band had pinned a note to the door that said
“play another song! “
Something tells me the other band didn't make it far in their career
You need to record too and listen to how it sounds. Then nip any mistakes then record and it takes time.
and that other band was … Nirvana
Trying to keep it simple:
- The best rock singer/front man in history
- A Genius songwriter
- Huge help from an experienced band (the Real People)
- A songwriter not afraid to rip off others to get where he wanted to be
- Attitude and appearance
@ Yeah near enough
I’m amazed to learn how disciplined and dedicated they were with rehearsals in this period. Quite a contrast to the chaos and hell raising they became known for later - if only they had stuck to this level of focus throughout their success.
To be Honest, What I wonder the most is Oasis's transition between Heathen Chesmtry to Dig Out Your Soul. You have this lovely quasi comeback album Don't Believe the Truth but eventually something went wrong particularly between DBTT and DOYS.
It is always played out that Liam was or became impossible but i genuinely think he loved and looked up to his brother giving Noel the power that he ended up with ❤
Excellent video, thoroughly researched and wonderfully paced. Top job!
Can of coke to James?
Saw them play in 1994 in Liverpool and it was a perfect storm. I know they got a new drummer and made a bigger second album - I saw them at Maine Road and they were brilliant. But that first one was hard to beat and felt like a perfect storm. It was pure energy and they needed each other.
I took my mate’s fiancé and as soon as Liam walked on and he said…
I wanna be him.
And that was it. The songs were full on, Noel had all of his talent but Liam absolutely had the crowd in the palm of his hand.
I never saw them after Maine Road. I had no interest in going to Knebworth and after that I rarely bought an album. But I’ve listened to the first one and the B sides a fair bit recreantly and they have brought back a few memories.
I can understand why younger generations are listening to them.
Very well done, great production there James. 👍🏻
Cheers :)(
Another layer to Noel’s joining was his relationship with Mark Coyle, the Inspials sound engineer. When they were on tour Coyle spent time unpicking Beatles and early Bee Gees songs. Noel would spend sound checks playing embryonic Oasis songs on Graham Lambert’s guitar whilst sitting on the drum riser.
thanks again James you're giving us oasis fans all these great vids
One of the big factors for me is that they stuck together as a unit once Liam and Noel had joined. Most bands spend half the time replacing the bass player, or finding a new drummer. If you can keep a stable lineup to begin with then you are halfway there in my opinion (obviously there has to be some talent and ability too!)
Very true
I have been looking forward to this video! I think I'm going to wait to watch it, savoring it like a fine bottle of wine until the moment is just right.
Another incredibly well put together presentation. !
Thanks.
All these videos are soooo gooood! Inspirational. Deliberately so, I think.
The only time I recall playing the boardwalk was in September 1992 with Blackburn band 3 men gone mad supporting Paris Angels...in the soundcheck I saw from the stage Liam walking across the room, his familiar style from having come upstairs from the rehearsal room spiff in hand with a plume of pot smoke following him. I recognized him as id seen Oasis support hooky's band revenge at Middleton hippodrome in April of the same year
Do you remember much about the April’92 gig Stuart?
@@emmahewitt3754 I though I'd replied to this comment? Seems to have disappeared...I remember the inspirals turning up and the fact that they didn't have any tunes I recognized in their later releases...not sure if they'd hooked up the real people at that point...I know Tony and Chris and their influence was huge on Oasis
Thanks James this video is great and has all the info I was wondering about
Glad it was helpful!
so well done 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@25:00 - That TV appearance with Alvin Stardust was supposed to be for the ITV Telethon (ITV's controversial and short lived charidee extravaganza).
Fantastic stuff! Your channel is pure gold, James ❤
Brilliant stuff as always James.
Another amazing video, congrats laddie
Class vid as always james mate
It's a pretty amazing transition because without Noel they would have got nowhere near a record deal. If you listen to their early material, it is like a mediocre baggy pastiche band, even though Liam's voice is still decent. I don't mind some of that stuff, but it would never have been commercially viable.
Meeting and being mentored by the real people cannot be under estimated
@@stuartcarswell2815yes. This.
I dunno. That Reminisce song sounded alright.
But it was the start they all required.
Haha, noel has got a bullshit filter... FUCKIN' SHIT!! 😂 the quote that he said to Liam.
Great video James, very enjoyable and informative
Lovin your work man! Thank you
Great video thank you for all your great work, James!
Great video Actually shows how quick they were to fame!
Another fantastic video! Very enjoyable😊👌🏻✌🏻
Another factor in this period was the decline of Madchester. Happy Mondays did the Steven Wells interview in Nov 91 which torpedoed their career. The Roses had disappeared and their wasn’t much in terms of innovative groups coming up other than Northside. A year before London A&R men were being sent up to Manc to look for the next big thing, if Oasis had been coming through a year earlier they may have been signed. As it was the scene was turning its back on the city. Ironically this bought Oasis time to develop every aspect of their game.
And the concurrent rise of grunge
There is far more to the Monday's not making more albums than one interview! 😁🇬🇧
@@Surv1ve_ThriveI am aware of that. Barbados, the inner fracturing of the band, drugs(obviously), song publishing rights and the ominous implosion of Factory all played a part. But in November 91 pop culture was turning against Manchester and in a perverse and minor way did Oasis a favour.
great content. thanks for your work!
Another great video so motivating knowing about there story
The boardwalk gig you brought up has the wrong date on it 😂
I saw the Inspirals twice in 1992, once in February and once in November. Both shows at the Barrowland Ballroom. We saw Noel onstage at the first gig tweaking something and a cheer went up because he was mistaken for Clint Boon. By the time of the November gig the stage show was scaled right down, with all the samples and whatnot absent. I'm guessing that Noel must have been gone by then.
James, the channel TheRightEarOfNash has made a video called "Forgotten Glory" which are the best remasters of these early Liam/Bonehead songs👍🏻
Great camera and audio quality
Great video mate. It would be very interesting to see which stories from those early days a movie studio would pick if they ever made a biography about them.
I love your videos James!!
Great summary at the end, think it probably applies in most walks of life
Awesome Video James. Great work and research. It's interesting how Noel comes across as a laidback "don't give a shit' type of guy, but he must have been obviously very ambitious and highly driven.
I saw an interview Noel did on Parkinson where he says they were on the road for 3 years straight, playing the toilets - from 91' to 94' - before they were signed and released their first album. This is a half truth and one of Noel's "stories". But to be fair, it would be interesting to know why, if they were signed in MAY 1993, it took so long to start recording Definitely Maybe.
I heard somewhere that Alan McGee thought they needed more live work to tighten the band up and set out to get them as many gigs as possible. They probably played more gigs from June - Dec 1993 than they ever did all through 1991, 1992 and the first half of 93'.
Brilliant video!👍
Hey man would you be able to do a video explaining some of the tones from the first album? I’ve hit a wall trying to replicate definitely maybe and it’s driving me crazy. Mainly supersonic, Columbia and cloudburst? Love the videos keep up the great work
Have you watched Noel Gallagher on That Pedal Show? he plays through the actual Marshall valve state and WEM combo that was used all through definitely maybe.. it’s quite an eye-opener
@@Boleskinebeatz I couldn’t find anything about the amp settings or reverb or anything I think it’s mainly that and perhaps pedal settings I can’t get right
It was the presence of both that made it. No other band had that, they were just blokes stood around. Having both was what made it - the mix of the arrogance of their personalities and the sincerity of their songs
Much love from the US!
Much more interestnig than after they were signed. The dynamic of the bands relationships are more interesting - more than just Noel did it all and was the boss and they were lucky
I actually think Take Me is a good track. And generally impressed with Liam. Obviously when oasis cant out I didnt think Liam could write songs at all or play guitar (could he?). It's fucking HARD to write a song man. I'm actually impressed.
I love Take Me as well. It’s featured in the documentary Supersonic
There’s videos of him playing some pretty complex chords while keeping rhythm, he’s probably average.
Take Me is an absolute banger
Liam should do Take Me live. Even for a one off
Proper enjoyed this!
See The Sun should've been released on a record, despite being a demo its one of my favourite Oasis songs lol
When will Noel be finally get honoured for services to music in a New Year's honours list? His MBE is long overdue.
He's probably been offered it and turned it down ..not sure if he's a fan of the royals
Yeah, unlikely that he'd accept a gong.
Last time he got close to the 'establishment' (vocally supporting Tony Blair, then being invited to a reception at number 10), he was badly burnt.
I’d be upset if he accepted an honour. It’s usually in exchange for agreeing to toe the line when told to, like getting behind vaccination, and crap like that.
I think Noel would be smart enough to realise his whole manner is about speaking his mind.
@@GT380man Well, he did take the jibby jab in the end, even though he was against it initially. Can only imagine the type of gobshites in his ear.
@@katonessYeah and after that he grew a 2nd arm and was infected by 5g. 😂
There is also an interview somewhere, I saw the video of it on a documentary, that Alan McGee was actually drunk that night and didnt even remember why he went to the club but didn't want anyone to know he was drunk so he always changed his story to make it seem like there was a reason. The most he remembered that night was a phone call from her that he should come out to hear Sister Lover perform, when he got there it was Oasis on stage but he had no clue who he was hearing and just said it sounded great to hide he was drunk. He didn't know he even asked Noel to his office a later day to discuss the group until Noel showed telling the secretary he had a scheduled meeting. For some reason he wanted people to think he was sober at that club that night so he acted like he remembered scheduling the meeting and forgot to inform his secretary. Supposedly it was this or a next meeting Noel played him Rockin Chair and said if he signed them up that'd be on the second album, which in his notebook of 93 it was.
Whenever I hear The Real Ppl mentioned w Oasis, I shudder. They shafted those guys, who gave them so much. Sad. They improved their guitar effects sounds from that liverpool 1993 demo. Muddy as on the demos..
I think that is overdone. The RP clearly had an influence early on, however, NG's tunes were that good that it allowed them to move beyond that world. Owen Morris is the key figure.
@@thescarletway3458 I disagree. Noel not giving the dude songwriter credit for Columbia, was the final insult. I’m sure the RP could use the money and it would have paid them back a tiny bit.
@@thescarletway3458 I love what Owen Morris did on Diem, but it’s worth remembering that Supersonic is the original recording and production done by the Real People, and that is as Oasis as it gets..
And along with a deep dive on the band’s history of reception in America, I just thought of a related idea for another @JamesHargreavesGuitar deep dive. A history of the Oasis, specifically Noel, vs Phil Collins rivalry, with a focus on the contrast in reception in America for both artists 👍
BRILLIANT documentary.
Would love to learn what the band did after the first album release.
Did they solo-performed without having much songs? 1 album is ~40 minutes.
Were they a supporting band most of the time before the 2nd album release?
By 1994 they were a driven force of their own, the new thing to watch. But yet I believe they still were doing some support acts, after the summer festivals of 1994 and by August, near the date of the release of DM they already were the headline act. Up to August of 1994, the setlist consisted of like 7 songs from DM plus Fade Away and I Am The Walrus, and then from August/September 1994 the setlist was DM in full plus Fade Away and I Am The Walrus. There's a lot of Oasis gigs in youtube to check out.
“A year on the road with Oasis” by Paul Slattery is a great book of photographs and accompanying stories of Oasis throughout their 1994 gigs. It’s crazy watching the gigs get bigger and bigger and the author/photographer telling stories of how the band began to change throughout the year
could you do a deep dive on the come up of the stone roses?
That snakebite album is the most influentual. Cos it shows you the road of progress. Class
That first stuff sounds so similar to The Stone Roses Garage Flower album
Ok @JamesHargreavesGuitar you’ve confirmed at the beginning of this video that you respond to fan/follower requests for Oasis subject-specific deep dives. I’ve tried emailing, sending a message on Twitter and leaving a comment on your TH-cam video about Oasis’ rivalry with REM
So once again, could you do a deep dive on the history of reception in America for not only Oasis, but Noel (and maybe Liam) Gallagher as well? I think that would be something that Oasis fans, especially in America, would appreciate. I'm not only a massive Oasis fan in America, but a massive fan of music from Northern England of the 80s and 90s, specifically artists on the Factory and Creation Records rosters
Additionally, I was watching a TH-cam video of highlights from MTV's 1996 Video Music Awards, and it gave me a couple of ideas for some possible future content on your channel
Watching this video made me think of a couple of things: how 1996 was absolutely the peak year of popularity for Oasis, especially in America, how the only band in America that could compete with Oasis in 96 for the title of Biggest Band in the World was the Smashing Pumpkins and how Oasis, despite their great and enduring music, never achieved a certain level of popularity in America that other massively successful British bands have achieved
So I thought of a couple of fun ideas for future videos you could do. One would be doing a deep dive on the history of reception in America for not only Oasis, but also Noel (and Liam) Gallagher, and another idea could be discussing how there was a subtle rivalry between Oasis and the Smashing Pumpkins in 96, as evidenced by how the Smashing Pumpkins swept the 96 VMA's in America and Oasis were the big winner at MTV's Europe Music Awards that year
Just a couple of ideas for future content, and I think nobody would do a better deep dive than you!
I’d love to see a video on this subject too
And I just thought of a related idea for another @JamesHargreavesGuitar deep dive. A history of the Oasis, specifically Noel, vs Phil Collins rivalry, with a focus on the contrast in reception in America for both artists 👍
I started out playing guitar two years ago and because of your video I just realised, that I had never played standing up too. so - thank you!
p.s.
Can someone lend me a guitar strap?
I have been playing since I was 19. im 46 now and I have now realized that I have never played standing up for more than few minutes, strappless either...
No
@@nicholaswoolfenden5254 I've already bought one 😉
I play bass, and at the beginning I only practiced sitting down, and we had a gig and it was difficult to play standing up, I hadn’t realised. But because it was a light acoustic set, I sat on a tall stool. But I rehearse standing up now.
The magic of the sound Oasis developed during this time is they sound like a band with much more insruments playing!!!!!
How big a part did Marcus Russell play, you dont mention him in your video.
Hey James do you know if there is any friendship between Noel & ex Chameleons guitarist Dave Fielding ? I guess their isn’t much being I’ve never heard anything said by either but being how Fielding produced Inspiral Carpets & Noel was their drum tech or roadie along with their same home locations & all round being on the same scene at the same time etc wondered if there was any more of a Chameleons / The Reegs / Oasis connection. Love your devotion & insight re the Manc music scene 👍from woods near Bournemouth
I've done this video lol
I'm sure I've heard the peter hook sound bite on either the cd that accompanied the Benson and hedges cd singles box sets or a cassette by vox magazine called oasis whats the story from the 90's.
hey james, would you ever considering making a video about noel’s lost (well not really lost) solo songs recorded in 1989 pre any band. i think some songs in that tape are amazing and don’t get anywhere near the credit it deserves
James, please can you do a video about the story of Elastica or The Boo Radleys. I don’t care if the video is long or short, I just really want to know the whole story.
Hey James, love what you do
Any chance you can document inspiral carpets from thier bogging like ya did with oasis
And include how Noel came about working with them and his time in the background of cool as fuck moo!
I find it amazing how those very early tracks almost sounded at best Oasis-lite, at worst a dodgy mid 90s parody of the band. Taking the obvious jump in class in songwriting aside with Noel arriving, Liam's vocal range and delivery improved immeasurably in the space of just two years.
It’s amazing how much Liam wanted to sound like Ian brown in the pre Noel days
Please please can do Alan White video what happened to him etc love your channel. To see Whitey video wud be epic
Was it Noel on the bass for See The Sun?
The brothers have proved time and again the only way this works is if they are all in. It wouldn't have worked without Noels tenacity and songwriting(Beady Eye anyone?) and it just doesn't work without Liams swagger. I love how Noel was Brian Epstein and McCartney rolled into one and Liam was pure 100% John Lennon. I am still amazed how glossed over they were in the states. Given Noels stick to it ness I am going to assume it just did NOT matter that much to him.
Andy Bell and Gem Archer, answers to a question no Oasis fan ever asked.
They were so big in Latin America, Europe & Japan, that they didn't see the States as the be and end all like a lot of other British Bands did at the time. The U.S Media didn't appreciate that as they liked dishing out but not being given anything back.
James do you think noel used liam as a scape goat becaues he had alot of ear worms (noel you would do a lot better solo (oop's) there was a rumor about sara liam was not the first mentioned it. noel used a a roumor to do what he wanted to do
You can really hear the difference in Liams voice in later oasis stuff from the earlier stuff, towards the end of oasis he was a pretty good vocalist!
He sounds a lot like Ian Brown from The Stone Roses at the beginning.
They were lucky they grew up in Manchester; with all those connections so close by. If they were born somewhere like Suffolk it would've been hard to find the incentive for jamming! And for putting your all into it. (Not to take anything away from them.)
ayup, the big JH, mr lottery ticket.
someone’s made a vid like this already. There’s is better cuz they haven’t made a rivalry with a fucking mobile network. cheers x
ps. can I get free tickets to ur next show
Brother what are you yammering about 💀
@@joshjwillway1545 chocolate crisps and easter eggs get me in the mood to listen to the radio
@@SifterBootlegsunfunny weirdo
Awesome video as usual! Somebody please answer me this though: How is it possible that the video of All Around The World is from '92? The band played the gear they purchased after they got signed, Liam sang with the vocal techniques he developed with the Real People and Bonehead had far less hair than on any photos from '92. They already looked and sounded the same they did in Gleneagles, and not at all like the recordings of Must Be The Music or Better Let You Know.
If you’re talking about the official video, it was released in 1997. Noel had the song since 92 though I believe.
Nevermind I see what video you’re talking about now
I'm pretty sure it was worked out based on Bonehead's guitar that it's from 93, probably after they got a record deal.
@@generalcustard1 Yes, before that he used a blue Strat and Noel had a cheap Epiphone EA-250. But to me - as a balding man - the ultimate proof is Bonehead's hair. Look up the band's first photo session from 1992 and see what I'm talking about :) There's no way that rehearsal footage is from the same year.
@@generalcustard1It was recorded on the 14th of September 1993. Brian Cannon mentions it was recorded before their gig at the In The City Festival in Manchester, which he was in the audience for.
It seems a massive leap from Must be the Music and See the Sun one week to Rock n Roll Star and Bring it on Down the next!
the Carpets are from Oldham....
who is Big'Un?
James, you really need to get the ear of some of the people who were in the music industry at the time Oasis got signed. Its widely known that the myth of Alan McGee viewing Oasis on the stage of King Tut's under a beam of celestial light from heaven shining on the "Saviors of Rock" is utter nonsense. They were already on the radar of record companies, and is alleged were already signed to a development deal. I've been told this from a person who up till recently was extremely high up the ladder in the UK record business.
❤❤❤
First stuff is very, very "Stone Roses" sounding.
True I still like it though
It was the popular sound around the time though
Hi James, I have a very unrelated question, but on your biggest bands in Britain video, the biggest key was a counter cultural message, what do you think would be counter cultural today. Whatever it is I'll do it
You'll be branded right wing if you do..
@@modernchampionmusic81 No idea what that means but alright
@@CaptainCommonsense142 He's saying the world is so boringly PC now that to be counter culture you'd practically have to become a neo-nazi as an antithesis of the liberal loving antifa culture that is prevalent now.
If you didn't get what he meant you're either too young or too stupid to do anything of any cultural impact.
Wait isn't being right wing already normal modern culture
@@CaptainCommonsense142 No
Take me sounds like a sped up version of rape me by nirvana played by the stone roses with out squire on guitar just my first thought anybody agree
I know it's not a massive revelation here, but 'Take me' was a great tune.
Not really, it relies on one riff that is played endlessly and the lyrics are banal. The melody is monotonous and flat.
Liam made Oasis
Life In Vain sounds very TVPs.
The songwriter wrote some decent bits and the frontman looked good on a big screen, but it was Paul and Tony that made the magic and laid down the groove and gave the best album its sound and its feel.
Tony and Paul were the dogs bollocks, man.
25:43 🤣🤣🤣
You could of made this video 5 seconds long James...They ripped off The Real People...The End ha ha
I think Noel was just really smart - took stuff from the inspirals, real people, used contacts like Johnny Marr etc - and did similar with songwriting taking best bits from here and there. Plus having an amazing singer as a brother
@@Tsa-SONGS-ABOUT-BEING-a-DAD By the sounds of it, they should of been called "The Magpies" and not Oasis ha ha
Easier to make it back then
Give Brandonwholikesstuff credit for this😂
The music industry really is 90% luck
If you have songs, yes
:)
How did they do it? 90% plagiarism. 10% hiding the plagiarism.
Liam was pretty tone deaf on those early demos. It's hard to believe he mastered his voice so excellently just a few years later, only to lose it all, then kind of get it back again.
I can't find the interview, but Noel did say once that in their early days, a lot of the early demo's were in the wrong key when originally written/rehearsed. Once that problem was fixed, it helped the development of the band go up tenfold.
Oasis used other people.
Tony's book cover and font use and his signing off on it just proves Noel made the right choice and clearly Tony still sucks
I hate Wonderwall, Oasis, and Noel's attitude.
Middle Class commie, by any chance?
Do you feel better now you've got that off your chest? I hope so as not many people are going to care tbh
Why even bother watching or commenting, you sound like a very sad individual
Why are you on this channel then? 🙄
your a fanny then
Noël brought the discipline and direction. Liam was not mature enough to hassle important people. Noel was the right fit and added guitar chops sorely required.
Liam unfortunately doe not have much good to say about his mega rich brother even now
Noel got the most money even in 2022, £5.4 million in royalties, net some £75 million vs Liam's £5.4 million. He's gone on to form successful bands
And need not worry about Noel's sniping from the cheat sheets.
On camera in interviews Noel is entertaining and mature. Liam still can't be. Too much of a gobshite which once funny, is now a bit sad. The fuck everything strut, the gratuitous put downs.
I'm a late Oasis fan but it's clear Noel had the goods and further along the writer talent, well over Liam.
And that must have been difficult given Liam's competitive spirit.
Thanks James for another enjoyable video. Great work
Hi James. I don't agree with much of what you say regarding Noel's lyrics and I think you grant him with way more intelligence than he has. I believe the first two albums are written by other people personally. Noel lacks the vocabulary for a start. Anyway, I love your passion and your content generally. You're a class act, Bud. All the very best 😊