Don’t Look Back in Anger: Oasis

2023-09-02 23:06:50

by Oliver
am 3. September 2023
in Diskografie Ranking, Featured

Fifteen years following the Britpop flagship’s last album, and despite thriving solo careers for Noel and Liam (via Beady Eye-detours) remain the Heydays of Oasis unmatched.

By the way, an assessment of the discography of the band around the two Gallagher brothers that has since felt general as the only constant is only partially correct. Because yes, the first two albums may be enthroned as absolute classics in music history above all subsequent material from the Manchester group; but no, have an even remotely weak album Oasis never published throughout her career.
A career that began in 1991 when bassist Paul “Guigsy” McGuigan, aka guitarist Paul Arthurs Boneheadand drummer Tony McCarroll formed a band with vocalist Chris Hutton The Rain founded, but quickly exchanged their frontman for Liam Gallagher, whereupon the early entry of his big brother, des Inspiral Carpets-Roadies Noel, as songwriter and new bandleader, and renaming the group to Oasis should follow.
And that ended 18 years later. Probably already when Noel announced his final exit on the evening of August 28, 2009. Certainly, however, when Liam declared the band dissolved on the following October 8th.
The time in between wasn’t just filled with two masterpieces, loud-mouthed announcements, feuilleton-ready brother quarrels and a lot of hot musical air, which has sold 70 million copies to date – but with numerous Britpop evergreens and hits, spread across five more strong studio albums, whose value, despite a relatively value-conservative approach, has often only actually shown itself in the rear-view mirror.

Oasis: The MasterplanHonorable Mention:
The Masterplan

Release year: 1998
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + Bonehead, Guigsy, McCarroll / White
Producers: Owen Morris, Noel Gallagher
playing time: 66 minutes

Still, it’s not enough just to praise the band’s regular albums. After all, there is The Masterplan a b-side collection that’s so damn good as one of the best of its kind that it earns at least (at least!) a podium spot in any ranking Oasis-Longplayer deserved.
This is ensured by the many outstanding hits on the record alone (with Acquiesce, Going Nowhere, Fade Away, Stay Young or the titular The Masterplan at the forefront), meanwhile other numbers like Talk Tonight or Half the World Away are so sure of their place in fans’ favorite lists. And everything might have been even more brilliant, since the larger-than-life standalone single is missing Whatever also so many other grandiose delicacies like Flashbax, The Fame or Sad Song – you might have made up the roughly two dozen B-sides that it wasn’t on The Masterplan actually managed to easily create another classic beyond the regular canon.
Also so became The Masterplan in the wake of the rapidly onset disillusionment whether Be Here Now However, it was a resounding success, which also sold like hot cakes in the UK – even though the song collection was originally only intended for the Asian and American markets.
And while Oasis the reputation of secretly parking what is possibly their greatest material away from the album motherships, also later on through such pearls as Idler’s Dream or Thank You For The Good Times should stay true, the B-sides of their first three albums play in a league of their own.


Oasis: Don't Believe the Truth7. Don’t Believe the Truth

Release year: 2005
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + Bell, Archer, Starkey
Producers: Dave Sardy, Noel Gallagher
playing time: 43 minutes

Don‘t Believe the Truth certainly does not prove the conclusion of this hardly objective ranking, because it is per se the worst album by Oasis is (it’s almost certainly a more rounded body of work than Dig Out Your Soul!). But because it represents the band’s most unambitious work: Where every other record in the discography in one way or another transports an egocentric megalomania, wants and has to be more than just good music, the really satisfying, but hardly inspiring sixth long-player releases Gallagher group (who landed an absolute stroke of luck with the entry of drummer Zak Starkey!) simply underwhelming.
Because it may be so easy to like this 60s-leaning harmony favor – the reveling Love Like a Bombthe pondering dreaming Guess God Thinks I’m Abelthe percussive strolling Part of the Queue or the feel-good zone meandering psychedelic in the lava lamp light Keep the Dream Alive are simply beautiful, all-round good songs that you really like to keep in your ear. Not even three weaker numbers (the opener that doesn’t get to the point Turn Up the Sun; the hasty and simplistic going forward, but possessing little added value The Meaning of Soul; the nice standard A Bell Will Ring) really diminish the impression of this frugality.
Just loving dearly or worshiping larger than life is just not enough here (and symptomatically especially not those songs that in the course of the with Death in Vegas, Richard Fearless or Tim Holmes and ultimately largely discarded recordings). Most likely to bribe the vehement Velvet Underground– rumble Mucky Fingersthe of The Soundtrack of Our Lives inspired retro mood makers Lyla (which only found a place on the record following the intervention of the record company and Swollen Hand Blues pushed out of the structure), the stately strutting The Importance of Being Idle or comfortably restrained hugging Beatles-Tribute Let There Be Love – which, paradoxically, might have been the ideal ending to the band’s history.

Oasis: Dig out Your Soul6. Dig Out Your Soul

Release year: 2008
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + Bell, Archer, Starkey
Producer: Dave Sardy
playing time: 46 minutes

If you didn’t know better by now, you might still swear that the final swan song of Oasis rather sounds like the successful attempt to open a new chapter for the band. By making vital course corrections in the in-house patented cosmos with Dave Sardy, who once once more took his seat at the producer’s chair, by means of a sound-technical-aesthetic rejuvenation treatment and by moving out of the comfort zone maintained with the predecessor: the hypnotically driving groove dominates a psychedelic-tinged pop that repeatedly – like in the stoic Bag it Up or the latently annoying Klepper (Get Off Your) High Horse Lady as well as the uninspired running into the dead end Ain’t Got Nothin – a kind of cosmic blues rock as a harsh corrective in the hallucinogenic Stone Roses-Suction installed.
Early on in the development of the seventh studio album, Noel fantasized regarding a bombastic record that in a certain way evoked the megalomania of Be Here Now as a reverse thrust to Standing on the Shoulder of Giants would dare (“I’d like to get, like, a 100-piece orchestra and choirs and all that stuff. (…) I kind of like fancy! I’d like to make an absolutely fucking colossal album. You know? Like literally two orchestras, stuff like that“) – which in the end was more true in terms of volume. Has become Dig Out Your Soul namely a not so opulent work, which in The Turning or the great ballad I’m Outta Time (probably the only hit-capable consensus single here) relies at most on formative piano accompaniments, while largely (like along the rainbow paths The Shock Of The Lightning or Falling Down) above all the endless horizon of the rhythm as in a trance serves as a leitmotif until one is not only with To Be Where There’s Life close to early The Verve is.
It’s just a pity that the record, following the revealing first half, in its last third up to the grandiose closer Soldier On in an imbalance of form and substance, until one has to ask oneself whether one can Dig Out Your Soul due to its relatively bold willingness to evolve, he doesn’t value much more what the work is willing to do as a statement than what it’s actually capable of as an album as a whole.


Oasis: Standing on the Shoulder of Giants5. Standing on the Shoulder of Giants

Release year: 2000
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + White
Producers: Mark „Spike“ Stent, Noel Gallagher
playing time: 48 minutes

It’s for a bulk of that Oasis-The audience can certainly understand more easily how seemingly bottomless (yes, almost shocking!) the disillusionment was that Standing on the Shoulder of Giants (in terms of the title, by the way, the proof that not every Isaac Newton quote can survive the enthusiasm of a heavily drunk night) was able to trigger at the time when sharing the subjective view that the fourth work has undergone a remarkable, rehabilitating development in perception over the past two decades that ultimately went beyond absolution.
Even though it wasn’t our finest hour, it’s a good album born through tough times. I worked harder on that album than anything before and anything since.‘ Noel analyzed and indeed feels Standing on the Shoulder of Giants Then as now, following a somewhat tense effort that hardly came loose from the wrist, where finally the window of generation of the record was really alone, a difficult time of upheaval for Oasis marked in which the founding members Guigsy and Bonehead had turned their backs on the Gallaghers, Mark Stent took over as producer from Owen Morris and Noel (who had just given up drugs and was playing almost all the instruments in the studio by himself) clearly wanted to present an album that would follow suit Be Here Now decidedly surprising: there were drum loops, samples, an electric sitar, mellotron and synthesizers that, with a boost of electronic facets and psychedelic weights, explored a more experimental side of Oasis illuminated – and would still deliver such an unmodern result.
But where the material, which for many will probably continue to be the low point of their career, really has a certain clumsiness, the songs captured have grown – secretly, quietly and quietly and unspectacularly. Sure, the double from (the legendary intro) Fuckin‘ in the Bushes and Go Let it Out has always been hard to beat when it comes to coolness; the grandeur Sunday Morning Call has never hidden to be a touching beauty beyond compare; and Roll It Over immediately rose to the anthemic climax to which other groups would sacrifice their wasted livers.
But that the smooth chorus of Who Feels Love? at some point would let the button open so forgivingly and the absolutely conventional rockers Put Yer Money Where Yer Mouth Is, Gas Panic!, the graceful pleading Where Did It All Go Wrong? and even I Can See a Liar when strictly taken standards should ultimately be as uncomplicated fun as crisp reliability with a veritable half-life – yes, that was just as little foreseeable at the start of the new millennium as the mildness that followed in the judgment that the alleged oath of disclosure Little James (as Liam’s songwriting debut) would also pass as solid above-average exercise, at least in context. The fact that most of the B-sides of the released singles are even better is of course a different story (or no – always the same?) story!

Oasis: Be Here Now4. Be Here Now

Release year: 1997
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + Bonehead, Guigsy, White
Producers: Owen Morris, Noel Gallagher
playing time: 72 minutes

While the friction within the band, which was driven by the constant party and cocaine excess, intensified (and Noel even left for a short time on September 11, 1996 in the middle of the North American tour following the band’s legendary unplugged concert), the third studio album of the gbiggest band in Englandbiggest band in the world … bigger than, dare I say it, fucking God“Even under enormous pressure of expectations from outside. A circumstance that Noel doesn’t want to give in to, but strives for monumental superlatives and wants to top the band’s previous path with an insatiable more-is-more mentality.
Hardly any of the songs composed on the island of Mustique in the Caribbean by Be Here Now That’s why it lasts less than five minutes, shies away from prominent guests (such as Mark Feltham, Richard Ashcroft and Johnny Depp) or doesn’t cultivate the band’s established mannerisms with an almost self-satisfied certainty and arrogance in a colossal sea of ​​overdubs and unnecessary ballast bar any understatements – and somehow this megalomaniac belly brushing still works. Despite everything… and/or precisely because of it.
The sales of a record that is only commercially going through the roof may have collapsed just as quickly as public perception tipped from euphoria to abusive resignation at the same time, but not only the absolute oversongs have it Stand By Me, Don’t Go Away and All Around the World (as a triumvirate that singlehandedly made Noel’s decision not to include any song from the record on the Best of compilation Stop the Clocks to accommodate ad absurdum) the necessary carrying capacity for this opulently inflated feeling of satiety, which would certainly not have been harmed by a little conciseness and tightening: here lush manifestos are thrown in the door without measure, bursting with melodic hedonism and a drinkable over-the-top -Production that (unlike the more sparse Mustique demos) requires you to be in the mood to get past the streaky decadence opener D’You Know What I Mean? simply having to use superlatives for this homogeneously flowing monster (which is perhaps more a tonal attitude towards life and a testimony to the times than a conclusively to the point album?), while songs like Magic Pie, Girl With A Dirty Shirt, Fade In-Out or I Hope, I Think, I Know have a fixed place in the fan heart without any discussion.

Heathen Chemistry3. Heathen Chemistry

Release year: 2022
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + White, Bell, Archer
Producers: Oasis
playing time: 43 minutes

Liam can Heathen Chemistry no matter how much punishment: better than they were on their fifth studio album Oasis only in their early days. Which is perhaps also expressed by the sales figures, because they rose following the disappointing predecessor Standing on the Shoulder of Giants noticeably once more. How might this not happen when without exception all the singles were hits, to choose between the great, Take care of the Shaker‚esken Psych-Rocker The Hindu Times and the grandiosely minimalist acoustic masterpiece Songbird (Liam’s nobility as a songwriter, who came out of nowhere and even Noel has nothing but praise for!) especially the almost cheesy ballad Stop Crying Your Heart Out and Little By Little have proven to be timeless evergreens without an expiry date? Noel magic for the masses – finally once more, as many fans breathed a sigh of relief at the time.
Around the entry of guitarist Gem Archer (Heavy Stereo) and bassist Andy Bell (Ride) in the band (from which the often underestimated Allan White should soon be thrown out) is the sole rule of Noel together with the completely cool archaic stomper Force of Nature (as an update to Full On), the beatlesk exhilarating flower power magic She is Love and the dreaming pop (Probably) All in the Mind as a songwriter in the Oasis-story with Heathen Chemistry ended anyway – and the new constellation carries the rest of the record with a grown sense of responsibility through the solid, rebellious spirit of optimism Hung in a Bad Place as well as the atmospheric, if not essential, mini-interlude A Quick Peep to smoky longing Born on a Different Cloud flawlessly experienced.
Basically, this failure-free, almost dignified comfort zone work that serves the catchy formula only has to put up with the reproach that the 30 minutes of silence between the okay Better Man and the unspectacular, albeit conciliatory The Cage were a moronic idea and themselves Heathen Chemistry deserved a more impressive finale (yes, that’s another nod to the B-sides, which are fabulous across the board!).

Definitely Maybe2. Definitely Maybe

Release year: 1994
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + Bonehead, Guigsy, McCarroll
Producers: OasisOwen Morris, Mark Coyle und David Batchelor (Slide Away)
playing time: 52 minutes

A commercially more successful debut album than that of the parade singles Shakermaker (the same time the question of where quotations end and plagiarism begin in Oasis-cosmos established), Supersonic and (the hedonism-evergreen superhit, which finally caused the breakthrough and ideally contrasted the alternative to pessimistic US rock) Life Forever flanked Definitely Maybe should not be on the island until twelve years later Arctic Monkeys succeed.
Although the road to their first studio album would prove difficult (the first recordings with producer David Batchelor were a flop, the re-recordings with Mark Coyle also failed to convince until an increasingly desperate and frustrated band, Owen Morris [der Noel erst für einen besoffenen Drogendealer hielt] gave free rein to the mix – which, according to popular belief, possibly sparked the Loudness War with the extreme compression). Oasis with Definitely Maybe Rock ‘n’ roll stars from the word go, for whom the world didn’t seem big enough: the anthems immaculately standing the test of time with no signs of wear use it here at all?) take turns, demanding raving superlatives, even today, regarding strokes of genius such as Slide Away, Columbia or Married With Children to be fair. Songs so simple and direct in their agenda that one shouldn’t have a chance to oppose them: “You might probably take the most original bands of all time, but they’re only playing what they’ve heard in their record collections. My record collection consisted of The Beatles, The Stones, David Bowie and T-Rex. I’m not fucking arsed regarding extra tracks from a Pink Floyd bootleg from 1971. I mightn’t give a shit man. I’d rather listen to ‘I Am The Walrus’ twenty times once more.“ Pragmatic and somehow unpretentious, yet with a self-confident attitude bordering on arrogance, timeless in a striving for greatness, so that with this record as a soundtrack, even banal homework can become a legendary snapshot of an epic life, no matter what some of the lyrics here are actually want to testify (Noel: “I wasn’t trying to impress anyone with my lyrical prowess. I mightn’t give a fuck regarding any of that. I was writing things that were true to me. It’s regarding shagging, drinking and taking drugs.„)
Whether this rawer debut as an instant classic or its cleaner, spruced up successor is at the top of the ladder in this ranking depends a bit on your personal condition on the day, but it doesn’t really matter: perfect is perfect.

What's the Story Morning Glory1. (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?

Release year: 1995
Occupation: Die Gallaghers + Bonehead, Guigsy, White
Producers: Owen Morris, Noel Gallagher
playing time: 50 minutes

How label boss and band promoter Alan McGee must have felt when he Oasis presented the drafts for their second studio work only shortly following their debut album, which was so enormously successful, one can hardly imagine, even in the most exuberant euphoria: following all, a more commercial optimization process is hardly possible, these are melodies for millions.
But hence the legendary CreationAccording to his own statement, the mastermind knew anyway from the first concert he attended of the Gallagher brothers that the biggest band of the 90s was on stage, so for McGee it must have been more than just confirmation: with (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? became Oasis to a global phenomenon, immortal.
Fueled by proletoid feuilleton fodder without end (Noel: “Liam is like a man with a fork in a world of soup.“) it was due to ballad-like songs, which offered impressive refrains and hooks to kneel down, welcomed strings in a more variable instrumentation including better drums softer and more conducive to consensus, fundamentally functioned on a more universal level than the predecessor already did.
A good part of the material that was brought up has thus immediately burned itself into the collective memory of pop humanity, especially the outstanding triumvirate of the album: who in the case of Wonder wall speaks of the perfect song (even if every party in the world is threatened by at least one student guest and his acoustic guitar, who wants to destroy this impression with devotion), must at least be the even better, instant classics that are never not shouted along Don’t Look Back in Anger and Champagne Supernova (the Tony McCarroll’s reason for breaking up) in the same breath … just not without a list of the evergreens on this record Roll With It, Some Might Say and dem (from the two songs [Being A] Blue as well as The Mirror & The Razorblade merged) breakwater Morning Glory to be able to carve.
The driving Hello also does a really great job as an opener beforehand, as Noel has allegedly been planning since 1992. And if the wonderful, subversive Richard Ashcroft tribute Cast No Shadow (which in the album context also creates a comfortable space to breathe between all the guitar walls), the lively relaxation exercise She’s Electric (which can be taken as an indicator of the exceptionally good, smooth atmosphere that is said to have prevailed during the recording) or the (apparently never officially played live) wallflower grower indulging Hey Now! should be filler material in this context, everything has actually been said regarding the quality of a record, which makes up for its less outstanding passages in the entire work and sets an indestructible monument to its authors.

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