OASIS: Why Noel Hates 'Be Here Now' For All The Wrong Reasons

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  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
  • Join James Hargreaves to examine the release of the climactic album of the 1990's in the UK - Be Here Now by Oasis, what happened in the lead-up to the release and what happened in the aftermath to answer the question... Why was the album that broke all records and remains beloved by fans worldwide later criticised and rejected by the very man who wrote it?
    Many images and videos in my RUclips content have been found online without any attribution or credit available. In many cases I have therefore not been able to add a credit in the videos themselves due to lack of information. If your image or video has been used and a credit is required, please email me with your details and evidence of authorship and a credit will be added into the video description.
    Many thanks, JH.

Комментарии •

  • @Sweatydave1
    @Sweatydave1 2 года назад +413

    Had my wedding reception at stocks due to the photo shoot for the album being shot there! Bit like oasis that marriage is dead and buried now!😂

  • @JormaX
    @JormaX 2 года назад +146

    Always loved Be Here Now and I've never been ashamed of saying it out loud(man!!).

  • @redbandmedia79
    @redbandmedia79 2 года назад +91

    “It’s getting better (man)” deserves a proper mix like the way they did it live at air studios on that bbc documentary. Absolute rocker

    • @edgewhypaddra5969
      @edgewhypaddra5969 2 года назад +4

      I hope I think I know also wasn't that good in recording

    • @matthewnijland
      @matthewnijland 2 года назад +4

      I agree! That live version is superior!!

    • @ads2686
      @ads2686 5 месяцев назад

      problem is Owen Morris was the guy who mixed the first 2 albums, he & noel mixed be here now and they were both hooked on coke

  • @BoogalooMedia
    @BoogalooMedia 2 года назад +84

    As an Oasis fan in the 90's, who also bought 'Be Here Now' on the day of release... I loved the release of 'Standing On The Shoulder of Giants'. Go Let It Out was a cracking first single from the album and Gas Panic is one of the best tunes ever written!

    • @williamsmith1399
      @williamsmith1399 2 года назад +6

      I love the back end of the Standing On The Shoulder Of Giants album. Gas Panic, Where Did It All Go Wrong, Sunday Morning Call and Roll It Over are excellent.

    • @allandudson9684
      @allandudson9684 2 года назад

      Well done. I was at knebworth on the second night and the crowd didn't seem to respond too enthusiastically to "stand by me" or "my big mouth" I woke up the next day being highly impressed by kula shaker and Cast as live performances

    • @littleinkling4604
      @littleinkling4604 2 года назад +3

      @@allandudson9684 I was trying to think who the support acts were for the second night only yesterday. Cranberies also? I was there on the first day. Bootleg Beatles, Chemical Borthers, Ocean Colous Scene, Manic Street Preachers and The Prodigy. There were 6 of us and just walked down to ther front and was amazed we got into the front section despite the grounds almost being full. And I'm not saying they did, but bloody hell, The Prod almost upstaged Oasis.

    • @cs0rpc
      @cs0rpc 2 года назад +2

      @@allandudson9684 they would have done well to respond to Stand By Me when they didn’t play it.

    • @allandudson9684
      @allandudson9684 2 года назад

      @@cs0rpc Didn't they... I weren't paying much attention by that time of night, I ran out of cigarettes...😁

  • @definitelyl7985
    @definitelyl7985 2 года назад +262

    Noel hates it because it was their one chance to become even more massive and they blew it, and he feels responsible for it. It's a good record, flawed and the fanbase loves it for what it is, but if we're talking quality and mass appeal it's nowhere near the first two. For someone who mastered the pop record with Morning Glory it's definitely a step-back, and it came at a time when Noel knew if he took more time and made nore conscious decisions it could've been much better. He's not as harsh with some of the latter Oasis records because their legacy was already set in a way and also he wasn't having his best time as a songwriter, it's all a matter of perception.

    • @costanzauk
      @costanzauk 2 года назад +14

      yea the later albums were much worse

    • @gm3043
      @gm3043 2 года назад +16

      some great songs, but just way too long and over produced.

    • @MultiJoe84
      @MultiJoe84 2 года назад +2

      They did make it pretty massive I’d say.

    • @messishaanika7698
      @messishaanika7698 2 года назад

      Spot on here

    • @littleinkling4604
      @littleinkling4604 2 года назад +16

      If Oasis played a concert tomorrow, no one's going to complain if not a single song from the 3rd album onwards wasn't in the set list.

  • @jamesroyle6888
    @jamesroyle6888 2 года назад +138

    For me it was their Swan song. They were never the same band after this.
    It was everything I wanted from an oasis album, and their live performances on this tour were off the scale. The last great rock band bar none.

    • @jamesroyle6888
      @jamesroyle6888 2 года назад +13

      @Kirk Wolfe I know what you mean, but by the time Gem and Andy joined it was already over, that's why bonehead left in the first place.
      If I were to separate them it'd be during creation/post creation. Mark Coyle and Owen Morris going was a massive change too.
      Saying that though people would literally wet themselves for a new oasis album.

    • @CasperLD
      @CasperLD 2 года назад +3

      The masterplan (the song) for me was their swansong.

    • @kingrubbatiti1285
      @kingrubbatiti1285 2 года назад +17

      I see DM, WTSMB and BHN as a trilogy of albums that defined that stereotypical Oasis Sound. It defined and era and I think they knew that too and the only way forward was to move away from it and do something different. Granted they never sounded dratiscally different, songs like Lyla and who feels love still sounded like Oasis,but not too rooted in the old oasis,if that makes sense? And I think Bell and Archer were the right people to move things forward. I like both incarnations of the band.

    • @markstrekalov8156
      @markstrekalov8156 2 года назад +2

      @@kingrubbatiti1285 Oasis MK II was on their way to the greatness with DBTT and DOYS. But life can be a nasty bitch at times, so the band split up at the end of the day.

    • @tomcole020
      @tomcole020 2 года назад +1

      Definitely. I love a lot of the post 90s oasis songs and Standing in the shoulder of giants is one of my favourite albums but be here now was the peak of the original oasis style

  • @GT380man
    @GT380man Год назад +14

    WTSMG represents such a dramatic era in my life and so many other people’s lives.
    In 1995, my employer closed its U.K. head office after being acquired by a rival. I lost my job. Bloody upsetting. I was sole breadwinner and everything depended upon my ability to make enough money to pay our mortgage and look after the four of us. The fourth member of the family was born in 1995. Imagine how stunned my wife and I were, a new baby on the way, no job soon, everything was going to change. At best, we would have to sell the dream home we’d just bought (a 1930s three bed semi in leafy Bromley / Beckenham suburbs, big garden, drive for two cars off road, extended kitchen overlooking a mature, large, south facing garden.
    We’d decorated only a couple of rooms, our bedroom first, and it was a beautiful place to be.
    The move to deepest rural Kent for my next job was such a dispiriting change especially for my wife, much more a city girl than the rural person I was.
    We didn’t recover for about five years, when we got a fantastic house which we stayed in for 21 years.
    The 1995 move was undertaken to the sound track of WTSMG. It played all the time, in the car (remember CD autochangers?), at home (remember HiFi separates?) and any pub we went into (remember juke boxes?) when we got a baby sitter.
    It was on the radio all the time (remember when Radio 1 was a real force in music?).
    A clutch of other albums followed, like Urban Hymns, Comfort in Sound, Free all Angels, but WTSMG was “the daddy”, I felt.
    A major moment in British music, Britpop, which felt like it would last forever, but was over before we realised the special time we’d just had. Who remembers Tony Blair “A new day has dawned, has it not?” (Complete with faked glottal stop)?
    Looking back, one reason why the Britpop era felt so good was that for a short while, Brits felt like we had got our power back. We held our heads high. We strode around like Ian Brown, with a swagger. (Remember “Cool Britannia”?)
    No sooner did they crest, they began to subside. Pop took over, and men started to become downplayed in favour of effeminate boy bands, girl bands, female mega stars. Bands which may have had guitars but weren’t “guitar bands”, and the guitar solo started its last movement. It’s all but gone now.
    1995 was perhaps the high water mark & if not, it was the last flood tide.
    Never forgotten, it now pulls at my heartstrings badly to hear that & to my memory, the associated mid to late 1990s musical cannon.
    Thank you, Noel & Liam.

  • @BryanCooperOfficial
    @BryanCooperOfficial 2 года назад +107

    I enjoyed this. Your analysis gave some interesting food for thought. But while I think you're right about there being a certain resentment from Noel at how Be Here Now represented the 'start of the end' for them, I don't agree with your take on it being his main reason. Noel was, IMO, bang on about the songs being too long. "Stand By Me" is one ideal example of an Oasis song that would've been vastly improved by being trimmed down. There are way too many choruses and suffers for being nearly 6 minutes long. Noel was a great writer of melodies (and still is), but his weakness was in arranging songs. (Who am I to critique him, though, right? But it's just my take.) They would almost always follow a very traditional structure and rarely 'surprise' the listener after you heard the first chorus. He didn't seem to have anyone around him to tell him not to go back to a verse, to reduce the number of choruses, or to cut the outros down, etc. I know repetition was important to their music, but it was taken to the nth degree on Be Here Now. I loved Oasis and was right in the thick of that whole era, but I still think they would've benefitted from a George Martin type figure in the studio for that album. It would've taken them to the next level.

    • @bridge_studio
      @bridge_studio 2 года назад +6

      Spot on.

    • @gm3043
      @gm3043 2 года назад +6

      Yeah some great songs, but way too long and over produced.

    • @Stereotype23
      @Stereotype23 2 года назад +6

      Absolutely. The reason why many Oasis fans love Be Here Now is because we can see through the flaws in production and overlong arrangements. The songs are incredible and on par with the first two albums but the production/song length, however, makes the album tedious for non-Oasis fans. Morning Glory was a rock record produced in a way that appealed to a pop audience. Be Here Now lacks this quality. A better producer - and one who could stand up to the band - would have fixed this.

    • @subsahara121
      @subsahara121 2 года назад

      Obviously Noel cant arrange music mate come on he is a Genius.

    • @matthewrider6453
      @matthewrider6453 2 года назад

      #MadFerItAmerican, here.... And that was spot on.

  • @stonecrestmovies
    @stonecrestmovies 2 года назад +31

    Be Here Now will always be a classic to me and I wasn’t even alive when it came out. I love every single second of it to bits.

  • @oliverjameshall2288
    @oliverjameshall2288 2 года назад +52

    I always got the sense that Noel had already written the first 2 albums way before being signed. When BHN came about, the well had run dry and he had to start a fresh. There are some good songs on there but it always felt a bit thrown together in a panic and the mix was chaotic. I remember listening over and over and it not having quite the impact of WTSMG.

    • @oliverjameshall2288
      @oliverjameshall2288 2 года назад +9

      @@badgasaurus4211 Thats True. There's an early demo of around the world in the supersonic film. And that must have been pre definitely maybe?

    • @mrkipling2201
      @mrkipling2201 2 года назад +13

      Going Nowhere was written in 1990. There’s footage of the band rehearsing All Around the World in the Boardwalk in 1992ish. He had about 2 and a half albums worth of songs by the time they signed the record deal I would say.

    • @ads2686
      @ads2686 5 месяцев назад +1

      he has admitted that. regretting giving away all them B-sides going on holiday to write the album didn't work.

  • @_definitelymaybe2332
    @_definitelymaybe2332 2 года назад +36

    Yes, finally we got onto this topic, thanks mate! I am so sick of Noel's opinion on it being heard before people could think for themselves. They''ve got obsessed with his answer to a point where they think it's their opinion.

    • @JamesHargreavesGuitar
      @JamesHargreavesGuitar  2 года назад +10

      Well said! I do agree that Noel has cast such a dark cloud over the album that people listen to it with a negative bias already in place.
      I'm so glad I got to hear it at the time, in 97, when there was a positive bias in place so I could actually appreciate it as it was meant to be heard!

    • @richgl31
      @richgl31 2 года назад +4

      @@JamesHargreavesGuitar Sorry- i think it’s lacklustre and bloated. The issue when most bands become too established (and get their money)- too much production and the loss of direction. The song subject matter starts not to have the connection with fans. For a fan like me at the time who saw them as a support band - that album was the point that turned me away from Oasis.

    • @mur5ph441
      @mur5ph441 2 года назад

      Totally agree I think it's brilliant

    • @matthewrider6453
      @matthewrider6453 2 года назад

      Brian f@¢king Wilson couldn't have sorted that dreadful production out FFS! I find that EVERY BHN tune to be better when done live!

    • @ads2686
      @ads2686 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@richgl31the fact that the band was hooked on coke, noel was listening to led zeppelin. Owen Morris being addicted to coke when he was the guy who mixed the first two albums and had no problem cutting guitar solos, the fact both he & noel mixed it & mark Coyle was not the producer.

  • @HauntedScouse
    @HauntedScouse 2 года назад +3

    This was released when I was 20 years old... a week off work, sat in the back of my old fave boozer, The Zodiac.
    Pool table, pints and my best mate Karl...
    Whole album on loop through the jukebox and the sound turned right up...
    Sometimes only two of us in the back room for hours that week... This was our private listening party... and it was the best thing I'd ever heard. Moreso with the volume cranked up..
    This was made for volume... not played in the background.
    The guitar solo in Its Getting Better Man... F#@king WOW...
    Great video... really enjoyed how this was put together.

  • @mrkipling2201
    @mrkipling2201 2 года назад +21

    Definitely Maybe will always be my favourite Oasis album and is their best in my opinion. Be Here Now is underrated and a good album. I think a lot of people were expecting Morning Glory part 2 though and that was the problem. Imagine how much more Be Here Now would have sold in the first week if it had been released at the start of the week, instead of on the Thursday. The reason all the critics loved it was due to the fact that they got it so wrong with Morning Glory. Morning Glory got panned by the critics and they ended up looking stupid so they thought we aren’t doing that again!!

    • @SluffAdlin
      @SluffAdlin 11 месяцев назад

      Morning Glory will have a place in my heart. All of its songs take me right back to April-September 1996 (I was 16) and my high school crush. Her favourite band was Oasis

  • @estela6226
    @estela6226 2 года назад +11

    James talks about Oasis like it's his doctoral work. I'm convinced he is the man of my life and there's nothing I can do about it ❤️❤️❤️

  • @woofdog1525
    @woofdog1525 2 года назад +6

    Be here now was very much of its time..it sounds like a band on the crest of a wave,having it large.I was 17/18 when it came out and it reminds me of long summer nights with it blasting out the jukebox as you walked in the pub,all your mates singing to it with their bucket hats on having a laugh without a care in the world..to me that’s what Oasis was all about..it was the spirit of youth & excitement..It’s an album that you turn up to max,get on the beers and let your hair down..if you want introspective deep chin stroking music then listen to Dark Side Of The Moon or Pink Moon by Nick Drake (both great albums by the way) ✌🏾✌🏾

  • @matthewstromer
    @matthewstromer Месяц назад +2

    Stood in line and bought on day 1 in the U.S. Blown away by it then and still love it now.
    Hoping somebody will eventually give it a 5.1 / Dolby Atmos mix to really flesh out all of the layers and tracks/guitars/sound effects. It's such an immersive album to begin with.

  • @sonicboom9739
    @sonicboom9739 2 года назад +13

    My year 11 soundtrack at school. Loved it - yes it wasn’t recorded perfectly but it encapsulated the spirit of a band who had made it to the top of the music industry and had entered the publics hearts. Who cares what Noel thinks all
    That matters is what the person listening to the record thinks of it. Critics are not to be listened to at all. Who are they anyway ?
    It was the end of the bands first phase - the proper lad phase before they went alittle well grown up, kids and responsibilities.
    The hype was great because it had an air of mystery as opposed to now where bands record and document everything on social media .
    There are a few ok songs but most of it is great - if you can play the songs on an acoustic guitar and it stands up it’s a good song !
    It was all part of the journey and we were all lucky to experience it in our lifetime because now there is no group like them …

  • @Robv93
    @Robv93 2 года назад +5

    One of my favourite albums of all time. D’You Know What I Mean, I Hope I Think I Know, Stand By Me, Be Here Now, Girl in the Dirty Shirt. I mean, it’s fantastic.

  • @renardfox328
    @renardfox328 2 года назад +2

    James, the world needs you. Please keep doing what you are doing. Bravo!

  • @stonesthrow420
    @stonesthrow420 2 года назад +3

    In 1995 and 96......I remember getting so jazzed about going to Best Buy every week to see what new Oasis singles I could buy. One day, I bought the Roll With It single..and listened to "Rockin' Chair" the first time. I remember asking myself..."how is every song I hear from this band so damn good??" Eventually, I had all of the single CD's, I even bought the "Sibbling Rivalry" disc that was just them arguing..which even that was fun to listen too. Their music always has and always will put me in such a great mood. Love your channel James!

  • @Jimmywilliams_
    @Jimmywilliams_ 2 года назад +7

    This album changed my life as a lost teenager and got me to teach myself guitar.. it got alot of stick back in the day, I remember chris evans on TFI on national TV saying the album is dead on the week of its release
    I think its very underrated album.

    • @littleinkling4604
      @littleinkling4604 2 года назад

      I remember one of his guests, might have been Donna Air or someone in 98 simply asking 'where are Oasis?' To which he replied 'Well you said it'.

  • @PekkoAhlsten
    @PekkoAhlsten 2 года назад +3

    I still remember the day when BHN was released. I was 16 at the time. I couldn't wait to finish school that day, and I rushed into my local records store immediately afterwards, the windows of the store were covered in BHN posters and the record was visible everywhere in the store. I bought a CD and cycled quickly back home and gave it a listen while going through the album sleeve artwork and lyrics. I remember after a couple of times hearing the entire album thinking that "this sounds good but damn it's long".
    Over the next few months, it started to become obvious to me that this is not MG or DM. I still enjoyed some of the songs but it became tiring to listen to the whole album. It was just too long and overproduced. Also, during that time I purchased Urban Hymns and OK Computer, which were something a bit different and both were absolutely amazing albums.
    I wish they would remix the whole album again in the future like they did with DYKWIM? I still listen to BHN, but with a modified version: D' You Know What I Mean? (NG Rethink 2016), My Big Mouth, Angel Child (demo) Fade In-Out, Don't Go Away, Trip Inside (demo), Stay Young, I Hope I Think I Know, Stand By Me, Be Here Now. This track list gives the album some structure and makes it shorter. It was a colossal moment in the music history, and I always remember that release day as a great day in my life. Nostalgia...

  • @jonasrmb01
    @jonasrmb01 2 года назад +33

    i wish he would remix the whole album like he did with dyou know what i mean
    i mostly listen to the brickwallhater fan remixes for songs like my big mouth and all around the world
    already makes a huge difference
    i personally have no problem with the length of the album

    • @OperationBlueprint
      @OperationBlueprint 2 года назад +10

      Fingers crossed the 25th anniversary release will be the entire album remixed.

    • @JamesHargreavesGuitar
      @JamesHargreavesGuitar  2 года назад +2

      Agreed 👍👍

    • @Boleskinebeatz
      @Boleskinebeatz 2 года назад +2

      Where did you find the remixes of MBM or AATW out of interest?

    • @DiRtYLaWs2007
      @DiRtYLaWs2007 2 года назад +1

      I think his original plan was to remix the whole album but for whatever reason, Noel knocked the idea on the head after finishing DYKWIM.

    • @jonasrmb01
      @jonasrmb01 Год назад

      i've since found a better remix if anyone still cares ruclips.net/video/F5zVK43EE4o/видео.html this channel also has a few other great oasis remixes and a better remaster of the first high flying birds record including a download link for that

  • @RC_991
    @RC_991 2 года назад +7

    the music press missed the boat on Morning Glory, so they made tried to make amends by giving Be Here Now rave reviews.

  • @stealerob3420
    @stealerob3420 2 года назад +15

    I don't care what anyone says be here now is an awesome album

  • @sergiogil5831
    @sergiogil5831 2 года назад +13

    I remember earlier in 1997 when OK Computer had been released, Yorke reckoned they had killed Britpop with their album.
    Noel didn't quite understand this, or he just put his efforts on doing the same thing than in the previos years, but bigger. Music was evolving but not in the way Noel expected.
    Blur's 97 album was underrated at the time but 25 years later, Beetlebum and Song Two are major classics. I believe they understood they needed to move forward - something that Oasis didn't.

    • @new.romance999
      @new.romance999 2 года назад +6

      And when Noel tried to catch up with the era and released Standing on the Shoulders of giants it was too late

  • @keirzeiss2069
    @keirzeiss2069 2 года назад +3

    Great video! Be Here Now is my fave Oasis album. I remember feeling like they had run out of gas and I didn't even bother buying any more of their albums until I had a personal Oasis resurgence years later. It was amazing to hear all of the albums I'd not bothered with...now ALL Oasis albums get a regular spin. Be Here Now is the masterpiece and the crazy tour that supported that album was MAGIC!!

  • @Boleskinebeatz
    @Boleskinebeatz 2 года назад +12

    I’m really glad you brought this up as I dug it out of my box of CDs in the loft a few months ago and have been playing it in the car ever since.
    I have realised it’s actually a great album with some amazing songs and Liam sounds brilliant throughout.
    Having had my sound engineer hat on trying to work out one of the reasons it got such a bad press, I’m convinced that the overwhelming culprit is the ridiculous amount of overdubbed guitars that not only make the timing dodgy, they obscure everything so much of the time.
    There is one track that I can’t recall the name of where Alan White may as well be drumming on cardboard boxes as the multiple guitars just kill any chance of hearing the tone of the drums or the room they were recorded in.
    Apparently Owen Morris was stripping back Gtr overdubs as far back as Definitely Maybe which is why it has such a cool punk sound.
    If Be Here Now was remixed with some top end and with 60% of the guitars taken off and about 3 minutes edited out of the outros of most of the songs it would be a monster!

    • @craigbarwell951
      @craigbarwell951 2 года назад

      Completely agree with this. I wish they would remix. I love the album but it could be a monster like you say.

    • @cs0rpc
      @cs0rpc 2 года назад

      @@craigbarwell951 Yes. I like the D’You Know What I mean remix a lot. Wish they’d done the full record. A 5.1 mix would have been interesting too, given a bit of space for the instrumentation.

    • @njr380
      @njr380 Год назад

      "f Be Here Now was remixed with some top end and with 60% of the guitars taken off and about 3 minutes edited out of the outros of most of the songs it would be a monster!"
      Someone please do this. Noel?

  • @hamricmike8
    @hamricmike8 2 года назад +10

    Oasis has been my favorite band since 1994 when I saw the Live Forever video on MTV here in the US. I have everything this band has ever released and Be Here Now is still my favorite album. I bought it the day it came out as soon as the record store opened. I live in the US so there weren't any waiting lines or anything like in the UK. I was 19 at the time and played that CD every day in my dorm room at college and bought another one that I could keep in my car. I never once remember myself thinking 'hmm these songs are too long'. All Around the World is one of those songs like Hey Jude where I wish it would just keep going forever.
    I think you're totally on point about them taking so long before they followed it with SOTSOG. If you disappear for 3 years you get forgotten. The Beatles made ALL of their records in like 8 years which seems ridiculous by today's standards.

    • @neilsun2521
      @neilsun2521 Год назад +3

      According to the official Beatles story, they made Rubber Soul in less than a month! They apparently came into Abbey Rd with no new material at all in November '65; and then had the album done and out in the shops by 3rd December!! In time for Christmas. (16 songs, written; rehearsed; recorded in a couple of weeks.)

    • @hamricmike8
      @hamricmike8 Год назад +1

      @@neilsun2521 I know, it's crazy how they did what they did in such a short period of time. We'll never see anything like that ever again. Bands today release an album every 3 years.

  • @stuffifollow
    @stuffifollow 2 года назад +1

    I was 17, and I quite remember when the album arrived at my hands... and, amazingly, I agree with everything you said in this video! I love long songs and there is so many details one is still discovering today in those tracks. I particularly enjoyed a recently released remastered version.

  • @The_AndroidSentByCyberlife
    @The_AndroidSentByCyberlife Год назад +6

    Its incredibly overhated, however all the critiques are fairly placed. BUT! With songs like Dont Go Away and All Arround The World you cant deny its very good

  • @pablocanteros9049
    @pablocanteros9049 2 года назад +1

    I really love Be Here Now. It was the first complete Oasis album I heard, in 1998, when I was 17 years old, and since then, it has been in my heart. Every time I listen to it (last Sunday I did), it generates a beautiful nostalgia in me, because I could also feel how an era was closing. This video is very good, like all the ones you make, for a 40-year-old man, in a remote country lost at the end of the world like Argentina. I appreciate you being the "oasis nerd", and all the information and opinion. really thanks

  • @columorourke5426
    @columorourke5426 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant synopsis. I agree. If I recall by 1998, the charts became overwhelmed in digital synthetic music (Vengaboys, Blue, Aqua)
    And of course Robbie Williams became the untouchable pop artist for a couple of years. I would say that Oasis did have a good year in 2005/06 with Dont Believe the Truth. I’ve great memories of that time too

  • @RunOfTheHind
    @RunOfTheHind 2 года назад +10

    OK Computer killed them off. That was the 'zeitgeist' release that year. Noel was disappointed because culturally they could no longer make the same impact. It was more of the same, just a bit 'more' - not the towering artistic achievement he wanted. They couldn't expand like Radiohead could. They had a Rubber Soul and a Revolver but weren't capable of making a Sgt Pepper's. Radiohead very much were.

    • @headshrinker1124
      @headshrinker1124 Месяц назад +1

      Radiohead come on mate 😂 oasis were premier league Radiohead were sunday league not anywhere near the same level Radiohead 😂 good one!

    • @Keeleysound
      @Keeleysound 19 дней назад +1

      Absolutely spot-on. I love Oasis and flawed as it is, I love "Be Here Now". But your analysis of Radiohead, "OK Computer" and how Oasis were unable to produce a fittingly visionary artistic statement and the necessary creative development of a third album when required, is spot-on 👌🏼

    • @avantgardo
      @avantgardo 14 дней назад

      @@headshrinker1124 😑

    • @waynesilverman3048
      @waynesilverman3048 11 часов назад

      Comparing them with oasis is like comparing 2 other things that are so different

    • @RunOfTheHind
      @RunOfTheHind 6 часов назад

      @@waynesilverman3048 What people wanted from music in the late-90s compared to the mid-90s was so different, which is the point. The flippancy of the brit pop days was gone; the lesser brit pop bands were dropping like flies, Blur made 'Blur' and the brit pop kids were growing up. Pre-millennium tension and the perceived futurism of that coming event pervaded. OK Computer, Mezzanine and Psyence Fiction were the order of the day. It'd gone from 'Might as well do the white line' to 'The drugs don't work'.

  • @robsol123
    @robsol123 2 года назад +6

    Love this video mate!!! X I love it when I see/hear stuff about how “BE HERE NOW” is a brilliant album - I love this album more than any other oasis album - means so much to me, such an amazing time to be alive!!! X BE HERE NOW is one of my favourite albums of all time by ANY BAND = amazing amazing amazing from start to finish - Noel is a bell end for hating it so much - never seen anything like it since!!! 😍🙌🎶

  • @ravenstrange8466
    @ravenstrange8466 2 года назад +23

    Noel Gallagher sometimes needs to be quiet where he often speaks his mind. I think he thinks he's being edgy, but he is damaging his legacy by saying things where silence would best serve him well. Oasis was, is, and always will be a magical force to be reckoned with.

  • @RainzzYT
    @RainzzYT 2 года назад +10

    I absolutely love the Be Here Now album

  • @m.r.8903
    @m.r.8903 2 года назад +6

    Also this album has so many instruments/riffs in there that every time you listen to it seems like it's always a different story (morning glory)

  • @samweston6272
    @samweston6272 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant video. You are a fab documentary maker Richard xxx

  • @utkarsh_Shrivastava
    @utkarsh_Shrivastava 2 года назад +5

    Be here now is my favorite album while exercising,it gives you that adrenaline rush.

  • @heale1
    @heale1 2 года назад +3

    Also, remember Be Here Now was released in the shops on a thursday and still made number 1 the following Sunday.

    • @BarnsleyMatchdayDrinkers
      @BarnsleyMatchdayDrinkers 2 года назад

      And when you had to shift records to top then charts.. not get a mate to refresh their played Spotify song every two seconds

  • @SirBartom
    @SirBartom 2 года назад

    Ahhh I only discovered your videos a few days ago and I genuinely love them! There's just smth bout them that makes them really easy to listen to. Even as background noise i find that I'm paying attention and retaining the info

  • @MrMacbridemax
    @MrMacbridemax 2 года назад +13

    Great video. I take a bit of a different view on it though. The Britpop bubble burst because it was unsustainable. Nothing as huge and all consuming as Oasis were in 95-97 could possibly last, regardless of what album Oasis put out next, or how long they left it until the follow up after Be Here Now. Culture must evolve and move on. It was a moment in time and I think that third album would have been the apex before the inevitable decline whatever happened.
    Taking the album on its merits, which is a slightly different conversation to my mind, I think it's very good, perhaps great in some ways, but also deeply flawed. It's sugar rush of an album, all surface thrill but not a great deal of depth. The five star reviews it got at the time can't be taken too seriously. They were in part a reaction to the critics having misjudged WTSMG so badly, so they overcompensated in the other direction. The industry as a whole had a LOT invested in that album being a success.
    And yes, the songs are ridiculously long, and the production is very abrasive and one note in my opinion. WTSMG had promised genius levels of songwriting. Be Here Now could not match it, or move it on, and ultimately, it marked the steady decline of Oasis' cultural relevance. Great bands must evolve, and for as much as I love and appreciate Oasis from 95-97, this was the moment where it became apparent that creatively they were running out of ideas.
    Still, it is a very good album, there are some genius moments on it, and I agree that it gets unfairly maligned.
    I think you're probably right that part of the reason Noel doesn't like it because he associates it with the beginning of the end of the phenomenon. However, if I was going to play pop psychologist, I reckon his stance on it is also an overreaction to the subsequent critical savaging it got. Almost like saying 'you can't hurt me by criticising this album, because I myself have disowned it.'

  • @Couly
    @Couly 2 года назад +7

    They should release a shorter acoustic version called Be Here Now: Naked

  • @chicharito229
    @chicharito229 2 года назад +17

    Be here now is a album of bangers! Dont listen to the negativity.

    • @ososnake97
      @ososnake97 2 года назад

      some songs are good but way too long, and the rest are utterly crap, i mean magic pie? d'you know what i mean? (that fucking wonderwall 2) be here now is also a meh song

  • @costanzauk
    @costanzauk 2 года назад +2

    I remember listening to it on the day on just being underwhelmed. Probably partly due to the hype, similar to the Seinfeld finale! There's a few bangers like Stand by me, Fade in/out and It's getting better man. But surely the test of a great album is how often you re-play it, and I didn't re-play it that much. I love your vids btw, very entertaining and you give a balanced perspective at all times, fair play

    • @Gunt78
      @Gunt78 2 года назад +1

      Exactly, It sounded good on first listen, I guess familiar but I never found myself feeling the urge to go back to it. It lacked depth, the hype had led me to believe they were going to do something groundbreaking and adventurous and the reality was it just sounded like Noel going through the motions as a songwriter.

  • @theSPECIALbrew74
    @theSPECIALbrew74 2 года назад +6

    1994-98 and oasis. The last cultural music touchstone that mattered. Pre internet. The internet devalued everything and streaming by five year olds with phones has left the charts looking like a Simon cowell playlist

  • @eddysandland58
    @eddysandland58 2 года назад +3

    If? You were around to buy it in 97' the Hype was unreal! We All know it's overly Produced And Long! But for me it's there 4th Best after DM/WTSMG?/TM & Then Be Here Now! It Still has some Tunes, Especially Live n A Special Place in the Oasis Catalogue! Thanks James! edit
    I was never Embarrassed (94-09) or saw it when you mentioned it, but I did feel it around 05-09 when they started to sound/look/retro/older!

  • @kingrubbatiti1285
    @kingrubbatiti1285 2 года назад

    It holds a special place for me. It came out when I was 16,I'd just finished school and was enjoying the summer before starting college in September. I remember going down to virgin and queuing up outside before getting in and grabbing my copy.

  • @mechanicalanimal125
    @mechanicalanimal125 2 года назад +2

    always been my favorite album of theirs since the day it was released. never understood any dislike towards it. it's just so good !!
    not one bad song on it, imo

  • @ketchup5344
    @ketchup5344 Год назад +2

    This chap presents very well. Very articulate. Credit where it's due.👍 Be here now sums up the 90s for me. Most important album for me of that decade.

    • @OpalMoonstone247
      @OpalMoonstone247 3 месяца назад

      Me too. D'You Know What I Mean is a personal anthem

  • @glantont
    @glantont 2 года назад +2

    I'm pretty much the same age as James and I can attest that as those singles came out, right up to D'you Know What I Mean, I had no reason to suspect Noel Gallagher would ever stop producing genius level music. Hearing the B-sides to Wonderwall felt incredible. How could a band have so much material and ability that those songs could go out where people might never hear them? It was electrifying. It was an incredible time to be 15 and I'll always be grateful to Oasis - and Blur - for making it so.
    But I'll always remember when the rot set in. As James says, the build up to BHN was so great that they got an hour on BBC2 to promo it. They broadcast this stupid film where Oasis were knocking round some big white mansion and wearing outrageously stupid hats, outsized flat caps. Noel and Liam sang Stand By Me and it was the first time I'd heard an Oasis song I hated. From there it was just ill-fitting white suits and endless overblown boring songs. I was crestfallen and heart broken. I never bought another Oasis record, and I didn't feel the magic again till the first High Flying Birds record, which I still hold is NG's best work since Morning Glory.

    • @mumbles215
      @mumbles215 Месяц назад +1

      Couldn’t agree more. The energy left the room and it was noticed by all.

  • @chili_phil
    @chili_phil 2 года назад +4

    You have nailed it once again. You really do know Oasis inside out. This is human psychology right here. It has far too many bad memories attached to it. I loved Be Here Now, I love the depth of it. The B-sides on that followed it was ace. I'm kind of glad they never went to the U2 level, it would have ruined something truly amazing. Great video.

    • @michaelmulhall5007
      @michaelmulhall5007 2 года назад +2

      Exactly oasis where massive in the uk Japan Ireland South America bit other parts of the world didn’t get it. Liam wasn’t like a Bono or Chris Martin telling every city in the world there the best. It was what you see is what you get. And the real fans get this. They were like your football team you support them to the death. When it was good it was great. Sometimes the gigs were shit near the end as Liams singing had gone and the in ear monitors didn’t help. But you stayed with them as you loved them

    • @chili_phil
      @chili_phil 2 года назад +2

      @@michaelmulhall5007 Mate, I love what you have wrote there! They were very similar to supporting a footy team through and through!

  • @masonmennell8514
    @masonmennell8514 2 года назад

    I haven't been getting video notifications from your channel lately, youtube is shit sometimes. Great video!

  • @mrspaceman6715
    @mrspaceman6715 2 года назад

    Hi James hello from Australia. love your channel. was wondering If you could give a review of what pedals noel and bonehead might have used for first 2 albums.

  • @dizzyupthefool5180
    @dizzyupthefool5180 2 года назад +3

    I will always love Be Here Now. It was part of the soundtrack to the greatest time of my life.
    DYKWIM
    My Big Mouth
    Stand By Me
    I Hope, I Think, I Know
    Fade In/Out
    Don't Go Away
    Be Here Now
    All Around the World
    I rest my case, your honour.
    And the tracks I didn't mention there are decent too!

  • @garysguitarworld7612
    @garysguitarworld7612 2 года назад +2

    Just gonna say it now, this is my favourite oasis album. It's so in your face and loud, love it

  • @leewallace3455
    @leewallace3455 2 года назад +4

    I am a huge oasis fan and this is actually my favourite album.

  • @TheBlondon
    @TheBlondon 2 года назад

    No dislikes and too right! James you’re the dude, this is the best! Mad for it from San Francisco!

  • @john_the_boxer
    @john_the_boxer 2 года назад +12

    Personally, I think the death of Princess Diana pretty much signified the end of the ‘feel good’ vibe that was sweeping Britain. Not so much ‘Britpop’, but the Cool Britannia movements. Think of what she meant to the people, what she stood for and what she believed. Urban Hymns sort of kept it going, then the Haigh Hall gig. But, by mid 1998, it was over.

  • @stephenwebster3304
    @stephenwebster3304 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the video and an interesting take. I always felt Be Here Now was the album the “masses” bought - as they wanted to “fit in” - they weren’t music fans - it was a scene to them. And they’d move on to the next one - once they’d caught up .
    As an Oasis fan - 94-96 was an amazing period and the band were a gateway for new music. I don’t lament 1997 - some of the finest albums of the decade came out that year - Ok Computer, Urban Hymns, Vanishing Point and In It For The Money.
    An amazing period - Oasis were the catalyst.

  • @ryumehara
    @ryumehara 2 года назад +1

    I hope you can make a separate video comparing every (album recorded) tracks from BHN against live/demos of it. And tell us how do you think it would have sound and how could it have made their first three albums one of the greatest run in recording history ✌🏻

  • @frommetoyou1981
    @frommetoyou1981 2 года назад

    I agree, I was 16 when be here now came out and 19 when standing on the shoulder of giants came out, I still bought everything after but things had changed, that momentum you speak of was lost.......very well said.

  • @highlanstar1
    @highlanstar1 2 года назад +2

    As a 13 year old it was amazing, still in
    F**king loved that album

  • @SuperBroonie
    @SuperBroonie 2 года назад +1

    Hit the nail on the head. I loved Be Here Now and bought the Masterplan which kept the ball rolling (cos I am an LP collector not singles) for a little longer but That was it for me never bought any more of their albums because Andy Bell and Ride were a favourite band of mine and when he joined Oasis along with Gem from Heavy Stereo it felt it was then an industry led amalgamation of bands like trying to create a Supergroup who were already Chemically perfect on Definitely Maybe . It was sad but a new scene started from America which was more exciting. Oasis have issues with tempo most of there material is at the same tempo and when The Strokes and White Stripes arrived it became exciting again. Oasis should have picked up on the 4AD band The Pixies and dynamics instead of Phil Spector's Wall of Sound. However yesterday I listened to Dig Out Your Soul for the first time and it is a classic album and I had tears in my eyes listening to Liams song Out of Time I guess out of nostalgia and the fact that the words seem to be like the knowledge that the party of all our youths and true Rock n Roll has gone forever. In the video the deck playing nothing on the turntable a reference I believe to Wonderwall and those times fading into obscurity as the Cult of celebrity and internet talentless fame washes it away forever. Sad

  • @projektgrudge
    @projektgrudge 20 дней назад

    Bought on the day of release. Having re-listened to it many times over the years, pretty much every song is a BANGER. James is right, If they had released another good album in 98, and carried on the momentum, critics would still rate the album as highly as they did upon release, Noel wouldnt be so obssessed with being down on the album, and we wouldnt be having this conversation.

  • @keefevo
    @keefevo 2 года назад +2

    Great video, I can never listen to Be Here Now as a whole album I find it a difficult listen so I just cherry pick my favorite tracks from it but you are right it was definitely the end of the Brit pop movement.

  • @simontunnicliffe2107
    @simontunnicliffe2107 2 года назад +1

    That Harry Potter book thing for the only thing comparable in modern times was very funny James and at the same time, quite sad. Good video as always.

  • @TheChadTI
    @TheChadTI 2 года назад +3

    This is a genius assessment man, one I never considered.

  • @Drummer8282
    @Drummer8282 2 года назад +2

    I would have swapped out;
    -Magic Pie for The Fame.
    -Stand By Me for Stay Young.
    -Don’t Go Away for ( I Got ) The Fever.
    And I’d have added Flashbax or Going Nowhere in there somewhere.

  • @anonusniogsonisrgnip
    @anonusniogsonisrgnip Месяц назад +1

    Be here now 1# oasis album to me. The larger than life, no fucks given, wall of noise production makes for a fantastic rock attitude
    And theres some amazing writing on here

  • @alfieralph8036
    @alfieralph8036 2 года назад

    Me and our kid used to perform/duet girl in the dirty shirt at our local pub jam night back in the early noughties... Always surprised me how much love there was for that song.

  • @thequietone2962
    @thequietone2962 6 месяцев назад

    I’ve been binge watching your channel dude, keep it up!

  • @adronias
    @adronias 2 года назад +10

    The problem for Be here now is that it was released within a few months of Ok Computer and Urban Hymns. It would be one thing if it wasn't as good as the first two Oasis albums.. but it wasn't even as good as the other British albums released at the same time.

  • @sideline8048
    @sideline8048 2 года назад

    Great video James do you think you can make a video on how to get a good Johnny marr tone

  • @wesdoodle2495
    @wesdoodle2495 Год назад +1

    Listening to I hope I think I know for the first time in years right now - what a great tune!

  • @DeathFromAbove1981
    @DeathFromAbove1981 2 месяца назад +1

    The album closing with the footsteps and a door closing made a statement to me, even if they weren't aware. I don't think they could've followed it up in late 98 with anything as big, not their fault, the landscape was changing around them. A 25 year hiatus and return couldv'e been incredible.

  • @geoffclarke8934
    @geoffclarke8934 2 года назад +3

    I loved Oasis especially the first two albums and still think Be Here Now is a pretty decent album. Didn't enjoy the subsequent albums quite so much apart from Don't Believe the Truth. Was fortunate to see them at Wembley in the summer of 2009 about a month before they split. Brilliant gig. Loved the Brit Pop era.

  • @IvanLendl87
    @IvanLendl87 2 года назад +2

    20:28 I agree that Oasis’s 3 year hiatus lead to the end of Brit-Pop but at the same time I can understand why the break happened. As Liam himself has said Oasis was like a Ferrari - incredible machine but dangerous & hard to keep under control. Combine the quick rise to world chart dominance with Noel’s & Liam’s constant infighting + Bonehead and Guigsy departing and it’s totally understandable why there was that break. Every musical movement or scene inevitably comes to its end unfortunately. Keep up the great work, James. Love your channel!

  • @jamlemon
    @jamlemon 2 года назад +4

    I remember lads at my school going to buy the album before picking up their GCSE results. Whereas I wasn’t interested in doing either! 😂

  • @chrisvanuden
    @chrisvanuden 6 месяцев назад +3

    I always loved Be Here Now. Never understood the hate it got.

    • @OpalMoonstone247
      @OpalMoonstone247 3 месяца назад

      Agreed. Only flaw is the toilet flushing sounds at the end of the title track.
      Magic Pie and Stand by Me could have been cut shorter or altered just a bit. Otherwise, as an album, I actually like every single song. Morning Glory is over hyped, in my personal opinion. It's iconic and great, but some songs are not very good.
      Be Here Now, is a tiring experience now that I've gotten older.
      When I was 15, I played the cassette so much that I broke it.
      Definitely Maybe was actually really great, which I appreciate now more than ever, alongside Standing on the Shoulder of Giants.
      After that, they're records sounded choppy, cheaper, and just didn't tell a story as much.
      I actually think the final album was fantastic if only they'd left track 9 off. What in the world was that nonsense for? Was like stepping on doodoo in a beautiful nature walk. 😂😂

  • @estela6226
    @estela6226 2 года назад +5

    To me BHN is the best rock album for the 90s, supreme work. Superb. I wish Noel could hear it like I do. Idk what Noel was expecting to happen. He wanted to be "big like U2"? Oasis had the music to do it and they did. What they didn't have was the personality for that. And honestly, they didn't need to. We didn't need a other fake a** Bono. We need the rawness of Liam and Noel.
    The movement died for so many reasons. Are we really not gonna talk about how most teens are absolutely unloyal to music? They like what's on the radio. If it's not on the radio anymore it's not valuable anymore. Noel is such a big fan of music that he fails to see it.
    Also, Noel had such a bad experience with coc*ine right after that period that he probably remembers the period of recording BHN with certain regret.

  • @mungofinalfi4480
    @mungofinalfi4480 2 года назад +1

    Also, around the same time as Be here now and leading up to the 00's, other well-known bands associated with britpop started to release albums in those three years that strayed away from the "britpop sound":
    1997:
    Blur - Blur
    1998:
    Pulp - This is hardcore
    1999:
    Blur - 13
    Suede - Head music

  • @renmusical
    @renmusical 2 года назад +1

    I felt the reception Be Here Now got in retrospect (as well as the constant fights with Liam, Bonehead's departure, etc.) sowed the seeds of Noel eventually leaving Oasis in 2009 and starting the High Flying Birds. Oasis would try to expand their sound with Stand on the Shoulder of Giants or Dig Out Your Soul with Noel allowing Liam and the others to wrote their own songs. So you can see how the aftermath of Be Here Now affected the band.
    Although I love some of the post-1997 albums, I can't see them beating out Definitely Maybe or Morning Glory. Saying that, I actually like Dig Out Your Soul and Giants more than Be Here Now.

  • @gomezthechimp1116
    @gomezthechimp1116 2 года назад +4

    Slade were massive in the early to mid 70s. Then they went on a massive extensive tour of the US which lasted 2 years. When they came back, punk had hit the UK and Slade were irrelevant.

  • @JackWhitehead1981
    @JackWhitehead1981 2 года назад +9

    Say what you like, this was the final, definitive album. I fucking love it.

  • @darkwarrior1194
    @darkwarrior1194 Год назад +2

    In my opinion to be honest, Be Here Now works really well as a weird mix of Britpop and Psychedelic Rock, I've always love that album as much as the first two

  • @TomParker-lj8qc
    @TomParker-lj8qc Месяц назад +1

    I hope I think I know is one of the best oasis tunes and never heard any of them speak about it

  • @91lifetime23
    @91lifetime23 Месяц назад +1

    To this day its still my favorite album of all time

  • @soulagent79
    @soulagent79 2 года назад +1

    I bought 'Be Here Now' the day it was released and have loved it ever since. If it was an artistic failure, it was the greatest one ever made. I agree it is overproduced, you can't really hear the bass guitar and it sounds muddy most of the time, but as an artistic statement it absolutely works.

  • @bartomiejmadejski260
    @bartomiejmadejski260 Год назад

    I love every Oasis album from the 90's, but Be Here Now will always have a special place in my heart, and not a single note I would change on it

  • @MassiveCatLittleLegs
    @MassiveCatLittleLegs 2 года назад +6

    About halfway through 'Magic Pie' there is a clicking sound. I always thought it was just on my CD, but then one day I was listening to it on youtube and there it was again. Basically it's where they've taken out an overdub and then not bothered to clean up the recording. That's how little they cared at that point.
    In fact, 'Magic Pie' pretty much sums up everything wrong with that album. It's approximately the same length as 'Champagne Supernova', but it has none of the peaks and troughs, the feeling like you've been on a rollercoaster. There's footage of them playing 'Magic Pie' on the Be Here Now tour, and even at that stage it looks tired, bloated and boring.
    I loathe that song. Terrible stuff.
    Other tracks... The NG remix of D'You Know What I Mean? is much better than the album version, My Big Mouth is pretty average, I Hope I Think I Know is alright I guess... I know Stand By Me has its fans, but for me it's boring... and so on. The Girl in the Dirty Shirt is the only song I really enjoy, but even that's two minutes too long. It's Gettin' Better (Man!!) would be a decent rock tune if it didn't go on and on and on and on and on and on. It's a 3 1/2 minute rocker stretched to over seven minutes.
    Don't Believe the Truth is the unsung classic.

    • @mumbles215
      @mumbles215 Месяц назад

      I don’t think there’s one song that is 3 or 4 minutes. I looked the other day. Even the reprise of all around the world is 2 mins. The songs aren’t good. Over produced. Wall or noise and the shit songs are too long.

  • @jamesbarton3155
    @jamesbarton3155 2 года назад

    Great in depth video. The point about the time when SOTSOG came out is very true. I was in secondary school during those times and as much as I loved Oasis then and throughout school, something had passed and it wasn't the same and certainly kids my own age in school were absolutely not interested in a new Oasis release maybe bar a couple that I knew. They had become uncool almost so quickly, it was quite bizarre to understand why and how that suddenly seemed to happen. I certainly remember that at that time, Emo and Pop-Punk became the cool trends to be into, something which I almost refused to entertain because it all seemed a load of rubbish. I was Oasis through and through and nobody was going to tell me otherwise. But only very recently, I've come to realise that I peaked at about 9 years old musically (haha) when I recorded Knebworth off the radio and watching the new documentary, really just brought it home. It was the last great period in music before the internet did literally take over all our lives (even if it sounds like I'm just echoing a NG quote! Lol).

  • @matthewrider6453
    @matthewrider6453 2 года назад +2

    Just to remind folks how hyped this album was... It debuted at #2 IN AMERICA(!), & that was considered a "let-down." It also went platinum here, meaning a million+ copies sold, as well. But was still considered to be a failure. It also received 4/5 stars by American Rolling Stone, along w/a rave review, calling it "the wonderwall of sound." And at the end of '97, Rolling Stone readers, in the Readers' Poll, voted Be Here Now the #1 album of '97 over the #2 OK Computer. So yeah.... Mull that over for a bit. It was a good album. It just wasn't an instant classic the way the first two albums were.

  • @unacceptableviews6231
    @unacceptableviews6231 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for the amazing video, this speaks to my soul, as Oasis were a huge impact on me. The summer of 1997 was epic I remember I played Be Here Now non stop. That year The Verve, Radiohead and Oasis all released amazing albums, then it just died. Soon after that the horrible boy band music took over, and in my opinion music has sucked ever since. It really has never been the same. I did enjoy the rest of Oasis albums from SOTSOG to DOYS in the following years, but if I had one bone to pick it would be the poor production of the albums. They should have stuck with Owen Morris and Noel.

  • @ads2686
    @ads2686 5 месяцев назад +3

    i think you are forgetting the band had been working non stop from 1990 or 91, by the time be here now came out, they were all hooked on coke the be here now tour lasted about a year, noel was having panic attacks. The band needed to take a break. i mean the guy who wrote the album is allowed to not like it. Imagine getting off coke being sober and then listening to be here now, imagine listing to all around the world (one of the first songs noel wrote and seeing what they had done to it). cant blame him for hating it. Although i will say i saw noel gallaghers high flying birds and he actually played stand by me live. Totally stripped back and if that was released itvwould have been massive.

    • @mumbles215
      @mumbles215 Месяц назад

      Another song he ripped off.

  • @headshrinker1124
    @headshrinker1124 Месяц назад +1

    Be here now brilliant album and one of my favourite songs

  • @coldacre
    @coldacre 2 года назад +2

    the reason why the press turned on Oasis was because a better album came out that year: OK Computer. by the time of Kid A in 2000, Oasis were yesterdays news

  • @tallowmangaa7884
    @tallowmangaa7884 2 года назад +1

    I remember in Ireland the whole album was played on the radio..

  • @had0165
    @had0165 2 года назад +2

    I remember being so happy as a 16 year old getting this on pre order - I loved it, the songs in hindsight were a little long and self indulgent of course. But a couple of months after, Oasis started to fade a little from the public eye and the singles were not as successful. Felt like a big cultural change at the time and music moved away from Britpop. But I really enjoyed it at the time.