Sunday, February 26, 2006
She's Electric
Oasis concert at the Singapore Indoor Stadium
[Feb 23rd 2006]
Neil Humphreys' Oasis gig review.
Adrian Yap's gig review.
Liam interview article from The Straits Times
Concert review by fans ( Eyeris / Oasistar / Shazee )
Some lame complaints by concert goers who are better off watching opera instead of a rock n roll concert..
******************************************************************
Basic Britpop - by Jill Alphonso for Straits Times
Oasis does not believe in working the crowd. What you see is what you get. No more, no less. Most bands these days know that to keep their fans interested, they have to pander to them a little; to put on, as they say, a show. Not Oasis. At their concert on Thursday, the British rockers sang, muttered once or twice to the crowd, and generally did not bother with much more. If some of the 9,000 strong turn out were disappointed by the lack of small talk and interaction, you could say it was not really the band's fault. After all, the Manchester blokes have never played to the gallery. They have never given a hoot what their fans want. Instead, they rely on their music, as well as their bad-boy antics, particularly fracticious bickering between the Gallagher brothers, singer Liam and singer-guitarist Noel.
In the same vein, one cannot expect them to execute flying leaps at their gigs, or to even smile.
The guys were the leaders of the 1990s Britpop phenomenon, a nationalistic movement against America grunge, that both rebuffed American pop domination and emulated its attitude. And back then, it was the slacker-cool image that Brit bands like Blur, Suede and Oasis adopted, for it was what American grunge acts Nirvana, Mudhoney, Pearl Jam and Soundgarden expressed to the world. It was an attitude that reflected a move against the mind numbing commercialism of the 1980s. You could see that right from the start of the gig when Liam, 33, took to the stage at 8.35pm. He sang in the trademark sideways stance he has developed over the years - standing with one foot forward, both hands clasped behind his back, hunched over and stretching his neck up to reach the microphone. After launching into new songs Turn Up The Sun and Lyla, taken from their 2005 album Don't Believe The Truth, he inexplicably left the microphone to stand arms crossed, centrestage.
From behind the sunglasses he wore, he stared into the crowd.
It appeared as if he fancied himself a kind surveying his kingdom. Or perhaps he was just challenging the crowd, as if to say, take us as we are. Or, maybe, he was just bored. In any case, those in the $160 free standing section were there to make sure they got their money's worth. The crowd in the mosh pit launched themselves skyward, some crowd-surfing for a few seconds before getting pulled out by the bouncers. Two men in the back did exuberant jigs to the songs, throwing the occasional full-body twirl and a moonwalk or two.
Liam left the stage mid-way through the set, allowing Noel to sing on hits like The Masterplan, the title track of their 1998 fourth album. Suprisingly, Noel's voice was expressive, a contrast to his brother's shouting, raspy vocals. If Liam is a singer whose voice would fit in a pub where brawls break out over football matches, Noel's is a loftier, rangier counterpart, one you might enjoy listening to while drunk and almost falling asleep. The band were at their best when they launched into Wonderwall, their eponymous hit of 1995, and older hits like Champagne Supernova. To hear those songs was to feel a twinge of what it was like to be a teenager in the 1990s, knowing vaguely that the roads ahead would be winding, but not knowing exactly which road you would have to walk down in life.
Everything was new, and the world seemed full of possibilities.
"Don't put your life in the hands of a rock n roll band who'll throw it all away," Noel sang on Don't Look Back in Anger. They were right. Some members in the audience might have felt that 70 minutes they had put in Oasis' hands were 70 minutes wasted because, where were the theatrics?
But in an era where big-rock bands with big shows and crowd-pleasing antics have become indistinguishable from commerical pop acts, Oasis' back to basics, no frills approach was a breath of fresh air. They might not be crowd-pleasers today with their posturing, incessant swearing and disinterested stage presence. And, yes, they even left the stage with nary a good bye. But the die-hard fan would have gone home with memories swirling in his head, recollections of a time when Britpop was young and when the world was younger. Oasis were unapologetically, unabashedly all that they have ever wanted to be - and what is wrong with that?
******************************************************************
Champagne Supernova audio clip from the Concert!
Lyla [ link ]
The Importance Of Being Idle [ link ]
The Masterplan [ link ]
Songbird [ link ]
Live Forever [ link ]
Champagne Supernova1 [ link ]
Champagne Supernova2 [ link ]
Guess God Thinks I'm Abel [ link ]
Madferit Fans' photo collections of the event! [ Ezri / Bir / Hafie / Sixdirtydishes ]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Courtesy of Mel
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Courtesy of Lurgee
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Feb 23rd 2006]
Neil Humphreys' Oasis gig review.
Adrian Yap's gig review.
Liam interview article from The Straits Times
Concert review by fans ( Eyeris / Oasistar / Shazee )
Some lame complaints by concert goers who are better off watching opera instead of a rock n roll concert..
******************************************************************
Basic Britpop - by Jill Alphonso for Straits Times
Oasis does not believe in working the crowd. What you see is what you get. No more, no less. Most bands these days know that to keep their fans interested, they have to pander to them a little; to put on, as they say, a show. Not Oasis. At their concert on Thursday, the British rockers sang, muttered once or twice to the crowd, and generally did not bother with much more. If some of the 9,000 strong turn out were disappointed by the lack of small talk and interaction, you could say it was not really the band's fault. After all, the Manchester blokes have never played to the gallery. They have never given a hoot what their fans want. Instead, they rely on their music, as well as their bad-boy antics, particularly fracticious bickering between the Gallagher brothers, singer Liam and singer-guitarist Noel.
In the same vein, one cannot expect them to execute flying leaps at their gigs, or to even smile.
The guys were the leaders of the 1990s Britpop phenomenon, a nationalistic movement against America grunge, that both rebuffed American pop domination and emulated its attitude. And back then, it was the slacker-cool image that Brit bands like Blur, Suede and Oasis adopted, for it was what American grunge acts Nirvana, Mudhoney, Pearl Jam and Soundgarden expressed to the world. It was an attitude that reflected a move against the mind numbing commercialism of the 1980s. You could see that right from the start of the gig when Liam, 33, took to the stage at 8.35pm. He sang in the trademark sideways stance he has developed over the years - standing with one foot forward, both hands clasped behind his back, hunched over and stretching his neck up to reach the microphone. After launching into new songs Turn Up The Sun and Lyla, taken from their 2005 album Don't Believe The Truth, he inexplicably left the microphone to stand arms crossed, centrestage.
From behind the sunglasses he wore, he stared into the crowd.
It appeared as if he fancied himself a kind surveying his kingdom. Or perhaps he was just challenging the crowd, as if to say, take us as we are. Or, maybe, he was just bored. In any case, those in the $160 free standing section were there to make sure they got their money's worth. The crowd in the mosh pit launched themselves skyward, some crowd-surfing for a few seconds before getting pulled out by the bouncers. Two men in the back did exuberant jigs to the songs, throwing the occasional full-body twirl and a moonwalk or two.
Liam left the stage mid-way through the set, allowing Noel to sing on hits like The Masterplan, the title track of their 1998 fourth album. Suprisingly, Noel's voice was expressive, a contrast to his brother's shouting, raspy vocals. If Liam is a singer whose voice would fit in a pub where brawls break out over football matches, Noel's is a loftier, rangier counterpart, one you might enjoy listening to while drunk and almost falling asleep. The band were at their best when they launched into Wonderwall, their eponymous hit of 1995, and older hits like Champagne Supernova. To hear those songs was to feel a twinge of what it was like to be a teenager in the 1990s, knowing vaguely that the roads ahead would be winding, but not knowing exactly which road you would have to walk down in life.
Everything was new, and the world seemed full of possibilities.
"Don't put your life in the hands of a rock n roll band who'll throw it all away," Noel sang on Don't Look Back in Anger. They were right. Some members in the audience might have felt that 70 minutes they had put in Oasis' hands were 70 minutes wasted because, where were the theatrics?
But in an era where big-rock bands with big shows and crowd-pleasing antics have become indistinguishable from commerical pop acts, Oasis' back to basics, no frills approach was a breath of fresh air. They might not be crowd-pleasers today with their posturing, incessant swearing and disinterested stage presence. And, yes, they even left the stage with nary a good bye. But the die-hard fan would have gone home with memories swirling in his head, recollections of a time when Britpop was young and when the world was younger. Oasis were unapologetically, unabashedly all that they have ever wanted to be - and what is wrong with that?
******************************************************************
Champagne Supernova audio clip from the Concert!
Lyla [ link ]
The Importance Of Being Idle [ link ]
The Masterplan [ link ]
Songbird [ link ]
Live Forever [ link ]
Champagne Supernova1 [ link ]
Champagne Supernova2 [ link ]
Guess God Thinks I'm Abel [ link ]
Madferit Fans' photo collections of the event! [ Ezri / Bir / Hafie / Sixdirtydishes ]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Courtesy of Mel
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Courtesy of Lurgee
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
reported by Alex Banks
6 Comments:
omg...haha i comment on your earlier post come back and my wish came through. thanks for the link and the pics are beautiful!
commented by Shazeea, Monday, February 27, 2006 12:16:00 AM
hello ! i'm Melissa!(the comment you made on my LJ) and I've linked you up at my blogspot (glinkytab.blogspot) and I don't find you familiar at all! why is that so? :( anyway cheers.
whoohoo..nice one for compiling all the interviews..clips..pics..vidz of oasis. you da man!
live forever! :)
live forever! :)
commented by Monday, February 27, 2006 6:37:00 AM
,
shazee - hey there! you've written a good review and i'm glad you like my pics collection. :)
melissa - hello Melissa! thanks for the link, yah? hmm..it's ok not to remember but it was worth the early trip there for sure. Cheers! ;)
lurgee - dude, after more than a decade of waiting.. all of us experienced the best supersonic gig ever! <)
melissa - hello Melissa! thanks for the link, yah? hmm..it's ok not to remember but it was worth the early trip there for sure. Cheers! ;)
lurgee - dude, after more than a decade of waiting.. all of us experienced the best supersonic gig ever! <)
yes yes..it was one of the best gig! could have been better for me if not for some drunk expat.
i had wished they played supersonic though! nonetheless it was still great!
i had wished they played supersonic though! nonetheless it was still great!
commented by Tuesday, February 28, 2006 6:46:00 PM
,
Hi Noreen here. The pictures you have here are superb!Great work. I've linked your page to my website in the Blog section. Please read my own review of the concert on my website. http://www.noreenrazali.co.nr Oasis rocks!!
commented by Wednesday, March 01, 2006 8:29:00 AM
,