The very first time Oasis played together they promised they were going
to be the best, that they'd never settle for the dull thud of
mediocrity. And then they set about proving it. Right from the off, they
resisted the security of the obvious, of doing things the way they were
supposed to. They never sent a demo to a record company, knew that
supreme self-confidence and a host of classic songs would be enough to
curve destiny their way. When Creation Records supremo Alan McGee saw
them at a club gig in Glasgow they had no manager, no agent, and no
money. Just greatness. He signed them on the spot. An unsuspecting world
was about to be blown away.
On April 11th 1994, Oasis released their debut single, 'Supersonic', an
elegantly noisy pop celebration. By now their live shows were being
talked of as something very special and they'd built an extensive,
committed fan base. A trio of classic singles, 'Shakermaker', 'Live
Forever' and 'Cigarettes and Alcohol' further emphasised Oasis'
soaringly assured power. Their increasingly growing audience began to
wonder what they ever did without them.
More live shows followed, including a triumphant New York debut and
promoters soon got used to the band breaking all records, exceeding even
the wildest expectations.
With the release of their debut album, 'Definitely Maybe', it was time
to rewrite the record books once again. The album was the fastest
selling debut in British history, entering the charts, unsurprisingly,
at number one. It's still in the UK top twenty after a staggering
eighteen months, going way past triple platinum and perhaps more
impressively has sold well over one million copies outside the UK.
They crowned 1994 with their No.3 Xmas single 'Whatever', swept the
readers' and writer's polls in the music press, and were,
unsurprisingly, winners at the BRIT Awards. Barely a year between their
first single and the stratospheric. Not bad going.
In 1995 the reputation of Oasis' live shows sky-rocketed. All around the
world gigs sold out in under half an hour, and telephone exchanges from
Dublin to Detroit blew up through the sheer weight of calls for
tickets. Furthermore they headlined Glastonbury, played two nights in a
colossal tent on Irvine Beach, Scotland, and staged the two biggest ever
indoor gigs in Europe, at a specially-expanded Earls Court. So loud
were the latter that serious earth tremors were reported in the
Kensington and Chelsea areas. The shows themselves were astounding,
emotional, and proof, if any was needed, that Oasis were undoubtedly the
biggest and best band in the country.
On record, too, the band had progressed, in April 'Some Might Say'
provided them with their first No. 1 single, selling over 300,000
copies. The follow-up 'Roll With It' reached 400,000, and 'Wonderwall'
is Platinum (600,000) and rising after 12 weeks in the Top Ten, and
inspired an almost instant cover version by Mike Flowers.
Their second album '(What's The Story) Morning Glory?' went straight in
at No. 1, and became the fastest-selling album since Michael Jackson's
'Bad' in 1987. By the end of 1995 it was certified 6 times Platinum,
and, apart from Robson & Jerome, by far the biggest-selling album of
the year. This success is being mirrored world-wide, with the album
hitting No. 1 in France, Sweden, Ireland and New Zealand, as well as
reaching gold in most other countries.
If last year was magnificent, their future looks better still. Edging
into 1996 , there's 4 BRAT Awards, 6 BRIT nominations, and 'Don't Look
Back In Anger' their ninth single in less than 2 years. Significantly,
at time of writing '...Morning Glory?' had just jumped to No. 5 in the
US Billboard charts.
How much more do they want? How much have you got'?
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