Oasis 2025: Weaponised Nostalgia with Better Lighting


An Oasis concert in 2025 is rather like stumbling across a time machine that only goes to 1996 — loud, swaggering, and faintly smelling of lager. The brothers Gallagher, still locked in their eternal contest to see who can sneer at the audience with greater menace, treat the stage less as a platform for music and more as a venue for weaponised nostalgia.

The crowd arrives in two distinct tribes: the die-hards, convinced this is the closest thing to religious transcendence short of meeting God in a pub, and the curious youngsters, there to confirm that yes, their dad’s record collection really did sound like this.

Musically, the set list is a monument to the unshakeable belief that anything written after the year 2000 doesn’t count. The guitars roar, the choruses swell, and every third punter spills a pint while bellowing Wonderwall as though auditioning for the part of “Drunk Mancunian #3.”

By the encore, the entire arena is united — not so much in melody as in volume — proving that while Oasis may never change, neither will the peculiar British talent for making a singalong sound like a riot with better lighting.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Man of Steel, Plot of Porridge

Smile for the State: The Home Office’s New Mechanical Fortune-Tellers

The Screeching Serenade of the Public Phone Pest