Article
possibly from Rolling Stone ca. July 1997
Liam Gallagher
looks like he could be on
stage. Dressed in a natty three-quarter-length blue coat and wearing
tinted shades, the Oasis frontman struts across the floor of the band's
no-frills office in central London, hands clasped behind his back and
chin thrust out in his typical performance pose. But today, Gallagher
isn't out to impress a crowd; he's just fawning over his manager's new
vintage Bella motor scooter. "It's top, really," Gallagher says
excitedly, circling the scooter. "I've got three like 'em at home. Top,
top, top!" Entering the room, Noel Gallagher, dressed casually in jeans
and a maroon Izod shirt, rolls his eyes and blows past his younger
brother on his way to the conference room, where Noel begins to wolf
down a lunch of pasta salad and grape juice. Sitting in front of him on
the table is a prized possession: a cassette of songs from Oasis' third
album, "Be Here Now," which is due out Aug. 26. It's a minor miracle
that "Be Here Now" exists at all, given the Gallagher brothers'
well-documented volatile relationship and the fact that Oasis nearly
broke up last September after Noel left the band with five shows to
play on a tumultuous U.S. tour. But after a few months spent cooling
off, Oasis regrouped, and "Be Here Now" was recorded between December
1996 and March of this year. Perhaps symbolic of the turmoil
surrounding it, the album is far more rowdy and aggressive than 1995's
spare "(What's The Story) Morning Glory?" "'Morning Glory' was a bit
quiet, poppy and clean," the older Gallagher says between bites of
pasta. "This time we decided to give it the fucking full-on - as loud
as we could get it. It..." He pauses, then leaps to his feet as he
overhears Liam confessing his admiration for No Doubt to an office
worker in the adjoining room.
"What did you just say?" Noel yells at his brother. "It's fucking
rubbish, man!" "It's a top fucking song!" Liam counters, referring to
No Doubt's hit powerballad, "Don't Speak." "This is what's wrong with
music!" Noel rages, then slams the door. "Fucking hell, that No Doubt.
Liam says he likes that song, and I can't believe it. God almighty.
I've got a big problem with that fucking bird who sings it. I'm sure
she's a very nice person. but that doesn't excuse the fact that the
song is rubbish."
Noel changes the subject by popping a tape of the new Oasis album into
the conference-room stereo. He adjusts the volume to a teeth- rattling
level, then sits back as the album's first single, "D'You Know What I
Mean?" blares through the speakers. The song is awash in layers of
psychedelic guitar and drum loops - sampled from N.W.A's "Straight
Outta Compton," he says - then segues into a soaring singalong chorus.
The melody of "D'You Know What I Mean?" is vintage Oasis, but the
song's devastating percussive roar sounds unlike anything the band has
done. Clearly, Noel's work with the Chemical Brothers on the electronic
duo's recent hit "Setting Sun" rubbed off. "It's definately influenced
the sonic side of things," Noel says. "When we were laying down this
mix, we listened to our drum tracks and then to 'Setting Sun.' When
their drums came in, they were twice as loud as ours. So I said, "We've
got to get ours fucking louder than that.' It's all about compressors
and EQs [equalizers], stuff I don't really understand. I just sit in
the back drinking, pointing and shouting, 'It's not loud enough, turn
it up!'" On the album, throbbing rockers such as "It's Getting Better
Man, " "Be Here Now" and the squalor-filled, Sex Pistols-like "My Big
Mouth" alternate with quieter guitar ballads like "All Around The
World," the gorgeous "Don't Go Away" - many of which are full of
layered guitar parts and string arrangements. Though singer Liam
recently tested his songwriting chops, penning a tune with the
Seahorses' John Squire for that band's album "Do It Yourself," Noel
wrote all the songs for "Be Here Now." "I write the fucking songs for
Oasis," he says with typical bravado. Oasis began laying down tracks
for "Be Here Now" at London's Abbey Road, but the band was soon kicked
out of the studio, Noel says, for "playing too loudly. Can you fucking
believe that?" So Oasis ended up recording most of the 12-song,
72-minute album at Ridge Farm Studios, in the southern England
countryside. But the genesis of some song stretches back further, to a
Caribbean vacation that Noel took last fall. "The first part of 'Fade
In/Out' was recorded in a little fucking shack on the beach," Noel
Says. The song-the bluesiest thing the band has ever done-features a
special guest: Johnny Depp. "We were drunk one night [in the
Caribbean], and I borrowed his slide guitar and tried to play this
solo, and it was absolutely dreadful," Noel recalls. "So he sat down
and played it and got it in one take. He's actually a really good
guitar player." Despite the pressures of recording a follow-up to the
hugely successful "Morning Glory" and the intense media scrutiny
surrounding the Gallaghers, the new album has re-energized the band.
Today, Noel Gallagher is in good spirits, cracking jokes and smiling
easily as he talks about "Be Here Now." It's a major change in attitude
from last fall, when he bailed on Oasis' U.S. tour. "I wasn't going to
do it anymore," he says, admitting that he regrets the decision to
leave. "It was a circus, and I was just sick of everyone arguing, so I
left. There wasn't a group for a while, then we decided to do one more
record and call it quits. But after we started working, we thought,
'Oh, fuck it, what are we doing sitting around moaning for?'" With the
record finished, Noel has moved to the brainstorming concepts for
videos, planning an Oasis tour this fall and editing footage for a
concert film (to be released later this year) documenting the band's
weekend performances last summer at Knebworth, England. It was the
largest concert ever held in Britian,
attracting more than 250,000 fans. Still, Noel admits, nothing comes
easy for Oasis. "We're back on the treadmill of being a band again," he
says. "You'd have thought it would be easier this time, but believe you
me..." He trails off with a shrug and a laugh. "I fucking know it won't
be."