It’s been 15 years since Oasis last performed together, but Liam Gallagher wants the world to know the band is still at the top of their game.
On Sunday, the 52-year-old rocker took to X to assure fans and critics that Oasis can “wipe the floor” with most of the bands performing today.
“Got asked a ridiculous question yesterday so are OASIS gonna be as good as you once were because when sone bands get back together there not as good,” Liam wrote. “I said listen here you C–T even on our bad day we’ll still wipe the floor with majority of bands out there BUMBAC—T LG x.”
Liam has a history of making bombastic statements on social media.
In February, the English star blasted the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, seemingly not impressed by Oasis’s induction nomination.
“F–k the Rock n Roll hall of fame its full of BUMBAC—TS LG x,” Liam Hours wrote on X just hours after the rock institution announced its 2024 candidates.
Liam and his brother, Noel Gallagher, 57, are gearing up for a 2025 reunion tour. The tour will mark the first time the brothers have performed together with their Oasis bandmates since their breakup following a backstage altercation at the 2009 Rock en Seine festival in Paris.
The brothers have a legendarily acrimonious relationship, often trading barbs in interviews and online, which led many fans to believe a reunion was impossible.
“[Noel]’s desperate to get Oasis back, but he knows he’s crossed that bridge,” Liam told Q Magazine in 2018.
Thankfully for fans, Liam and Noel laid their weapons down over the summer. After much speculation, the Gallaghers confirmed they would reunite for an Oasis Live ’25 tour on social media on Aug. 27.
“This is it, this is happening,” both Liam and Noel posted on X and Instagram.
“The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised,” Oasis said in a statement.
Originally slated to play concerts next summer across the UK and Ireland, the band added dates and expanded the tour to include a North American leg, adding stops in the US, Canada and Mexico following overwhelming demand.
The band hasn’t performed in North America for 16 years.
Fittingly, Oasis also released of a Deluxe 30th Anniversary Edition of their seminal album “Definitely Maybe” on Aug. 30.
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