This week marks the 20th year anniversary of Oasis’ legendary shows at Knebworth, which confirmed their status as the quintessential rock band of the mid 1990s in Britain. The massive gigs, played across two consecutive nights, came just two years after their debut Definitely Maybe had catapulted them into the public eye. Playing to over 250,000 people, the shows were a mass celebration of Britpop in its pomp as fans flocked to see the band that, in many ways, came to define an entire generation. With the release of live track My Big Mouth to mark the anniversary, we look back at the legendary event and assess what it meant for British music at the time.

Located just over 30 kilometres from the centre of London, Knebworth proved to be a popular choice of venue amongst rock and roll bands after its owner, Lord David Cobbald, first agreed to let The Allman Brothers play there in 1974. However, the fact that a “sleepy, 300-acre park, featuring the grandiose house which dates back to 1490, turned into a riotous music mecca” is certainly an interesting one.

After The Allman Brothers first played a show in the grounds, numerous others soon followed. Pink Floyd, Frank Zappa and Captain Beefheart all played there in the early years, as the crowd numbers steadily began to swell. Rolling Stones, Queen and Led Zeppelin added their names to the extensive list too. But impressively it was Oasis’ shows that created one of the largest legends.

“Anyone who was 16 or 17 at that time- that was a gig you had to be at. I really think it was just as significant as Woodstock was for the Americans in 1969,” promoter Conal Dodds told NME a decade on from the event.

“When I signed Oasis to Creation, I thought they were going to be big. But I’d be lying if I said I thought they would get that big,” Creation Records founder Allan McGee said. “I think we should’ve just stopped after Knebworth.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxcfcuUcBHw

The event drew a huge audience but the whole story surrounding the weekend also added extra elements of intrigue. Just how had two working class brothers and their band from Manchester come to dominate the music industry in the space of two short years?

Noel Gallagher, songwriter, guitarist, singer and now part-time skateboard enthusiast, tapped into a common feeling amongst the youth in Britain at the time. The band’s debut album, which he wrote the lyrics for entirely by himself, reflected a desire to escape out of the places and circumstances he had been born into. It was a thought that was prevalent in Britain at the time as the restrictive government, severe lack of jobs, and the general growing pains of shifting out of adolescence and into adulthood weighed heavily.

In my mind my dreams are real” younger brother Liam Gallagher sang on the opening track Rock And Roll Star. It was a song which was suitably full of grandiose visions of the future. This breaking out of the monotony and the familiar tales of living for the weekend (Cigarettes and Alcohol) resonated strongly with a widespread fan base, who were all experiencing the same thoughts and feelings.

Oasis ascended to the upper echelon of bands in Britain after their follow up, (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? tapped into this zeitgeist too. Their Knebworth appearances proving to be the confirmation of their meteoric rise, as it completed their transformation from likely lads to fully fledged superstars.

The Irish Examiner reported that a staggering 2.6 million people applied for tickets to the shows in 1996. That was the largest demand for concert tickets in British history. They subsequently deemed it the “crowning glory of the Britpop era.”

The band members themselves had picked the bands that would feature on the eclectic bill. A Beatles tribute band opened proceedings in the early afternoon, while The Charlatans, Manic Street Preachers, The Chemical Brothers and Prodigy were also among those that appeared.

“Noel was the only one into us at the time though,” Liam Howlett from the Prodigy recalled. “All the Oasis boys had a Portakabin each. I remember Liam popping his head out of his as we came offstage shouting, ‘What the fuck was all that noise? Turn the fucking bass down!’ Knebworth was just so beautiful though. It was like a big fucking rave. There were loads of people were on E’s everywhere. It was an event never to be repeated. It was a moment in time.”

A sense of freedom and excess was epitomised not only out in the crowd but backstage too. “I used to work for a catering company based at Knebworth farms and I had to work at the VIP bar backstage,” Alex Vooght said. “It was pretty exclusive. There were sofas made out of Levi jeans, pinball machines and a massive Scalextric set.”

“When I got there the first thing I saw was Mick Hucknall trying to chat up Martine McCutcheon,” Pulp front man Jarvis Cocker added.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QP1-S-_ASBk

When the band strolled onstage the enormity of the occasion didn’t escape Noel Gallagher. “This is history right here,” he told the crowd. They then launched head on into their debut album track Columbia. The custom built stage housed the band while an incredible 11 sound towers were dotted all around the site. “Liam wanted his vocals blisteringly loud,” sound engineer Rick Pope told Sound on Sound.

Oasis played a set list packed with hits, despite only being drawn from their just two-album long career at that point. Supersonic, Side Away, Wonderwall, Don’t Look Back In Anger and Live Forever were all aired, while there was also time to bring the set to a close with a cover of The Beatles and a John Squires guest appearance,  along with a concluding firework display.

“Knebworth wasn’t designed to be a historic event- it was just what people made of it,” the band’s manager Marcus Russell later revealed to NME.

Oasis would go on to release a string of albums and tour while often dubbed, either by themselves or members of the press, as the biggest band in the world. But to many the two nights they performed in Hertfordshire remains a high-water mark both for the band but also for British music.

“Knebworth was a cultural shift,” Derek Robinson stated.

“The UK was in the doldrums in the early Nineties. Oasis, and Knebworth, were instrumental in kick-starting the cultural revolution that led to the Young British Artists, Trainspotting, an explosion in literature and art, Cool Britannia 1997, and the regeneration of huge parts of London and the UK by a youth that were suddenly energised.”

Robbie Williams, former Take That member and “dancer in a boy band”, as McGee once called him, went on to sell out three nights at Knebworth. But Oasis’ two show run in August 1996 still stands as the pinnacle act at the historic site, and an integral moment in British music history.

For the band’s part, guitarist Bonehead still remembers the weekend fondly and described it as something he will “never forget”. Liam Gallagher was unaware there would be two shows and got so drunk after the first night that he barely remembered the second. While, unsurprisingly, Noel Gallagher provided the greatest moment of insight. “It felt that everything was leading up to something that was going to define not only the size of the band, but what British pop music was at that time. It all felt like it was leading to Knebworth.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqbPBWQNkzM

Image: Irish Examiner

Bubbles. Nary a person alive doesn’t enjoy their soapy, spherical presence and bright, rainbow sheen. Except perhaps, for one Noel Gallagher. Apparently the British musician was not impressed by an audience member blowing them in the front row of his concert in Melbourne on Tuesday.

Gallagher literally stopped his show at the Margaret Court Arena to chastise the fan, who had reportedly brought a bubble machine in. The logistics of smuggling a bubble machine into a gig aside, Gallagher was not impressed.

“Hey El Houdini,” said Gallagher according to The Independent. “Someone actually brought a fucking bubble machine to a gig. You’re a magician? Why don’t you make the fucking bubbles disappear then? Did you pay to get in? Or did you magic yourself through the fucking door? If you bought a ticket you’re a shit magician.”

At the conclusion of his performance, Gallagher managed to slip in one last warning: “If they mention in the fucking review of this gig that I had a shit bubble machine on stage you’re in fucking big trouble.”

Obviously trying to perform some of your greatest hits while translucent floating orbs block your vision must be pretty distracting, but still, it’s not as if the audience members were throwing bottles of urine.

The bubblegate episode clearly did not escape some reviewer’s pieces, because Cameron Adams from news.com.au started off his review with “Sorry Noel”. Classy.

Playing a selection of his High Flying Birds catalogue, as well as some of his most revered Oasis hits, the bubbles didn’t seem to detract from the overall enjoyability of the concert. You can breathe easy now Noel.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fuubqoEb4jE

Gallagher’s been having a bit of an interesting time throughout his NZ/Australian tour. His equipment was delayed on a flight over from South America and he didn’t seem to happy to be touching down in Adelaide either, wearing his characteristically morose expression as he sauntered through the airport to his next commitment. 

The Project also failed to bleep out Gallagher after he swore during an interview, saying “chock-a-block with the fucking things” when asked about dealing with record labels and awards. In fairness to Gallagher, it was a pre-recorded interview which clearly wasn’t scrutinised closely enough by the editorial team.

Image: news.com.au

The team behind one of the highest-grossing documentaries ever, Amyhave recently confirmed that they have begun work on a film centred around one of the “classic British rock bands” – Oasis. 

According to Screen, the film will follow Oasis from the “moment in 1991 when Noel joined his brother Liam’s Manchester-based band,” to their official break up in 2009. According to the managing director of the film’s distribution company, Independent Film Sales, at the heart of the film is the relationship between the Gallagher brothers. “Two of the finest rock ‘n’ roll stars this country has ever produced. Mat’s (director Mat Whitecross) sensibility and style are going to provide the perfect complement to this tale of the rise of one of the great rock ’n’ roll bands.” It’s been reported that the filmmakers have gained unprecedented to both the band and unseen video footage. Considering Noel described Liam as “rude, arrogant, intimidating and lazy” before the band’s breakup in 2009, it’s sure to make for enthralling viewing and a hefty task for the filmmakers.

Whitecross has previously directed Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll, The Road To Guantanamo and Spike Island, the latter  a film following a group of Stone Roses fans grappling to get ticket’s to the band’s Spike Island concert in 1990. He joins the Amy team of Asif Kapadia and James Gay-Rees who will act as the film’s producers. Despite the rave reviews and high box office sales of Amy, the film did garner criticism from the late singer’s father, Mitch Winehouse, who has said he will be making his own film about his daughter’s life.

There are very few other details surrounding the Oasis film with neither a title nor a release date hinted at as of yet. That is set to change next week when Independent make a full announcement on the film. Until then, one can only imagine that if the documentary isn’t to the Gallaghers’ liking as Amy was not to Mitch Winehouse, we’ll be hearing about it.