Noel Gallagher has exclusively told
The Maker about his ideal replacements for Bonehead and
Guigsy, the latter of whom quit Oasis last week. In
a revealing interview conducted at Olympic Studios,
Barnes, London, where Oasis were mixing their new album,
Noel hypothesized “Johnny Marr would be good, but he’s
started his own band. The obvious choices are Nick McCabe
and Simon Jones from The Verve.”
However, Noel admitted the dream team would
probably no work out: “I don’t think they would be
right. People have to want to do it. People have to be
into all the old songs and the news songs. At least the
two members left at the right time. It gives us six
months, but we’ve got to do it now. We’re not
panicking yet.”
The rest of the interview in full:
How’s the new album sounding?
“It’s rock ’n’ roll pop music. It’s not fucking
drum ‘n’ bass. It’s not a dance record. It’s
typical Oasis, but it’s a little different. It’s not
a radical departure – we like the way we sound. We’re
not into 21st-century rock ‘n’ roll, but it doesn’t
sound like 1969 either.”
Is it a harder Oasis sound?
“One song should have been written by the Sex Pistols.”
What’s the first single called?
“I’ve been told to say fuck all! The single is out in
January. That’s the most poppy-sounding on the album.
The rest is pretty heavy. We’ve already written the
stuff for the next record. So we can get on with it with
the new lads, whoever they will be. If we leave it too
long, people will continue to speculate about the band.”
Has Liam written anything for the album?
“There is a Liam song on there. He plays guitar, I
think. I sing two songs on it. It’s half an hour
shorter than ‘Be Here Now’ – there’s no
eight-minute songs. The lyrics will take on a new meaning
now [that Bonehead and Guigsy have quit]. People will
read thing into it.”
Is Oasis still a tightly knit unit?
“Everything is fine. People are saying it won’t be
the same. Of course it’s not. We had eight years
together. Of course it is going to be different. We toyed
with the idea of changing the name. But we didn’t spend
eight years together to just break up, restart under a
different name and still sound the same.”
Did you seriously think about ending Oasis and
starting with a new name?!
“Of the original members, there’s only Liam left –
they were Oasis. There would be no point in renaming the
band and sounding exactly like Oasis. We’re spent eight
years around the world as Oasis.”
Any possible name changes?
“It never got to that point. We just laughed and said
‘fuck it!’”
With your wife, Meg, expecting a baby at the end of
the year, might that mean you could quit Oasis too?
“I can’t say. I love my family. I’ve got a record
coming out and I’ve got a baby coming out. We’re
still together, the three of us, the music will still go
on.”
Who’s producing the new album?
“Mark Stent. We worked with Owen [Morris] for so long
and you get to know people so well. We liked the stuff he
[Stent] has done with U2. Whish is not to say this sounds
like U2. When we told people at the record company about
Mark, they were a bit worried because of the Spice Girls
[who Stent has worked with]. But it was more because of
U2. It’s worked very well. We’ve not sacked him.”
What have you been listen to while making the
album?
“The Travis album. I haven’t really listened to much
– The Chemical Brother. I was planning to get to the
festivals, because it’s a good way to see all the
bands. I was going to Reading, but I’ve got to go
shopping for baby clothes. We’ll see them all at the
festivals next year.”
Are you still going to tour the world?
“There’s seven million people that brought the last
record and lots of people to play to. I think this time
we’ll want to play England last, as opposed to first. I
don’t think England has seen the best of us. We usually
start here with six massive gigs, but we don’t hit our
stride until after a month or two. I don’t think we
played particularly well on the last tour. Coming out
onstage in a big red fucking telephone box threw us a
bit. That was a bad advert for drugs.”
Will the new Oasis material be just as commercial?
“It’s always going to be a commercial record. I write
records to sell records. We’re a big fuck-off rock ‘n’
roll band. I was getting bored of it, but we’ve been at
it for six years solid. The year off was designed for
everyone to sit down and see if we wanted to do it again.
That’s what they [Bonehead and Guigsy] have done. They
have given it on last go and got our while the going was
good. I totally respect that.”
Are you still mates?
“Yeah, I don’t fall out with people easily. Apart
from that knobhead in Blur. He looks like a dustbin man
these days, but good luck to him.”
Does Oasis need to be a five-piece with a rhythm
guitarist?
“I can’t carry the band with one guitar. I’m not
that good. Ideally, I would like the play rhythm guitar
and get Jimi Hendrix to play lead. But that would change
the sound.”
Are you just mixing the record now?
“Yeah, we have to finish tonight [Thursday, August 26].
We’ve got no more time left. We’re finishing the
single, them I’m going home to listen to it on my
stereo and then coming back to cut it. Then I’m going
to the pub to get smashed. Later this week, we’ve
leaving for the USA to cut the record and we’re doing
the video.”
Is Tailgunner still a going concern?
“I start Tailgunner next week. Mark [Coyle] has written
all the songs. While I’m in the USA, he’s going to
lay down the tracks and I will come back and play the
drums. I’ve got my own studio in the country.”
There are newspaper reports that there’s an
on-going row between your wife, Meg Matthews, and Liam’s
wife, Patsy Kensit, because of the double pregnancy. And
that this has caused tensions which were felt among the
band members.
“That’s not even worth answering. If there is a row,
then I haven’t noticed one. There’s a few between me
and my wife! That’s something the lads were pissed off
about. Things get written that don’t concern the band.”
How’s your relationship with Liam been during the
making of the record?
“Superb, as a matter of fact. We have not had one
disagreement.”
What’s his voice like on the songs?
“It just sounds like Liam. But with more attitude, if
that’s humanly possible.”
There was talk a few months ago of this record
having a punkier sound. Any truth to that?
“It’s quite loose. We didn’t fancy about doing a
hundred takes, or on the mixing. The last record we mixed
the life out of, and played the life out of.”
We left Noel to carry on with the recording and,
contrary to talk of a more punky new record, could hear
“Wonderwall”-esque acoustic guitars emanating from
the studio.
Liam, who seemed anxious to get on with the album,
was unusually quiet. “We’re too busy,” he said. But
he did agree to pose for a picture when he left the
studio with a minder at 10pm. “Oh, if it’s for The
Maker”, he joked, before being driven off in a red
Audi.
Earlier that afternoon, Richard Ashcroft had
arrived at the studio with wife Kate (from
Spiritualized). When asked how things were going, he said
“Splendid.” But what was he doing at the studio? What
exactly was going splendidly? Is he contributing backing
vocals to the album? With no Bonehead, is he playing
guitar on any tracks?
Guigsy’s departure was announced on Wednesday, 25
August, at a press conference at pub music venue The
Water Rats in London’s King Cross, much to the shock of
music industry and Oasis insiders. He reason for leaving
seems to echo Bonehead’s desire to spend more time with
his family away from the unrelenting stress of touring.
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