‘90s rock band says reunion tour will be their last: ‘No plan for any new music’

Oasis
This 1996 file photo shows Noel Gallagher of Oasis performing live at a UK concert. (Photo by Mick Hutson/Redferns via Getty Images)Redferns

A popular ’90s rock band is heading out on a reunion tour, but don’t expect anything more.

Oasis is coming to North America on their 2025 tour dates, including sold-out concerts in Toronto, Chicago, Los Angeles and East Rutherford, N.J. Liam Gallagher hinted he and his brother Noel Gallagher may also have new music, but the band’s manager Alex McKinlay is now confirming the tour will be their last together with no plans for a new album.

“This is very much the last time around, as Noel’s made clear in the press,” McKinlay told Music Week. “It’s a chance for fans who haven’t seen the band to see them, or at least for some of them to. But no, there’s no plan for any new music.”

Oasis added several U.S. concerts in October after tickets sold out instantly, but McKinlay said they won’t be adding any more. Fans can purchase tickets from resellers on StubHub and Vivid Seats.

“Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally,” McKinlay told Music Week. “We could have sold out half-a-dozen Rose Bowls in Pasadena and probably eight MetLife stadiums in New York in a day. We saw the ticket stats, we were watching what was happening and the demand was way beyond our expectations.”

Oasis first announced its reunion in August, ending a 15-year feud between the Gallaghers. The rock group was one of the biggest bands of the 1990s and defined the era’s Britpop scene with songs like “Wonderwall,” “Don’t Look Back in Anger,” “Champagne Supernova,” “Stop Crying Your Heart Out,” “Live Forever,” and “Stand By Me.”

This year marks the 30th anniversary of “(What’s the Story) Morning Glory?” The 1995 follow-up to their debut album, “Definitely Maybe,” featured released with the Grammy-nominated hit “Wonderwall” and became one of the best selling albums of all time with an estimated 22 million copies sold worldwide.

Oasis split in 2009 after a tumultuous decade that saw Liam and Noel Gallagher frequently clashing in public and founding members Paul Arthurs (guitar) and Paul McGuigan (bass) leaving in 2000. Liam Gallagher and several Oasis band members continued performing as Beady Eye, while Noel Gallagher formed his own project, Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds.

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