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Liam Gallagher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English singer-songwriter (born 1972)
This article is about the singer and songwriter. For theShameless character named after him, seeLiam Gallagher (Shameless).

Liam Gallagher
Gallagher performing withOasis in July 2025
Born
William John Paul Gallagher

(1972-09-21)21 September 1972 (age 53)
Manchester, England
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
Years active1991–present
Spouses
Children4
Relatives
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • percussion
  • guitar
Labels
Member ofOasis
Formerly ofBeady Eye
Musical artist
Websiteliamgallagher.com

William John Paul Gallagher (born 21 September 1972) is an English singer and songwriter who is the lead singer and co-founder of the rock bandOasis. Gallagher frontedBeady Eye, an offshoot of Oasis, between 2009 and 2014, before starting a solo career in 2017. One of the most recognisable figures inBritish rock music, he is noted for his distinctive vocal style and outspoken personality.

Gallagher was interested in joining a band called the Rain. After mutual agreement, the band underwent a name change to Oasis, and his older brotherNoel was initially approached to be their manager.[1][2] Noel was subsequently extended an invitation to join the band as their lead guitarist and songwriter, which he accepted. The band's debut album,Definitely Maybe (1994), was a critical and commercial success amidst the emergence ofBritpop. Their second album,(What's the Story) Morning Glory? (1995), reached the top of the album charts in many countries, and their third studio album,Be Here Now (1997), became the fastest-selling album in UK chart history. Britpop eventually declined in popularity, and Oasis failed to revive it; however, all of their subsequent albums topped the UK charts, and they continued to tour, playing gigs to 1,000,000+ people worldwide, but particularly inEurope, andSouth America.[3][4][5][6] In August 2009, following Noel's departure from Oasis, Gallagher and the remaining band members would go on to form Beady Eye, with whom he released two studio albums before they disbanded in 2014.

In 2017, Gallagher began his solo career with the release of his debut solo album,As You Were (2017), which proved to be a critical and commercial success. It topped theUK Albums Chart and was the ninth fastest-selling debut album of the 2010s in the UK, with over 103,000 units sold in its first week.[7] In 2018, the album was certified platinum with over 300,000 units sold in the UK.[8] His second album,Why Me? Why Not, received mostly positive reviews and topped the UK charts upon its release in September 2019. This made it his tenth chart-topping album including eight with Oasis, and it also became the fastest-selling vinyl of 2019.[9] In March 2010, he was voted the greatest frontman of all time in a reader poll byQ magazine.[10] In 2019, he received theMTV Europe Music Award for "Rock Icon". Gallagher's third album,C'mon You Know, was released in 2022 and became his fourth solo album to debut at number one on the UK Albums Chart.[11] In 2024, Gallagher collaborated with ex-Stone Roses musicianJohn Squire on the studio albumLiam Gallagher & John Squire, which was released on 1 March 2024 and continued Gallagher's streak of debuting atop the British charts.[12]

Oasis's time was marked by turbulence, especially during the peak of Britpop, during which Gallagher was involved in several disputes with Noel. Their conflicts and wild lifestyles regularly made tabloid headlines. The band had a rivalry with fellow Britpop bandBlur.

Early life

[edit]

Gallagher was born in theLongsight area ofManchester on 21 September 1972, to Irish immigrant parents Peggy and Tommy Gallagher fromCharlestown,County Mayo, andDuleek,County Meath, respectively.[13] As the youngest of three children, he has two elder brothers, Paul andNoel. Shortly after his birth, the family moved to Ashburn Avenue and then Cranwell Drive in the Manchester suburb ofBurnage.[14] As the eldest child, Paul was given his own bedroom while Liam had to share his bedroom with Noel.[15]

When he was 10, Peggy took him and his brothers and left abusive Tommy, whom she divorced four years later.[16] Although Liam maintained sporadic contact with his father throughout his teens, their issues remain unresolved. While drinking at a pub after anOasis show in Ireland during the height of their fame, Liam noticed his father from across the room and had to be calmed down by Noel. A leaked phone call later revealed that he subsequently called his father and threatened to break his legs if he ever saw him again.[17]

Gallagher was educated at St. Bernard's RC Primary School and theBarlow Roman Catholic High School inDidsbury. Despite common reports that he was expelled at age 16 for fighting, he was actually suspended for three months. He then returned to school, where he completed his last term and gained fourGCSEs in 1990.[18][19] He preferred sports at a young age, having no interest in music. During his teens, he suffered a blow to the head with a hammer from a student at a rival school, which he credits with changing his attitude towards music.[20] After this incident, he became infatuated with the idea of joining a band.[19] He became confident in his ability to sing and began listening to bands likethe Beatles,the Stone Roses,the La's,the Who,the Kinks,the Jam, andT. Rex. In the process, he became obsessed with the Beatles'John Lennon, and would later sarcastically claim to be Lennon reincarnated despite being born eight years prior toLennon's death.[21] Liam and Noel attended a Stone Roses benefit gig atInternational 2 in 1988; both brothers claim that if they had not gone to that gig, Oasis would never have happened. Liam later claimed: "That was my favourite gig of all time, killed me dead, changed me fuckin' life. If I hadn't gone that night, I'd probably be sitting in some pub inLevenshulme."[22] He would also help Noel with his job as a roadie forInspiral Carpets and worked as a tax collector forHM Revenue and Customs.[23]

Career

[edit]

1991–2009: Oasis

[edit]
Main article:Oasis (band)

"Liam? We wouldn't have been what we were without him, that's for sure. As important and as vital as those songs were and still are, I think the two elements that made Oasis was his thing and them songs. If it wasn't for him we might have been just another band. I couldn't imagine anybody else being the singer."

— Noel Gallagher, interviewed in 2015[24]

When school friendPaul "Guigsy" McGuigan invited Gallagher to join his band The Rain as a vocalist, he agreed. He was the band's co-songwriter, along with guitaristPaul "Bonehead" Arthurs. Noel has since openly mocked this writing partnership, describing them as being "just awful", and Liam also admitted that they were "shit".[19] The band only rehearsed once a week and did not get many gigs. It was at one of their rare shows in 1991 atthe Boardwalk in Manchester that Noel, having recently returned from touring internationally as a roadie forInspiral Carpets, saw them perform. In 1993, Oasis played a four-song set atKing Tut's Wah Wah Hut inGlasgow, whereAlan McGee ofCreation Records discovered them and signed them for a six-album deal. The band's debut albumDefinitely Maybe was released on 28 August 1994, and went on to become the fastest-selling British debut album of all time. Liam was praised for his vocal contributions to the album, and his presence made Oasis a popular live act. Critics cited influences fromthe Beatles andSex Pistols. Liam's attitude garnered attention from the Britishtabloid press, which often ran stories concerning his alleged drug use and behaviour. In 1997,Definitely Maybe was named the 14th greatest album of all time in a "Music of the Millennium" poll conducted byHMV.[25] InChannel 4's "100 Greatest Albums" countdown in 2005, the album was placed at No. 6.[26] In 2006,NME placed the album at No. 3 in a list of the greatest British albums ever.[27] In the 2006 book ofBritish Hit Singles and Albums, the album was voted the best album of all time, with the Beatles'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band finishing second.[28]Q placed it at No. 5 on their greatest albums of all-time list in 2006, andNME hailed it as the greatest album of all time that same year.

The Gallagher brothers performing with Oasis in September 2005

The band's second album(What's the Story) Morning Glory? was even more successful, becoming the third-best selling album in British history.[29] Around this time, Oasis became embroiled in a well documented media-fuelled feud with fellowBritpop bandBlur. The differing styles of the bands now leading the Britpop movement—Oasis a working-class northern band, and Blur a middle-class southern band—made the media perceive them as natural rivals. In August 1995, Blur and Oasis released new singles on the same day; Blur's "Country House" outsold Oasis' "Roll with It" by 58,000 copies during the week.[30] When the band mimed the single onTop of the Pops, Liam pretended to play Noel's guitar and Noel pretended to sing, taking a jibe at the show's lip-syncing format.(What's the Story) Morning Glory? is considered to be a seminal record of the Britpop era and as one of the best albums of the 1990s,[31] and appears in several charts as one of the greatest albums of all time.[32] In 2010,Rolling Stone commented that "the album is a triumph, full of bluster, bravado, and surprising tenderness" and that it "capped a true golden age for Britpop".[33] The magazine ranked the album at No. 378 on its 2012 list of "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time".[34] The album's enduring popularity within the UK was reflected when it won the BRITs Album of 30 Years at the2010 BRIT Awards. The award was voted on by the public to decide the greatest Best Album winner in the history of the BRIT Awards.[35] The album was also included in the book1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[36]

Gallagher performing in February 2006

Oasis's third album,Be Here Now, was released on 21 August 1997 and set a new record as the fastest-selling album in UK Chart history. The album was denounced by Noel in later years, but Liam has defended it.[37] On the first day of release,Be Here Now sold over 424,000 copies and became the fastest-selling album in British chart history; initial reviews were overwhelmingly positive.[38] The band's long-time producerOwen Morris said the recording sessions were marred by arguments and drug abuse, and that the band's only motivations were commercial.[39] As of 2008, the album had sold eight million copies worldwide. It was the best-selling album of 1997 in the UK, with 1.47 million units sold.[40] The album topped the UK Vinyl Albums Chart in 2016, 19 years after its original release.[41] Creation Records shut down in 1999, after which the Gallagher brothers set up their own label,Big Brother Recordings, for all future Oasis releases. Future album and singles were marked with codes starting with "RKID" ("our kid", Northern English slang for a sibling or younger relative). Oasis returned in 2000 with the albumStanding on the Shoulder of Giants. Founding members Bonehead and Guigsy left during the recording, leaving Liam as the only member remaining from the band's pre-Oasis lineup. The album featured the band's first song written by Liam, "Little James", written for his then-wifePatsy Kensit's son James.[42] This song, along with the album as a whole, received generally mixed reviews.

Oasis's next album,Heathen Chemistry, was released in 2002 and featured three more songs written by Liam. One of them was "Songbird", an acoustic ballad about his love forNicole Appleton, whom he would later marry. The song was the fourth single from the album and reached No. 3 in the UK charts. Later that year, Gallagher broke several teeth and sustained injuries to his face after a fight broke out at aMunich bar. He and Oasis drummerAlan White were arrested but released without charge. Oasis had to pull out of the shows in Munich andDüsseldorf due to Liam's injuries. 2005 saw the release of Oasis's sixth studio album,Don't Believe the Truth, featuring a further three compositions by Liam: "Love Like a Bomb" (co-written with rhythm guitaristGem Archer), "The Meaning of Soul", and "Guess God Thinks I'm Abel". The album won twoQ Awards: a special People's Choice Award and Best Album.[43] Gallagher joined the rest of Oasis to receive the Outstanding Contribution to Music Award at theBRIT Awards in 2007. As the band picked up the award, he commented on stage, "Seeing as we don't get nominated for this shit no more, this'll have to do."

2008 saw the release of the band's final albumDig Out Your Soul, which featured three Liam-written songs: "I'm Outta Time", "Ain't Got Nothin'", and "Soldier On".Dig Out Your Soul went straight to No. 1 on the UK Album Charts and reached No. 5 in the U.S. 200 Billboard Charts. In the UK, the album sold 90,000 copies on its first day of release, making it the second-fastest selling album of 2008, behindColdplay'sViva la Vida. It debuted on the UK Albums Chart at No. 1 with first-week sales of 200,866 copies, making it the 51st fastest selling album ever in the UK. The album debuted at No. 5 on theBillboard 200 in the U.S. with 53,000 copies sold.[44] It is the highest chart position of any Oasis album in the U.S. sinceBe Here Now, which debuted at No. 2, but fewer total opening week sales thanDon't Believe the Truth.[44] It spent over 30 weeks in the French Albums Chart.[45] Many critics laudedDig Out Your Soul as one of the band's strongest albums, one opined that "it seems Oasis have made something that can happily play alongsideMorning Glory".[46] In August 2009, during thetour in support of the album, the band split up due to Noel not being able to work with Liam any more.[47]

2009–2014: Beady Eye

[edit]
Main article:Beady Eye
Gallagher performing with Beady Eye in March 2011

In November 2009, Gallagher announced that he and former Oasis band members had written new material as part of a new project, and could be gigging as early as a couple of months, and stated that "Oasis are done, this is something new".[48] On 19 November 2009, he announced that he would be recording an album with Gem Archer, Andy Bell, and Chris Sharrock around Christmas time, with a possible release date in July 2010.[49] He told MTV: "We've been demoing some songs that we've had for a bit. Just doing that, on the quiet, not making a big fuss about it. After Christmas we might go in the studio and record them and hopefully have an album out in July." He later said that the band would "do it in a different kind of way now. I'll try and reconnect with a new band, new songs, and I'm feeling confident about the songs." He was reported to have been "feeling a million percent confident that they could be better than Oasis".[50]

In March 2010, Gallagher was voted the greatest frontman of all time in a reader poll byQ magazine.[10] On 16 March 2010, he announced that his new band would be releasing their first single in October with an album to follow the next year.[51][52] On 9 November 2010, Beady Eye released their first single "Bring the Light" as a free download.[53] The next single from the album, "The Roller", was released in January 2011.[54] The band's debut albumDifferent Gear, Still Speeding was released on 28 February 2011. On the album the songwriting is credited as a collaborative work between Gallagher, Andy Bell, and Gem Archer. TheBBC andThe Independent both commented that the album bests Oasis' later music, if not lacking innovation from the previous group, whileNME praised the album's simplicity and variety and cited "Bring the Light" as a surprising highlight.[55] The album is generally agreed to have surpassed expectations, withMojo remarking that the album "shaped up better than many imagined", andQ saying that it "decimates all negative preconceptions".[56]

On 3 April 2011, Beady Eye headlined aJapan Tsunami Disaster relief concert at theBrixton Academy. Gallagher organised the star-studded event as a fundraiser for the devastating event that happened on 11 March 2011. The event raised over £150,000 for theBritish Red Cross, which was working in the earthquake and tsunami-hit country.[57] Gallagher also announced that Beady Eye's version ofthe Beatles' "Across the Universe", which they performed on the night, would be released as a charity single, to benefit the fundraising.[58]

In March 2012, Gallagher stated that Beady Eye would play Oasis songs.[59] They did this for the first time when they supportedthe Stone Roses in June 2012.[60][61] This prompted speculation as to whether an Oasis reunion was in the offing.[62] In August 2012, Beady Eye performed "Wonderwall" at theLondon 2012 Olympics closing ceremony.[63]

The band's second studio albumBE was released on 12 June 2013. It was recorded withDave Sitek between November 2012 and March 2013. The band embarked on a corresponding tour playing a "secret gig" at Glastonbury. In contrast to his headlining spot with Oasis, Beady Eye featured as one of the first bands to open the festival. Gallagher stated it was a "refreshing" change. BE was not as successful in the United States as Gallagher and the rest of the band had hoped. This hindered their American popularity, and it was announced there would be no tour dates scheduled for the United States.[64]BE received a mixed critical reception.[65] Many positive reviews complimented the band's progression from their debut album, while negative reviews criticised the album's lyrics and production.

Simon Harper ofClash magazine said, "Shades of light and dark ripple throughout and keep the listener guessing... (On 'Soul Love') Liam Gallagher's cosmic vibe is matched by the first distinct stamp of producer David Sitek's ambient adventuring, which commandeers the second-half of the song, letting it drift dreamily skywards. This is what permeatesBE, making it sonically enchanting."[66] On 25 October 2014, Gallagher announced that Beady Eye had disbanded. His post on Twitter stated that the band were "no longer" and thanked fans for their support.[67]

2016–2019:As You Were andWhy Me? Why Not.

[edit]
Gallagher performing in August 2017

In aTwitter post on 4 January 2016, Gallagher balked at the idea of pursuing a solo career.[68] However, in an interview withQ later that year,[69] he announced that he would be releasing solo songs in 2017; he did not consider it a solo career, stating that he had a backlog of songs he had written over the years and wanted to release them.[70] A solo appearance atBergenfest in 2017 was announced in November 2016, with other festival appearances for summer 2017 later confirmed.[71] After beginning to record his debut solo album in 2016, it was announced in March 2017 that the album was to be titledAs You Were. His solo debut single "Wall of Glass" was released on 1 June, with an accompanying music video.[72][73] In the same month, Gallagher performed his first solo concert at theRitz in Manchester with all proceeds going to victims of theManchester terror attack.[74] He also revealed that he would launch his first solo tour of the United States and Canada to support the album's release.[75]

On 4 June 2017, Gallagher made a surprise appearance at theOne Love Manchester benefit concert, where he played "Rock 'N' Roll Star", "Wall of Glass", and "Live Forever" alongsideColdplay'sChris Martin andJonny Buckland.[76] He performed at theRock am Ring festival and thePinkpop Festival in June 2017. Since a dispute with his management in 2017, he has been represented by his Australian-born nephew Daniel Nicholas.[77] Gallagher also performed atGlastonbury in June 2017. During the set, he sang "Don't Look Back in Anger" for the first time, dedicating his performance to the victims of the recent Manchester and London terror attacks and theGrenfell Tower fire.[78] On 30 June 2017, he released his second solo single "Chinatown".[79]

On July 28, 2017, Liam Gallagher made his first-ever performance in the U.S. as a solo artist during a concert at the McKittrick Hotel in New York City.

In July, he performed at theExit festival in Serbia andBenicassim festival in Spain and made his first-ever performance in theU.S. as a solo artist during a "secret gig" at theMcKittrick Hotel inNew York City.[80] On 3 August, Gallagher performed atLollapalooza in Chicago and left the stage in the middle of a song after performing for only 20 minutes. He later apologised on Twitter and said he had vocal problems.[81] In August, Gallagher performed atReading and Leeds Festival. In October, he performedthe Beatles' song "Come Together" withFoo Fighters andJoe Perry at the CalJam festival in California.[82]

On 6 October 2017,As You Were was released to positive reviews. The album proved to be a successful comeback for Gallagher, debuting at No. 1 in the UK with first-week sales of 103,000. In doing so, it outsold the rest of the top 10 of the UK Albums Chart combined, as well as achieving higher first-week sales than both Beady Eye albums combined. It also achieved the highest single-week vinyl sales in 20 years, with 16,000 copies sold.[83] On 23 October, Gallagher announced that he would be doing a one-off concert inFinsbury Park on 29 June 2018. The gig sold out within minutes of tickets being announced.[84] Subsequently, it was announced that there would be a concert atEmirates Lancashire Cricket Club in Manchester on 18 August 2018.[85] It was also confirmed that Gallagher would be a headline act at the TRNSMT Festival inGlasgow Green on 30 June 2018,[86] and that he would be a headline act at the 2018Isle of Wight Festival alongsideDepeche Mode,the Killers, andKasabian.[87]

Gallagher performing at the 2018Vieilles Charrues Festival

In February 2018, Gallagher performed "Live Forever" at theBrit Awards as a tribute to the victims of the2017 Manchester Arena attack, afterAriana Grande (whose show was the target of the attack) could not perform due to illness.[88] In April, it was confirmed that he would supportthe Rolling Stones at The London Stadium on 22 May.[89] Later that month, he confirmed that he had started work on his second solo album withGreg Kurstin andAndrew Wyatt. On 29 May 2019, Gallagher revealed that the album would be calledWhy Me? Why Not. On 7 June, "Shockwave" was released as the album's lead single.[90][91] The same day, a documentary was released calledAs It Was, which chronicled Gallagher's return to music.[92] On 27 June, Gallagher released another single titled "The River". On 26 July, he released a third single from the album, "Once", followed by a fourth single, "One of Us", on 15 August.

Gallagher played an acoustic set forMTV Unplugged in Hull City Hall on 3 August, showcasing his solo songs. "Once" debuted live and new songs "One of Us", "Now That I've Found You" (which was inspired by Gallagher's reunion with his daughter Molly),[93] "Gone", and "Why Me? Why Not." were played publicly for the first time.[94] Gallagher also performed several Oasis songs, including "Stand by Me" for the first time since 2001, and "Sad Song" which he had never performed live before. For the Oasis songs, Gallagher was joined on stage by former Oasis guitaristPaul "Bonehead" Arthurs.[95] The special aired on 27 September, several hours afterWhy Me? Why Not. debuted at number one in the UK.

Why Me? Why Not. received mostly positive reviews from music critics. Many positive reviews complimented the album for expanding on the sound ofAs You Were, with Gallagher's vocals also being singled out for praise. AtMetacritic, which assigns anormalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received a weighted average score of 74 based on 19 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[96] In November, he received the first Rock Icon award at theMTV Europe Music Awards.[97] That same month, he announced that he would perform at Manchester'sHeaton Park on 12 June 2020[98] andTRNSMT Festival on 11 July 2020.[99]

2020–2024:C'mon You Know andLiam Gallagher & John Squire

[edit]

On 31 January 2020, Gallagher surprise released a live EP entitledAcoustic Sessions, which contained 7 live acoustic performances of both his solo and Oasis songs, as well as the original demo version of "Once".[100] On 27 March, he announced that the Heaton Park show was cancelled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[101] In response to the pandemic, he announced that he would perform a free show forNHS staff atThe O2 Arena on 29 October 2020, which was ultimately postponed to 17 August 2021.[102] After the first worldwideCOVID-19 lockdown began in March 2020, Gallagher posted several humorous video clips to Twitter of him singing various Oasis hits with reworked lyrics to advise his fans to wash their hands.[103] Later that year, Gallagher released his MTV Unplugged performance as his first live album,MTV Unplugged (Live At Hull City Hall), containing 10 of the 17 songs played. It was released on 12 June 2020 and debuted at number one on the UK charts upon its release, becoming Gallagher's third UK no.1 album as a solo artist.[104]

Gallagher andJohn Squire performing inMilan in April 2024

On 27 November 2020, Gallagher released a stand-alone single titled "All You're Dreaming Of". The proceeds from the song go toAction for Children. Peaking at No. 24, it became his fourth solo single to reach the UK top 40, while also becoming the UK's highest selling vinyl single of 2020.[105]

In October 2021, Gallagher collaborated withRichard Ashcroft on a reworked version of "C'mon People (We're Making It Now)" for Ashcroft's albumAcoustic Hymns Vol. 1.[106]

On 1 October 2021, Gallagher announced that he would be releasing a third solo album, titledC'mon You Know, on 27 May 2022. Gallagher performed at Knebworth Park on 3 and 4 June 2022, nearly 26 years after he performed there with Oasis.[107] On 11 October, Gallagher announced that he would also perform at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester on 1 June and Hampden Park in Glasgow on 26 June 2022.[108]

On 20 January 2022, Gallagher announced that the first single to be released fromC'mon You Know would be "Everything's Electric" co-written byFriedrich Kunath,Dave Grohl—who also provided drums—andGreg Kurstin.[109] The track was released on 4 February 2022.[110][111] Gallagher performed "Everything's Electric" at the42nd Brit Awards on 8 February 2022. It debuted at number 18 on the UK Singles Chart Top 100 and debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Sales Chart.[112][113][114][115][116] The album's title track was released on 1 April.[117] The album's third single "Better Days" was released 22 April with the song's proceeds going toWar Child.[118] The album's fourth single "Diamond In The Dark" was released on 26 May.[119]

Gallagher performing with Oasis in August 2025

On 17 March, Gallagher announced that he would be releasing hisDown By The River Thames performance as his second solo live album. It was released on 27 May 2022, the same day asC'mon You Know.[120][121] On 3 and 4 June, Gallagher performed atKnebworth Festival in Hertfordshire.[122] The concerts were performed on two consecutive nights which coincided withC'mon You Know becoming a number-one album in the UK national charts.[123]

On 29 July, Gallagher released his second EP,Diamond In The Dark, which features a cover of "Bless You", originally recorded by John Lennon.[124] On 10 October 2022, Gallagher released a fifth single from the album titled "Too Good For Giving Up" in partnership with mental health organisation Talk Club UK.[125]

On 16 October 2023, Gallagher announced that he would do a tour to mark the thirtieth anniversary ofDefinitely Maybe in June 2024 where he would perform the album in its entirety alongside some of B-sides from the album's singles.[126] On 21 November 2023, Gallagher announced that he would headline TRNSMT on 12 July 2024.[127]

In 2024, Gallagher collaborated with ex-Stone Roses guitaristJohn Squire on the albumLiam Gallagher & John Squire, which was released on 1 March 2024;[128][129] the album was preceded by the singles "Just Another Rainbow"[130] and "Mars to Liverpool".[131] The album debuted in the top position on the U.K. charts.[12] Squire and Gallagher announced a tour on 26 January 2024.[132]

2024–2025: Oasis Live '25

[edit]

On 27 August 2024, it was announced that both Liam and Noel Gallagher would reform Oasis and embark ona tour in 2025.[133] The first tour date was 4 July 2025 inCardiff, and the last day of the tour was on 23 November 2025 in São Paulo, Brazil. Other tour locations include stops in the United Kingdom,Ireland, Asia, Australia and the Americas.[134] The week of 10 August 2025, Gallagher announced he would stop throwing his maracas during concerts after accidentally hitting a forty-two year old woman with the maracas and having been told not to.[135][136]

2025-present: The Future of Liam Gallagher

[edit]

After the Oasis ’25 tour, Gallagher stated that no further Oasis activity was planned in the immediate future, such as 2026, indicating that the reunion was intended as a finite project rather than a permanent reformation.[137] He has since expressed an intention to focus on solo recordings and live performances, while remaining open to occasional special appearances.

Controversies

[edit]

With the appearance of Oasis on the music scene in 1994, Gallagher quickly made a public name for himself with his "loutish" behaviour.[138] By 2000, his reputation and confrontational persona saw him feature in aChannel 4 documentaryHellraisers along with actorsPeter O'Toole,Oliver Reed andRichard Harris and musiciansKeith Moon andOzzy Osbourne.[139]

After an argument on a flight fromHong Kong toPerth in 1998 that apparently involved ascone, Gallagher was banned for life fromCathay Pacific Airways; he responded that he would "rather walk".[138][140] During the band's Australian tour at the time, he was arrested and charged with assault after allegedly headbutting a 19-year-old fan who claimed he was only asking Gallagher for a photo. Criminal charges were later dropped, although a civil case was pursued that led to Gallagher reportedly settling out of court.[141] In 2006, Gallagher allegedly had a drunken brawl with footballerPaul Gascoigne at theGroucho Club inLondon, which ended with him setting off a fire extinguisher in Gascoigne's face.[142]

On an early U.S. tour, Gallagher made derogatory remarks about Americans, as well as his brother Noel, which led to an ultimatum from the latter, who briefly left the band in 1994. When addressing their muted reception in the U.S. (especially in comparison with their home country), Gallagher said, "Americans wantgrungy people, stabbing themselves in the head on stage. They get a bright bunch like us, with deodorant on, they don't get it."[143]

On receiving an award at the2010 Brit Awards for the best album of the past 30 years, Gallagher swore while he thanked all the former members of Oasis except for his brother. He then dropped the microphone and gave the award to a member of the crowd.[144] Gallagher's behaviour prompted that year's host,Peter Kay, to brand him a "knobhead", much to the applause of the audience.[145]

On 1 July 2025, Gallagher tweeted "Chingchong", which is widely recognised as a racial slur mocking Asians. He initially dismissed concerns with "whatever", but later deleted the post and issued an apology.[146] Some Asian fans, particularly those from China and South Korea, called for a boycott of Oasis' Asian tour concerts.[147]

Musical style and inspirations

[edit]
Gallagher's singing pose, with his arms behind his back and head arched up towards the microphone, 2017

Gallagher's voice has been compared to a blend ofJohn Lennon,Johnny Rotten andIan Brown. He has stated he has no clear influence other than Lennon and "music" itself, though he has been known to incorporate many different forms such as punk, indie, new wave, and jazz.[148] On his singing,Spin magazine states that he "twists vowels to the stretching point Johnny Rotten-style — 'sun-shee-ine'".[149] Gallagher has identified Rotten's band theSex Pistols as being one he would have liked to front, having stated that he can impersonate Rotten "in his sleep".[150] On theDefinitely Maybe DVD, Gallagher revealed that the reason he sings with his arms behind his back is because it allows him to project more power through his voice. His singing pose also sees him leaning forward, arching his head up towards the microphone on the stand.[151]

Gallagher stated that his first record purchase wasthe debut album ofthe Stone Roses.[152] In 2017, Gallagher admitted that had it not been for pop singerMadonna, he would have never entered the music industry. Recalling a childhood anecdote, he said he was "blown away" the first time he heard her song "Like a Virgin".[153]

Other projects

[edit]

On 7 May 2010, it was confirmed that Gallagher's production company In 1 Productions would adapt the Richard DiLello book aboutthe Beatles' record labelApple Corps, calledThe Longest Cocktail Party, into a feature film.[154] As of 2024, the film has yet to be completed. Gallagher was previously the owner of the clothing range Pretty Green, named after a song bythe Jam.[155]

Gallagher's Parka-themedPaddington Bear statue inCarnaby Street, London, auctioned to raise funds for theNSPCC

In 2014, Gallagher designed aParka-wearingPaddington Bear statue, one of fifty located around London prior to the release of the filmPaddington, which was auctioned to raise funds for theNational Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC).[156]

In March 2015, Gallagher appeared alongsideStephen Fry in a short film forComic Relief titledNational Treasures.[157] In June, he played in a charity football match at theJuventus Stadium inTurin and performed on a special episode ofTFI Friday. For the latter, he performed "My Generation" bythe Who as part of asupergroup which includedPaul Arthurs,Roger Daltrey,Jay Mehler, and former Oasis collaboratorZak Starkey.

In October 2017, Gallagher appeared in theGeorge Michael documentaryFreedom, in which he referred to the recently deceased Michael as a "modern-dayElvis", particularly praising his 1990 single "Praying for Time".[158] On 3 November, he made an appearance alongside his mother Peggy and son Gene in a celebrity edition of theChannel 4 seriesGogglebox in aid ofStand Up to Cancer.[159] In December, he narrated theClimate Coalition's "alternative Christmas advert" depicting a snowman melting due toclimate change.[160]

Gallagher released a documentary in 2019 calledAs It Was, following his life after Beady Eye and his life leading up to his solo debut albumAs You Were.

Gallagher stars alongside sons Lennon and Gene in a documentary calledLiam Gallagher: 48 Hours at Rockfield, which documents a 48-hour period inRockfield Studios with exclusive performances and interviews. It was released in May 2022.[161]

Gallagher is among the people interviewed for the documentary filmIf These Walls Could Sing directed byMary McCartney about the recording studios atAbbey Road.[162]

Personal life

[edit]

Relationships

[edit]

On 7 April 1997, Gallagher married actressPatsy Kensit atMarylebone Town Hall.[163] Two months later, he began an affair with singerLisa Moorish inLos Angeles, and she gave birth to a daughter, Molly, on 26 March 1998. Gallagher did not meet Molly until May 2018,[164] after which he expressed hope that he would have a continued presence in her life.[165] Molly would later change her surname on her social media profiles from "Moorish" to "Moorish-Gallagher". Liam Gallagher and Patsy Kensit's son was born on 13 September 1999. The couple divorced in 2000. Gallagher's second son was born to Canadian singerNicole Appleton of the girl groupAll Saints on 2 July 2001.[166] After being together for nearly eight years, Gallagher and Appleton married on 14 February 2008, also at Marylebone Town Hall.[163][167]

From 2011 to 2012, Gallagher had an affair with journalist Liza Ghorbani, who gave birth to a daughter in January 2013. The affair was publicly revealed five months later, after he had separated from Appleton and started dating Debbie Gwyther, who is his manager and publicist.[168] During this time, he briefly moved to his mother's house in Ireland, and he was divorced from Appleton in April 2014.[169] His relationship with brother Noel further deteriorated following the severe financial pressures resulting from Liam's divorce and family court settlements, and again when Liam's requests for Noel to take part in an Oasis reunion to help him raise funds were ignored.[170] In 2019, in a BBC documentary about his life, Gallagher praised each of the four mothers of his children for raising the children to be "good people".[170]

During a holiday on theAmalfi Coast in August 2019, Gallagher proposed to Gwyther.[171] They live in theHighgate area ofLondon with their two cats, Sid and Nancy, whom they adopted from Wood Green Animal Charity and their dog Buttons, whom they adopted from Happy Doggo in Thailand.[20]

Gallagher's first grandchild, who is the son of Molly and footballerNat Phillips, was born in September 2025.[172]

Views

[edit]

Gallagher endorsed theLabour Party in the2017 UK general election.[173] He has discussed his concerns onclimate change, having publicly praised Swedish climate activistGreta Thunberg,[174] and voted for theGreen Party in the2019 UK general election.[175] He has called people involved withcancel culture "fucking squares" and elaborated, "Unless they come around to your house and say you're cancelled, you're still going to do your fucking thing. ... You can still go and do your gig, there are people out there who are going to like what you've got to say."[176]

Hobbies

[edit]

Gallagher is a supporter ofManchester City FC.[177] In 2019, he revealed that he never learned how to drive or swim.[178][additional citation(s) needed] He has citedQuadrophenia,Scarface,Seven andTrainspotting as his favourite films.[179] Whilst onThe 2 Johnnies podcast, Gallagher revealed that he supported theMayo Gaelic Football Team and watches theAll-Ireland Senior Football Championship final every year.[180]

He also revealed that his favourite Oasis song is "Live Forever".[181]

Health

[edit]

Gallagher often goes jogging, but revealed in 2019 that he had begun to suffer fromarthritis of the hips and that doctors had advised him to jog less.[182][183] In early 2023, Gallagher underwent hip surgery.[184] He also suffers frompsoriasis,[185] which has forced him to sometimes wear protective gloves,[186] andhay fever.[187]

Gallagher fell out of a helicopter following his headline set at the 2021Isle of Wight Festival, sustaining cuts and bruises to his face.[188] The injuries were severe enough for Gallagher to delay his performance at the 2021 edition of theBelsonic festival to the 2022 edition.[189][190]

Relationship with Noel Gallagher

[edit]

During Oasis's American tour in 1994, Liam frequently changed the words of Noel's songs so that they were offensive to both Americans and Noel. In September 1994, Oasis played at theWhisky a Go Go inLos Angeles. The day of the show Oasis had been usingmethamphetamine that they believed wascocaine. The band made several mistakes and tensions arose on stage between Liam and Noel, eventually leading to Liam hitting Noel in the head with his tambourine. After the show, Noel shortly left the tour and went toSan Francisco.[17]

During the 1995 recording sessions for(What's the Story) Morning Glory?, the brothers had a fight when Liam invited everyone from a local pub back to the studio, while Noel was trying to work, culminating in Noel hitting Liam over the head with a cricket bat. Noel later described this event as "possibly the biggest fight we ever had".[191][17]

In August 1996, after a record-breakingpair of shows at Knebworth, tension mounted between the Gallaghers when Liam backed out of Oasis'sMTV Unplugged set minutes before it was due to start. Noel was forced to fill in at the last minute. Liam said that he had been struck down with a "sore throat" and that he does not like performing acoustically, though Noel has claimed he washungover.[192] Noel was further angered when Liam heckled him from the balcony while the band performed.[193][194] Four days after, Noel was again forced to fill in for Liam on the first show of their American tour, when Liam refused to travel to America with the rest of the band claiming he needed time to buy a house. He was back on stage with Oasis for their next show three days later inDetroit. Tension between Noel and the rest of the band mounted and Noel left the tour, causing several media outlets to question the future of the band.

While on tour inBarcelona in May 2000, Oasis were forced to cancel a show when drummer Alan White's arm seized up; the band spent the evening drinking instead. During the night Liam made a crude remark about Noel's wife, Meg Mathews (apparently questioning the legitimacy of Noel's baby daughterAnaïs), leading to a fight.[195] Following this, a press release was put out declaring that Noel had decided to quit overseas touring with Oasis. The rest of the band, with guitarist Matt Deighton replacing Noel, played the remaining dates.[196] Noel eventually returned for the British and Irish legs of the tour; at the first of these shows the brothers shook hands after the song "Acquiesce".

In 2009, prior to the group's break, Noel called Liam "rude, arrogant, intimidating, and lazy", describing him as "the angriest man you'll ever meet ... like a man with a fork in a world of soup".[197] The final straw for the band came atRock En Seine inParis, when an altercation between the brothers (subsequently described by Noel as "no physical violence but there was a lot ofWorld Wrestling Federation stuff") prior to their performance resulted in the destruction of Noel's guitar and saw him announce his departure from the group.[198][199] Liam later claimed he "messed the first one up" when questioned about his 2019 MTV Unplugged performance and has since claimed he missed the show because he "accidentally got drunk again".[193][194]

Liam has stated he does not speak much with Noel and that they "don't really have a relationship". During theDig Out Your Soul Tour, the only time that they ever spoke directly was when onstage.[199] Noel would later reveal that while they were in Oasis, the two "never hung out together outside of the band, ever".[200] After the band's initial split, the only direct contact they had with each other consisted of exchanging text messages at Christmas; Liam also invited Noel to his wedding, which was scheduled to take place in 2021, but did not believe Noel would attend.[201] When speaking to Sky News, Noel denied any invitation being received and remarked that as he was not invited to Liam's previous weddings "I'm not going to go to this one, am I?".[202][203] Despite their constant fighting, the Gallaghers showed mutual affection before, during, and after their time in Oasis. Liam often calls Noel the best songwriter in the world, while Noel frequently calls Liam "cooler" than himself and praises Liam's good looks.[204][205] Noel has said that Oasis came down to the relationship between him and Liam.[206] Weeks prior to this, Noel said Liam was "obsessed with him", leading Liam to allege the same thing about Noel.[207][208] During hisDefinitely Maybe 30th anniversary tour in 2024, Liam reserved a seat for Noel at every gig.[209]

On 27 August 2024, Liam and Noel announced their plans to reunite and reform Oasis for the band's first tour in 15 years, which took place in 2025.[210] The brothers later both separately confirmed that there is no animosity between them anymore.[211]

Discography

[edit]
See also:Oasis discography,Beady Eye discography, andLiam Gallagher discography
with Oasis
with Beady Eye
Solo albums
with John Squire

Awards and nominations

[edit]
YearAwardsWorkCategoryResult
1996NME AwardsOasisBest ActWon
1996Best Live BandWon
1997Won
1998Best Live ActWon
1999Band of the YearWon
2001Best Live BandWon
2003Won
2017Oasis:SupersonicBest Music FilmWon
2017Q Awards"Wall of Glass"Best TrackNominated
2017HimselfBest Live ActWon
2017GQ AwardsRock n Roll Star of the YearWon
2018Brit AwardsBritish Male Solo ArtistNominated
2019MTV Europe Music AwardBest RockNominated
2019Rock IconWon
2019Scottish Music AwardsBest UK ArtistWon
2020MTV Europe Music AwardBest RockNominated
2024MTV Europe Music AwardHimselfBest RockWon

Backing band members

[edit]

Current

Former

References

[edit]
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