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Oasis Music CD's, DVD's Books

Don't Believe The Truth [Limited Edition Specially Packaged CD + DVD]

 Track Listings
Disc: 1
 
1. Turn Up the Sun
2. Mucky Fingers
3. Lyla
4. Love Like a Bomb
5. The Importance of Being Idle
6. The Meaning of Soul
 
7. Guess God Thinks I’m Abel
8. Part of the Queue
9. Keep the Dream Alive
10. A Bell Will Ring
11. Let There Be Love
 
Disc: 2
1. 17 Minute Epk
2. Track-By-Track Discussions By The Band Members On The Making Of The Album
  • Amazon.co.uk Review
    This Limited Edition version comes with a bonus DVD and is specially packaged in a hard-back cardboard book. Oasis have been accused of losing it and recovering it more times than any sane mind should rightfully remember, but whatever trajectory their controversial discography takes from here, Don’t Believe The Truth should come out looking like a rather proud success. Partly, it’s because Liam and Noel sound on such rude form: the younger, fronting with some of the old menace and successfully channelling his rather simplistic songwriting impulses on the lightly trippy, shaker-ridden "Guess God Thinks I’m Abel"; the elder playing some of his more devious tricks, imagining The Beatles’ Revolver played by a Mariachi band on "The Importance Of Being Idle", and doffing a cap to late-period Velvet Underground on "Mucky Fingers".

Partly, though, it’s because Oasis sound like they’re functioning less like a not-so-benevolent dictatorship and more like a real band again. With only five songs written by Noel, contributions from Liam, guitarist Gem Archer and bassist Andy Bell have space to spread their wings a little: in particular, Bell’s "Turn Up The Sun" – a gargantuan opener that sees Liam deliver one of his best opening lines to date ("I carry the madness/ Everywhere I go") – proves mighty testament to Oasis’ new democratic bent. --Louis Pattison

Album Description
This Limited Edition version comes with a bonus DVD and is specially packaged in a hard-back cardboard book. Don't Believe The Truth is the sixth Oasis studio album – their first since the number one multi-million selling Heathen Chemistry, released in 2002. It includes the soon-to-be-classic single "Lyla". Noel Gallagher describes the track as "the Soundtrack of our Lives doing The Who on Skol in a psychedelic city in the sky (or something!)"

Definitely Maybe Track Listings
 
1. Rock 'n' roll star
2. Shakermaker
3. Live forever
4. Up in the sky
5. Columbia
6. Supersonic
 
7. Bring it on down
8. Cigarettes & alcohol
9. Digsy's dinner
10. Slide away
11. Married with children
The Masterplan
~OasisTrack Listings
 
1. Acquiesce
2. Underneath the sky
3. Talk tonight
4. Going nowhere
5. Fade away
6. The swamp song
7. I am the walrus (live)
 
8. Listen up
9. Rockin' chair
10. Half the world away
11. (it's good) to be free
12. Stay young
13. Headshrinker
14. The masterplan

 

Heathen Chemistry
~Oasis
 

Track Listings
 
1. The Hindu Times,
2. Force Of Nature,
3. Hung In A Bad Place,
4. Stop Crying Your Heart Out,
5. Songbird,
6. Little By Little,
 
7. A Quick Peep,
8. (Probably) In My Mind,
9. She Is Love,
10. Born On A Different Cloud,
11. Better Man
  • Amazon.co.uk Review
    Heathen Chemistry, is the fifth studio album from Oasis (sixth if you include The Masterplan), and sounds like an album completely devoid of history and expectations--it is light and breezy and blissfully unaware of anything outside its (notably short) running time. The legendary Gallagher songwriting gland seems to have got stuck on cruise control since the late 1990s--and is focused on quality more than quantity now. There are some classic Oasis tunes here (the simple but effective "Stop Crying Your Heart Out"), yet the only song that wouldn't sound out of place on their 1994 debut is the playful rock growl of "Hung In a Bad Place", ironically written by new boy Archer. This poses a problem--what exactly defines an Oasis song now? Written by Noel? Sung by Liam?

Fortunately, Heathen Chemistry also features some overdue Noel Gallagher numbers--the more insightful, acoustic based songs such as the standout "Little By Little" (which contains the fantastic bridge "I didn't mean, what I just said / But my God woke up on the wrong side of his bed"). Nobody, really, does it better. Least of all his brother--"Songbird" is a startlingly good acoustic pop ditty, complete with trademark handclaps that, along with the voodoo spirit of Hendrix haunting his "Better Man", shows that his songwriting has improved tenfold since his last effort, but he still has much to learn. Where Noel Gallagher really excels, however, is in the production. For the first time, an Oasis album sounds clean and crisp--not musically, but in its sonic presentation--it's a technical achievement that elevates the album significantly.

Assured without being arrogant, heartfelt without being insincere--Heathen Chemistry will delight and repel in equal measures. It's a heroic return to form--hard as nails on the outside, yet soft and romantic on the inside--like every hero should be. --Ben Johncock

Be Here Now
~Oasis

Track Listings
 
1. Do you know what I mean?
2. My big mouth
3. Magic pie
4. Stand by me
5. I hope, I think, I know
6. The girl in the dirty shirt
 
7. Fade in-out
8. Don't go away
9. Be here now
10. All around the world
11. It's gettin' better man
12. All around the world (reprise)
Amazon.co.uk Review
In retrospect, it's hard to see how Oasis could have possibly equalled the hype surrounding the release of this, their third album. Arriving as their popularity was at its peak, it's a confusing, faintly self-indulgent collection. The first single, the wryly-titled "D'You Know What I Mean?", had a monolithic sort of grandeur, taking Noel Gallagher's fondness for overdubbed, wall-of-sound guitars to some new peak, but also seemed a little over-extended--as did its follow-up, "All Around The World", a slab of Beatles-esque, sing-along pop that seemed to last longer than the entire White Album. Then again, it made a kind of sense: nothing if not mindful of rock tradition, Oasis's quest to be the World's Greatest Rock & Roll Band meant that they were obliged--like the Stones before them--to make their own mid-1970s album (albeit, two decades too late). And from its Caribbean origins, to its raucous, bloated, "cocained-out" sound, this is it: a triumph of arrogance over ambition. Maybe next time they'll go punk. --Andrew McGuire --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
Familiar to Millions
~OasisTrack Listings
 
1. Go let it out
2. Who feels love?
3. Supersong
4. Shakermaker
5. Acquiesce
6. Gas panic!
7. Roll, with it
 
8. Wonderwall
9. Cigarettes & alchohol
10. Don't look back in anger
11. Live forever
12. Champagne supernova
13. Rock 'n' Roll star
 
 
 

Standing on the Shoulder Of Giants
~Oasis
Track Listings
 
1. Fuckin' In The Bushes
2. Go Let It Out
3. Who Feels Love?
4. Put Yer Money Where Yer Mouth Is
5. Little James
 
6. Gas Panic!
7. Where Did It All Go Wrong?
8. Sunday Morning Call
9. I Can See A Liar
10. Roll It Over
 
 
Lyla [SINGLE]
~Oasis Track Listings
 
1. Lyla
2. Eyeball Tickler
 
3. Won’t Let You Down
 
Oasis DVD's Books
       
       

Albums

Fever
Light Years
Intimate & Live
Impossible Princess
Kylie Minogue
Let's Get to It
Rhythm of Love
Enjoy Yourself
Kylie

Top Singles

On a Night Like This
Can't Get You Out of My Head
Come into My World
Loco-Motion
What Do I Have to Do?
Spinning Around
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