It begins with a seismic one-two punch. Definitely Maybe (1994) is rock & roll as raw ambition—"Live Forever" and "Cigarettes & Alcohol" rejecting grunge's gloom for working-class euphoria. Then comes (What's the Story) Morning Glory? (1995), their commercial apex. It’s a masterpiece of scale: from the planet-sized "Champagne Supernova" to the snarling "Roll With It" and the immortal "Don’t Look Back in Anger."
While later albums never recaptured the Morning Glory high, Oasis’s discography remains a lesson in chemistry over craft. They were a band who peaked like a supernova but burned bright enough to define a generation—eight albums of arrogance, heart, and choruses that still fill stadiums. discography oasis
Be Here Now is the sound of excess—cocaine-length songs, layered guitar solos, and walls of feedback. Critically panned at the time but beloved by fans for its sheer, unapologetic overkill. It’s the hangover after the world’s greatest party. It begins with a seismic one-two punch