“It is about escaping,” mentioned Noel Gallagher in 1994, talking forward of the discharge of Oasis’ debut report Positively Possibly. However actually, it is about a lot greater than that.
One of many defining cultural paperwork of the ’90s, the Manchester quintet’s ferociously optimistic and thrillingly self-possessed debut album is a snapshot of what it means to be younger, fearless and fiercely satisfied of 1’s personal capability to transcend the mundane and mediocre. And this summer time, because the reunited Gallagher brothers reclaim their mantle as The Individuals’s Champions on probably the most euphoric tour of the twenty first century thus far, their 23-song setlist options no fewer than six alternatives from the report, their swagger and snap totally undiminished.
Written within the wake of the Conservative get together securing a fourth consecutive basic election victory within the UK, at its core Positively Possibly is an album about working class pleasure, anger, ambition and defiance.
Although it was not often recognized as such upon its launch, being bracketed alongside inferior Britpop albums with which it shared valuable little DNA – “I would hear Blur or Pulp or Suede on the radio and assume, Fuck these idiots” Noel Gallagher admitted in 2023 – it’s a punk rock album at coronary heart, a set of dole queue anthems which thrust two upraised fingers within the faces of a firmly entrenched institution doing its stage finest to interrupt the spirit and solidarity of working class communities from Burnage to Belfast. And as such, it’s probably the most fearless assortment of attitudinal rock n’ roll to emerge from Britain for the reason that Intercourse Pistols’ incendiary debut By no means Thoughts The Bollocks. In reality, in a 2023 interview with UK music journal Mojo, Noel Gallagher, who wrote each track on the report, explicitly linked the 2 albums, boldly describing Positively Possibly as “the final nice punk album.”
“We have been a punk band with Beatles melodies,” Gallagher acknowledged. “We had no results, barely any gear, simply a great deal of perspective, 12 cans of Crimson Stripe and ambition. For those who take heed to that and By no means Thoughts The Bollocks, they’re fairly comparable. That album was in regards to the angst of being a teen in 1977. Quick ahead to 1994 and Positively Possibly is in regards to the glory of being a teen. It’s being down the park with a ghetto blaster distilled… There’s no bullshit on it. It’s an trustworthy snapshot of working-class lads attempting to make it. It’s about shagging birds, taking medicine, ingesting and the glory of all of that.”
From its unapologetically nicked opening T. Rex riff, Positively Possibly is Oasis’ personal nice rock ‘n’ roll swindle, an album which shamelessly pilfers and re-appropriates a few of the most acquainted riffs, rhythms and themes from rock n’ roll historical past whereas wanting the listener sq. within the eyes and asking ‘So. Fucking. What?’
“Have a look at you now, you’re all in my fingers tonight” sneers the then 21-year-old Liam Gallagher on the finish of the strutting Rock ‘n’ Roll Star, a self-fulfilling prophecy the youthful Gallagher brother later fairly accurately recognized as “probably the most conceited track ever”.
Even the cocksure Gallagher boys would concede that Positively Possibly just isn’t a flawless assortment… although if ‘The Chief’ had swapped out Digsy’s Dinner and Married With Youngsters for contemporaneous B-sides Fade Away and Half The World Away it’d be as near perfection as makes no distinction.
As ubiquitous as pub jukebox mainstays Shakermaker and Supersonic would possibly nonetheless be, their vitality and verve is wholly undiminished by over-familiarity, whereas Gallagher junior’s stretched vowels on the opening traces of Cigarettes & Alcohol stay an plain rock ‘n’ roll second.
With its rallying name to the “outcast” and the “underclass”, the Stooges-inspired Carry It On Down, dusted down and sounding immense on the Dwell ’25 tour, is the album’s most overtly punk (and political) 4 minutes. Slide Away consists purely of choruses, every extra uplifting than its predecessor, whereas the six minute Columbia, with its roots in Acid Home jams and Ecstasy-fuelled mischief-making, is a blissful tangle of over-driven guitars and wide-eyed euphoria.
Better of all although is Dwell Eternally, arguably Noel Gallagher’s defining track. Written as a response to (inaccurate) ‘inkie’ music paper experiences that Kurt Cobain was contemplating naming Nirvana’s third album I Hate Myself And I Need To Die, it’s the Oasis credo writ massive, a surge of ‘Fuck you’ positivity and bullish self-belief standing as a grand secular hymn for the dreamers and schemers. Critics have usually sneered at Oasis’ nursery rhyme lyrics, however Gallagher – like his nemesis Cobain – intuitively understood that there’s a magnificence in simplicity, and Dwell Eternally stays certainly one of his most pure, good compositions.
On September 4, 1994, Positively Possibly debuted at Number one on the UK album charts. That night, Oasis performed Belfast for the primary time, receiving the information of their triumph as they sat backstage within the Limelight venue’s tiny dressing room. This author was current that night time, and remembers the Manchester band being greeted with an ovation which far exceeded the customary greeting for visiting bands, a reception which spoke of a shared perception that their chart success was a victory for ‘us’ over ‘them’. Even at their most cocaine-bloated and indulgent, Oasis managed to retain that sense of connection, as is being emphatically demonstrated in each sold-out stadium they go to this summer time.
It is easy to see why Positively Possibly is connecting with a brand new inflow of Gen Z followers. It is a report about chance, and hope, and rising up with out giving in, no matter shit is thrown at you. Solely Noel and Liam actually know the way lengthy Oasis’ second act will final, however their first album will ceaselessly stay an impossibly thrilling declaration of independence and intent.