Oasis Discography
Oasis didn't try to be cool; they tried to be enormous. They succeeded. Their first two albums are untouchable classics, and their story remains the ultimate rock 'n' roll soap opera. If you are new to them, start with the first two albums; if you want the full journey, strap in for a bumpy but brilliant ride.
Noel Gallagher is a premier melodist. He understood that a song needs to be sung in a football stadium. His strength was taking simple chord progressions and making them sound massive. Liam Gallagher, meanwhile, provided one of the most distinctive voices in rock history—petulant, nasal, but capable of incredible tenderness. oasis discography
Critically hailed as a strong return to form; stripped-back indie rock. Dig Out Your Soul Oasis didn't try to be cool; they tried to be enormous
Definitely Maybe and (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? — two of the 90s’ best. Valley: Be Here Now — bloated but fascinating. Overall: A classic case of a band that burned bright, crashed, then spent a decade searching for lost fire. Even their weaker albums have 3–4 great tracks. For newcomers: start with the first two albums, then explore Masterplan (B-sides compilation) before touching the later records. If you are new to them, start with
The sound of too much cocaine and zero editing. Overblown, overlong, and overproduced. Songs stretch past 7 minutes with unnecessary guitar layers. D’You Know What I Mean? has a killer riff but drowns in excess. Stand by Me and All Around the World show ambition, but the album collapsed under its own hype. A fascinating trainwreck.