Get ready to experience one of the most anticipated rock ‘n’ roll comebacks of our time.
Witness the return of Oasis in “Don’t Look Back In Anger,” in cinemas and IMAX this September.
Tomorrow, celebrate one year since the return of Oasis with your first look at the new landmark documentary. The countdown is on: 👉https://t.co/vNWuIGezao
The great wait is over.
An epic new documentary film from BAFTA and Oscar-nominated writer, producer and director Steven Knight, directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace, will tell the story of the Oasis reunion the world was waiting for. Featuring unprecedented on stage and backstage footage from the Gallagher brother's sell-out global stadium tour.
Coming to IMAX and cinemas worldwide on September 11 and streaming globally later this year on Disney+ internationally and on Hulu and Disney+ in the U.S.
30 years ago today I saw Oasis at Maine Road.
I was here right at the back, it was my first ever stadium concert and is still to this day the best gig I have ever attended. The band were on top of the charts and in my opinion the best live band on the planet.
📷Jill Furmanovsky
Record Store Day 2026 is tomorrow.
James Dean Bradfield’s ‘The Great Western’ returns on (orange marbled) vinyl, with Nicky Wire’s ‘Intimism’ released on vinyl for the first time (green marbled).
Available exclusively in independent record shops.
Who’s queuing early for these?
#RSD2026
“Libraries gave us power.”
30 years ago today, the Manics released ‘A Design For Life’.
A song that changed everything. The first chapter after the darkest of times, and a statement of intent that still resonates three decades on.
Swipe through moments from the iconic video.
Retweet for a chance to win
A We Are Live Tour T shirt, a sweatshirt, a bucket hat (all in your size) and a mug
Winner picked at random 10am on Thursday April 23rd
Ba-ba-da, ba-ba-da…
On this day in 2001, the Manics released ‘So Why So Sad’, a sunlit rush of melody masking something far darker.
Peaking at No.8 in the UK and still quietly divisive, it stands as one of the band’s most audacious pop moments.
Underrated classic or glorious curveball?
One year on from the release of ‘Critical Thinking’, and the response still speaks for itself.
Here’s a snapshot of what the press had to say:
“Met with the void, the Manics battle on to fill it with beauty and rage.” – 𝐍𝐌𝐄
“A meticulous, strident and euphoric sounding record.” – 𝐂𝐥𝐚𝐬𝐡
“Rarely have ruminations on decline sounded so vigorous.” – 𝐌𝐨𝐣𝐨
“All these years later, they’re needed more than ever.” – 𝐑𝐞𝐜𝐨𝐫𝐝 𝐂𝐨𝐥𝐥𝐞𝐜𝐭𝐨𝐫
Which format did you pick up?
lyrics that have inspired generations of people
@NoelGallagher is taking home Songwriter of the Year at The BRIT Awards 2026 🏆
Watch the show live Saturday 28th February on ITV1 & ITVX in the UK and on YouTube globally
On this day in 1994, Manic Street Preachers released the ‘Life Becoming A Landslide’ EP. The fourth and final single from ‘Gold Against The Soul’, it reached number 36 in the UK chart and marked another step in the band’s rapid rise.
Do you still have your original copy?