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10 Essential Oasis Songs That Must Be on the Reunion Setlist

10 Essential Oasis Songs That Must Be on the Reunion Setlist

Liam and Noel Gallagher are back—onstage, together.

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Liam and Noel Gallagher have reunited, and Oasis is finally back.

Their world tour kicked off July 4 at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium, marking the end of a 15-year silence between the famously feuding brothers.

Tickets vanished in minutes, and with seven shows at Wembley Stadium alone, it’s clear that Britpop’s crown is still very much in demand.

Whether a new album follows is still uncertain. But fans, for now, are focused on singing along to the songs that defined a generation.

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Here’s the definitive playlist of the Oasis tracks they must play.

1. Rock ‘n’ Roll Star (1994)

First album, first song, full throttle. “Tonight, I’m a rock ‘n’ roll star!” wasn’t just bravado, it was prophecy.

With roaring guitars and Liam’s snarling delivery, the track captured the band’s rise-from-the-streets swagger.

Definitely Maybe opened with this punch of energy and set the tone for everything that followed. No better way to start a comeback show.

2. Acquiesce (1995)

A rare moment of vocal sharing between the Gallagher brothers.

Liam delivers the verses while Noel hits the chorus with lines that feel oddly personal: “Because we need each other / We believe in one another.”

This B-side became a live staple for a reason. It sounds like unity, even when they swore it wasn’t.

3. Supersonic (1994)

Improvised lyrics, jagged riffs, and pure attitude. Oasis’s debut single was a mission statement.

“I need to be myself / I can’t be no one else” says it all.

Chaotic and cool, it burst through the noise of the early 90s with unstoppable force. Still feels like a sonic shockwave.

4. Let There Be Love (2005)

A rarely performed ballad that deserves a spotlight in the reunion.

Split vocals show a softer, reflective side of Oasis, offering a moment of calm in their stormy history.

“Let There Be Love” is emotional without being sentimental.

A track that feels custom-made for a reunion tour finale, where the crowd could turn the chorus into an anthem for reconciliation.

5. The Importance of Being Idle (2005)

With its Kinks swagger and deadpan humor, “The Importance of Being Idle” gave us Noel Gallagher at his most charmingly sardonic.

This UK chart-topper was a reminder that even in their later years, Oasis still had the magic.

Sung by Noel, it would give Liam a breather and deliver one of the most infectious grooves of their discography.

6. Slide Away (1994)

One of the rawest and most emotional moments from Definitely Maybe.

Liam’s voice breaks through with longing, while the guitar work swells into an epic chorus. “Slide Away” isn’t just about love, it’s about escape, desperation, and dreaming beyond the everyday.

An underrated live highlight.

7. Little by Little (2002)

Noel’s songwriting at its most philosophical.

“Little by little, we gave you everything you ever dreamed of,” he sings over a slow-building, stadium-ready arrangement.

One of the few gems from Heathen Chemistry, it’s a spiritual successor to “Don’t Look Back in Anger” and tailor-made for a mass chorus of 80,000 fans.

8. Some Might Say (1995)

The first UK No. 1 single and the moment Oasis broke the mainstream wide open.

Combining Stones-like drive with a Beatlesque melodic core, it’s pure Oasis at their peak. The lyrics are absurd and glorious, and the chorus was built for beer-drenched festival fields.

Essential Gallagher energy, bottled and blasted out.

9. Wonderwall (1995)

Love it or not, this is the one everyone knows.

Acoustic, emotional, instantly recognizable.

“Wonderwall” turned Oasis from Britpop stars into global icons. Every gig, every bar, every campfire—it still gets sung.

A song that defined the decade and won’t be left off the setlist anytime soon.

10. Don’t Look Back in Anger (1995)

If one song sums up Oasis’s legacy, it’s this.

Sung by Noel, “Don’t Look Back in Anger” is more than a Britpop anthem—it’s the soundtrack to an era. It’s been sung at protests, vigils, weddings, funerals.

The ultimate closer, always.

The crowd arms-in-arm, screaming “So Sally can wait”—this song is more than music. It’s communal catharsis.

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