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highplainsdem

(58,466 posts)
5. The term was first used before Oasis had that huge instant success. It never really fit them.
Tue Sep 30, 2025, 01:04 AM
Tuesday

Article about how the term came into use:

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/stuart-maconie-britpop-anniversary-more-3390694

And from Manchester came the ultimate lads, Oasis, whose version of Britpop was more blokey, less arty and whose first album entered the charts at No?1 and became the fastest selling debut in history.

Guitar music was no longer the realm of the awkward indie kids.

Oasis fans were labourers, office workers, football lads in replica tops, much like the band.

Only three years after playing to a few dozen kids in Manchester, the band were playing to a quarter of a million people at Knebworth in 1996.


Oasis never fit with the others. Their rock lineage was Beatles > Sex Pistols > Stone Roses. It was ludicrous to compare them to Blur.

Recommendations

1 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I'm reposting the OP above after mistakenly posting it in GD first. highplainsdem Tuesday #1
Reply posted in GD by johnp3907: 1. Marc Bolan cast a big big shadow! highplainsdem Tuesday #2
Reply posted in GD by flvegan: 2. Score one for Oasis! highplainsdem Tuesday #3
Funny that they called it BritPop speak easy Tuesday #4
The term was first used before Oasis had that huge instant success. It never really fit them. highplainsdem Tuesday #5
Ahem ... speak easy Tuesday #7
The Beatles, Sex Pistols and Stone Roses are the bands they mention most. But you're right that glam rock, highplainsdem Tuesday #8
Ditching the glam costumes speak easy Tuesday #9
Considering that Liam's standard uniform is a parka, baggy jeans and athletic shoes, I don't think he'd've highplainsdem Tuesday #10
I can see Liam doing glam. speak easy Yesterday #15
Nope. That's a colorful parka, and Liam and Noel both own a lot of colorful as well as fairly drab parkas. highplainsdem Yesterday #16
I think we are talking at cross purposes, speak easy Yesterday #17
Okay. I didn't realize you were talking about what Liam might've done if he'd been born 20 years earlier highplainsdem Yesterday #18
Rod Stewart? Working class / Football fanatic. speak easy Yesterday #19
Liked his music, thought the glam costumes were ridiculous. No matter who wore them. highplainsdem Yesterday #20
How many people danced to "You're in my heart, you're in my soul" unaware of the soccer ⚽️ reference? underpants 1 hr ago #24
You can't copyright a rhythm sequence speak easy Tuesday #6
Something in that live clip I don't understand... LudwigPastorius Tuesday #11
That's the Poznan, which was started by a Polish football (soccer) team and adopted by the Manchester highplainsdem Tuesday #12
Thanks! LudwigPastorius Tuesday #14
Oh, and that Polish football team thanked Noel and Liam: highplainsdem Tuesday #13
I love Oasis ....but.... I've always found them to be a bit derivative underpants 3 hrs ago #21
The Beatles were accused of being derivative at times, too. highplainsdem 2 hrs ago #22
I get that and I agree. The "British Invasion" was basically selling American black music back to white people underpants 1 hr ago #23
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