Oasis reunion: The story of a comeback denied a thousand times The Gallagher brothers have announced a series of concerts in 2025, marking 15 years since their acrimonious split Noel and Liam Gallagher may not have been in a room together for 15 years, but the power of that unmatchable feeling called nostalgia and the prospect of a colossal payday have broken down the wall: Oasis are back. The British group have resisted a reunion from the time they split in 2009, but on Tuesday morning through a message on their social networks, the band that put bad-tempered rock back on the sales charts has announced that they are getting back together for a 2025 tour. Oasis will play concerts at Cardiff Principality Stadium (July 4 and 5), Manchester Heaton Park (July 11, 12, 19 and 20), London Wembley Stadium (August 25, 26 and August 2 and 3), Edinburgh Murrayfield Stadium (August 8 and 9) and Dublin Croke Park (August 16 and 17).

Next year marks the 30th anniversary of one of the group’s two most successful albums (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? (1995), which includes their most famous hit, Wonderwall . The announcement marks the end of 15 years of fights and insults, which at first were amusing but later became tiresome and increasingly hostile (“Noel is quite dark. But so was Hitler,” Liam once said of his brother).

For years, the brothers have been adamant they would not perform together again, especially Noel: “It wouldn’t make sense,” he said. Now, that stance has .