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The Last Oasis Performance Ever Ended With a Beatles Cover

While an Oasis reunion could possibly happen soon, the famed British band played their last performance back in 2009.ย It’s been years, but fans fondly remember that very last set.

Their very last show on August 22, 2009 was quite the set. The band headlined V Festival at Weston Park in Staffordshire, UK for the Dig Out Your Soul Tour, which took Liam and Noel Gallagher across the globe for almost an entire year. Oasis was promoting their most recent (and still most recent today) album Dig Out Your Soul.

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Those in attendance had no clue that they were witnessing what was quite possibly the very last Oasis show. The set was impressive, too. They opened with hits like โ€œRock โ€˜Nโ€™ Roll Starโ€ and threw out โ€œWonderwallโ€ and โ€œSuperstarโ€ as well. Noel returned for the encore to play a stripped-down acoustic rendition of โ€œDonโ€™t Look Back In Angerโ€.

The finale of the show, though, was a rousing rendition of โ€œI Am The Walrusโ€ by The Beatles. It was quite an English way to go out, but we have to admit their cover was excellent.

Why Did Oasis Break Up?

Oasis had been together since 1991. Brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher struggled to work together almost from the very start. There were even allegations of physical fights backstage. And it came to a head in 2009, with both brothers deciding that they outright hated each otherโ€™s guts. Quite publicly, too.

[Get Tickets To See Oasis Live If The Reunion Kicks Off]

โ€œI simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer,โ€ said Noel in a statement shortly after their V Festival set. He also went on to say that Liam used โ€œverbal and violentโ€ intimidation towards him and his family while they were working together.

โ€œIt takes more than blood to be my brother,โ€ Liam said in an interview with NME. โ€œHe doesnโ€™t like me and I donโ€™t like him.โ€

Thereโ€™s something so odd about โ€œI Am The Walrusโ€ by The Beatles being the last song and performance weโ€™ll likely ever hear from Oasis live, but itโ€™s also somewhat fitting. The original was a psychedelic joke meant to throw off listeners who were looking for some deeper meaning behind the Fab Fourโ€™s lyrics. Itโ€™s a playful song by an otherwise tumultuous band that couldnโ€™t hold it together; there are definitely some parallels there with Oasis as well.

Photo by Theo Wargo

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