Oasis Brothers Reunite Onstage for First Time in 16 Years at London Club
- Matty Bez

- Apr 27
- 2 min read

In a moment that fans have waited over a decade and a half to witness, Liam and Noel Gallagher were spotted together at a working men’s club in North London — their first public performance side by side in 16 years.
The iconic brothers reportedly arrived separately at the Mildmay Club in Newington Green last Thursday, where they filmed material believed to be a promo video for their eagerly awaited Oasis reunion tour this summer. Locals mentioned the noise levels were enough to draw some complaints.

The highly anticipated Oasis '25 Tour will kick off in Cardiff on 4 July, marking 16 years since the band's dramatic breakup after a backstage bust-up at France’s Rock en Seine festival. It also commemorates the 30th anniversary of their legendary second album, (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?.
In a joint statement when the tour was announced, the band declared:
"The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised."
Signs suggest the brothers have buried the hatchet, with Noel telling TalkSport recently that rehearsals would begin soon. When asked about Liam, he said: “He’s alright. He’s on tip-top form. I was with him yesterday, actually.”
The UK leg of the tour will feature a mammoth seven nights at Wembley Stadium and five shows in their hometown of Manchester, before the band heads across the US, Mexico, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and wraps things up in South America later this year.
However, excitement around the tour has been dampened slightly by ticketing scandals. Lloyds Banking Group revealed fans have lost over £2 million to scams since tickets first went on sale last August.
Further controversy came from a Competition and Markets Authority investigation, which suggested Ticketmaster might have broken consumer protection laws after more than 900,000 tickets — some originally priced at £150 — ended up being resold for upwards of £350.
Despite criticism over ticket pricing, Oasis distanced themselves from the backlash, insisting last year that all pricing decisions were left to promoters and management.
"Inevitably, the interest in this tour is so overwhelming that it’s impossible to schedule enough shows to meet public demand," the band said in a statement.
When one frustrated fan accused them on X (formerly Twitter) of “ripping off” loyal followers, Liam simply replied: “SHUTUP.”



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