Liam and Noel Gallagher’s band will stop in three American cities plus Toronto and Mexico City in August and September 2025.
In August, when Oasis revealed a slew of reunion dates in Britain and Ireland starting next summer, the group said that plans were still underway for shows in “other continents outside of Europe.” That led to rampant speculation on social media — including purportedly leaked itineraries — about where the Britpop stars might go.
Turns out that speculation was pretty close to reality. But not 100 percent right.
The band announced on Monday that its world tour would include stops in Toronto, Mexico City, Chicago, Los Angeles and East Rutherford, N.J., outside New York — all of which figured prominently in online guessing, though dates and venues were not all as expected. The Oasis Live ’25 tour, led by Liam and Noel Gallagher, will be the famously combative band’s first since its implosion 15 years ago.
Over the weekend, the band teased the announcement with billboards in Times Square and elsewhere pointing to 8 a.m. Eastern time and saying, “Be careful what you wish for.”
“America,” the band said in a statement. “Oasis is coming. You have one last chance to prove that you loved us all along.”
Fans had speculated about a wider world tour, with presumed dates in Australia and Asia, but none were announced on Monday.
Even before the Gallagher brothers confirmed that Oasis would be getting back together, speculation about the Oasis reunion became front-page news in Britain, where the Gallaghers’ fisticuffs and insult trading has been hot copy for decades. After a month, they still have not confirmed any other members of the reunion band.
The 19 shows announced so far in Britain and Ireland — including seven nights at Wembley Stadium in London — became immediate sellouts, and led to complaints about prices for some tickets spiking while fans were still in the queue to purchase them. A government agency, the Competition and Markets Authority, said it was opening an investigation into Ticketmaster’s handling of the sale, “including how so-called ‘dynamic pricing’ may have been used.”
Registration for tickets to the North American shows was opened on the Oasis website, and the ticket sales will begin on Friday via Ticketmaster.
Source: Music - nytimes.com