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B-sides — Oasis

Noel famously admitted later in life that he didn't understand how the music industry worked, assuming his songwriting well would never run dry. This led to a lack of traditional "quality control" that paradoxially benefited fans.

This album misses later gems like Let's All Make Believe and Pass Me Down the Wine , but for the 1994-1997 era, it is perfect.

: A gentle, acoustic departure that proved Noel could write fragile, tender melodies just as effectively as loud stadium stompers. It famously became the theme tune to the BBC sitcom The Royle Family . The Morning Glory Era (1995–1996)

Co-written with Chris Griffiths, this melancholic rock track features one of Liam Gallagher's finest vocal performances of the '90s. The song captures a distinct sense of yearning and displacement, building into a powerful, melodic chorus that easily deserved a spot on (What's the Story) Morning Glory? . Comparing the Creative Peaks

What’s your favorite Oasis B-side? “Round Are Way”? “Cloudburst”? “Flashbax”? Drop it in the comments. oasis b-sides

This melancholic, yearning number is now instantly recognizable to millions as the theme song to the iconic BBC sitcom The Royle Family . Noel delivers a perfect, understated vocal over a simple guitar riff. It tells the story of escape and loneliness, showing a maturity beyond the "laddish" Britpop stereotype.

No other band in history treated their "throwaway" tracks with as much reverence as Oasis. During the mid-90s, the Gallagher brothers didn't just release singles; they released mini-albums where the extra tracks were often better than most other bands' lead singles. The Golden Era of the "B-Side"

For Oasis, B-sides weren’t mere throwaways or remixes. They were a statement of prolific arrogance and creative fertility. At their peak, Noel Gallagher famously claimed he could release Definitely Maybe and its B-sides as a double album, and he wasn’t wrong. Many fans argue that the best Oasis tracks—songs that define their swagger, melancholy, and ambition—are hiding on singles, not albums.

It’s a song about surviving the apocalypse of fame together. The chorus explodes with a melody so triumphant it’s ridiculous. Why wasn’t it on Morning Glory ? Because, as Noel puts it, they "had too many songs." It remains the perennial opener for fans’ mixtapes (and later, Spotify playlists). Noel famously admitted later in life that he

Decades after the band's initial split, Oasis remains a cultural phenomenon. A massive driver of this longevity is the internet-era rediscovery of their deeper catalog.

The streaming era has killed the B-side. Why record a hidden track when a playlist will bury it? But the Oasis B-sides taught a generation of fans that the best treasure is the one you have to dig for.

(1994) Before it got a second life on the Help charity album, this was a Definitely Maybe –era B-side. A punk-rock cry of frustration (“We don’t see as we think we should, and we don’t say as we know we could”) that barrels along like a train with no brakes. It’s Some Might Say ’s angrier cousin.

(B-side to "Wonderwall"): A cinematic masterpiece complete with a sweeping orchestral arrangement and philosophical lyrics about life and fate. Noel has openly stated that hiding this on the back of the "Wonderwall" single is the biggest regret of his musical career. : A gentle, acoustic departure that proved Noel

: Originally a B-side to "Some Might Say," it became a definitive anthem because it features both brothers sharing lead vocals—a rarity that fans saw as a symbol of their bond. Talk Tonight

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The ultimate anthem of brotherly unity; features both brothers sharing lead vocals on a roaring chorus. "Wonderwall" (1995) Noel Gallagher