(All photos by Timothy Norris. Click photos for entire slideshow)

Seven albums and seventeen years into their career, Oasis still doesn't seem to have listened to a record made after 1973. The band's recently-released Dig Out Your Soul offers echoes of their era-soundtrack second album, 1995's (What's the Story) Morning Glory, yet it – and last night's show – is still basically the Beatles with some Who ballyhoo and stolen Marc Bolan.

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Openers “Rock 'n Roll Star”, “Lyla” and Dig Out Your Soul's first single “The Shock of the Lightning” were as tame as the county fair-ready front rows.  But Oasis gradually gained emotional traction with the T-Rex-affected “Cigarettes and Alcohol”; “Waiting for the Rapture”s tie-dyed “Come Together” stomp; and a poignant “The Masterplan,” sung by guitarist/bandleader Noel Gallagher.  “Slide Away” (from the band's '94 debut, Definitely Maybe) personified what made Oasis famous: descending-progression melancholy and instant-nostalgia lyrics with a romanticism that's OK for blokes down the pub to drunkenly sway along to.

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Aside from sneering 'n stooping frontlad Liam Gallagher's lairy, lip-of-the-stage posturing, Oasis have always been a static bunch – they'd be upstaged by their own bobbleheads.  Looking like a colonial waiter in his collarless white shirt and Paul Weller hair, Liam's motionless “come on then” stance was more soccer terrace than rock concert.  But as the anthems  – “Morning Glory” (dedicated to Depeche Mode's Martin Gore); “Supersonic”; “Wonderwall”; “Champagne Supernova”; the Noel-sung “Don't Look Back In Anger”; and twinkly current single “I'm Outta Time” – cascaded across the Staples' soulless battlestar interior, musicality eclipsed (lack of) movement. 

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Ladies and gentleman: The Shroud

Gem Archer, increasingly a true lead guitarist, peeled off song-relevant licks and buoyant spotlight solos; new drummer Chris Sharrock – though almost too technically proficient for this still-baggy Madchester hangover – added flamboyant, Keith Moon tom-tom foolery.  Patchouli-scented Sgt. Pepper undertones came courtesy of an incongruously Cousin Itt-ish touring keyboard player (brilliantly introduced as “The Shroud”).

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Oasis are living jukebox, but the familiarity of their sonic components is comforting and their laddish swagger iconic. They closed with a vivid version of the Fab Four's “I Am The Walrus” – or maybe that's what they were playing all night. — Paul Rogers





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