The band will play a total of seven dates in London
10:48, 26 Jul 2025Updated 11:10, 26 Jul 2025
Liam Gallagher on stage at the first Wembley gig. (Image: Lewis Evans/Big Brother Recordings)
Liam Gallagher gave a three-word assessment of the crowd at Oasis’ first gig at Wembley Stadium last night (July 25).
The band are to play a total of seven nights in the capital between now and September as part of their Live ’25 reunion tour.
They’ll play Friday, July 25 followed by further dates on Saturday, July 26, Wednesday, July 30, Saturday, August 2, and Sunday, August 3.
There will then be an eight-week gap which will see Oasis perform dates in Edinburgh and Dublin, and abroad, before they return for their two final dates at Wembley on Saturday, September 27 and Sunday, September 28.
Playing to a sold-out crowd, clips of around 81,000 people bouncing to Cigarettes and Alcohol have already begun to go viral on social media.
The brothers back on stage at Wembley(Image: Joshua Halling/Big Brother Recordings)
Liam praised the crowd’s energy, saying they had been ‘loud as f***’.
Introducing Champagne Supernova, which is the final song of the show, he addressed the crowd: “Right then London you f***ing mad-heads.
“You’ve been amazing, man. Loud as f***.
“Nice one for making this happen, it’s good to be f***ing back.”
Comparisons have already begun between the crowds at Wembley and Heaton Park, where the brothers completed a string of five nights last Monday (July 20).
“Definitely better than Heaton [Park]”, wrote one user under a video of the crowd posted by Wembley’s TikTok account. “It’s definitely not”, came the quick reply from another user.
Announced last August, two days before the 30th anniversary of their debut album Definitely Maybe, the reunion tour was the biggest concert launch ever seen in the UK and Ireland.
An estimated 630,000 people will watch them at Wembley before the tour heads to North America in the autumn.
It had been Manchester United fans in the firing line at Heaton Park – but even fans at Wembley couldn’t escape some teasing from Liam about their favourite football team.
“Don’t be booing Arsenal fans,” he told the crowd as he instructed them to do the Poznan bounce.
“Just because you’re not top of the league. It isn’t our f***ing problem.”
The band also paid tribute to the late Ozzy Osbourne, projecting a huge portrait of the singer onto the big screen before launching into Rock N Roll Star, which they dedicated to Osbourne.