For nearly three decades, the Gallagher brothers have turned sibling rivalry into a full-blown rock saga — one that’s equal parts legendary, chaotic, and strangely addictive. From backstage blow-ups to passive-aggressive interview jabs, Liam and Noel Gallagher’s feud has lasted almost as long as Oasis’ catalog has dominated rock playlists.
The cracks first showed in the mid-’90s, when heated arguments spilled into the press, leading to the infamous 2009 backstage fight in Paris that officially ended Oasis. In the years since, the brothers have traded insults like guitar riffs — sharp, loud, and unforgettable. Noel has called Liam “a man with a fork in a world of soup,” while Liam fired back with classics like “potato” and “miserable little dwarf.” Their feud became so public, it turned into its own form of entertainment.
But 2024–2025 changed the atmosphere — not enough to declare peace, but just enough to stir hope.
Recently, Liam Gallagher sparked fan mania by hinting at a possible 2026 European Oasis tour, saying he’s “open to getting back onstage if the stars align.” He added that the return of Oasis would require both brothers to “sit down and discuss their future properly,” a surprising shift from his usual fire-and-brimstone tone.
Noel, who has always been more guarded, echoed something similar earlier this year, noting that “a conversation has to happen at some point,” though he maintained there would be no new Oasis music even if the band toured again. For longtime fans, this is the closest thing to optimism they’ve heard in years.
The contradictory mix of hope and hostility perfectly sums up their relationship: always on the edge of reconciliation, always one sarcastic comment away from collapse.
Still, the possibility of a tour — even without new songs — feels colossal. After all, Oasis reunions have been rumored for over a decade, but never before have both brothers’ public statements aligned this closely. It’s enough to make the rock world ask: Is this finally happening? Or just another Gallagher tease destined to end in chaos?
What do you think — will the feud take a back seat long enough for the brothers to step onstage together again, or are we watching another Gallagher cycle ready to explode?