Oasis always thrived on tension between the Brothers
Gallagher -- not the interpersonal squabbles but their conflict between instinct and discipline.
Liam personified the former while
Noel flew the flag for the latter and their distinct, differing definitions of rock & roll continued to churn out exciting rock & roll until the end, when
Liam’s cavalier attitude toward work proved the final straw for the elder
Gallagher. Unsurprisingly, the first solo projects from the two reflected this dichotomy:
Liam’s
Beady Eye is all big-legged swagger;
Noel’s
High Flying Birds is tasteful, mannered craftsmanship.
Noel often griped how
Liam would prevent
Oasis from doing anything unexpected, thereby raising expectations of left turns on
High Flying Birds, but the little brass flourishes peppered throughout the record don’t stop the album from playing like a succession of variations on “Don’t Look Back in Anger” and “The Importance of Being Idle.” Craftsman that he is,
Gallagher does come up with several keepers -- the
Oasis carryovers “Stop the Clocks” and “(I Wanna Live in a Dream in My) Record Machine,” “If I Had a Gun...,” and “Everybody’s on the Run." ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine