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(What's The Story) Morning Glory?
Oasis
Epic Records, 1995
REVIEW BY: Sean McCarthy
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: 08/19/2004

Definitely Maybe was one of the greatest debut albums of
all-time. Each song marked the arrival of a bunch of cocky,
Beatles-worshipping, coked-up Brits. The album's excess (an obvious
reflection of the band's) was the
License to Ill of Brit-pop. If
Definitely Maybe was the party,
(What's the Story) Morning Glory? is the hangover. While
Definitely Maybe was bragging about becoming rock and roll
stars and doing white lines,
(What's the Story) Morning Glory? sounds like someone who is
coping with the morning after who heard it from another person that
they were a total ass the night before: "did I say that?", "Was I
that obnoxious?"
Luckily, the band doesn't lose any confidence on their sophomore
effort. Their Beatles' worship definitely leans toward later-era
Beatles with this album, especially with mega-production numbers
like "Cast No Shadow", "Wonderwall" and of course, the epic
"Champagne Supernova." Where
Definitely Maybe rocked,
(What's the Story) Morning Glory?moves.
It's no wonder that this was the album that gave Oasis a huge
American audience (
Definitely Maybe barely cracked the top 50); the album was a
huge hit on adult contemporary radio. The characters in
"Wonderwall" sound like more like the life-weary characters that
populate a Bonnie Raitt album: "backbeat the word is on the street
that the fire in your heart is out." For the most part, the
wide-eyed optimism of Oasis' debut is gone, replaced by kids who
had to grow into adulthood faster than they ever anticipated.
"Don't Look Back in Anger" has to be both one of the most
heartbreakingly written ballads of the last 20 years and one of the
most underused karaoke songs of all time. The almost-shoegazing
"Cast No Shadow" was inspired by The Verve frontman Richard
Ashcroft. The use of strings, pulsating percussion by Alan White
and tide-wave guitar riffs by Noel Gallagher and Paul Arthurs
somehow make these songs sound heroic statements, rather than sad
bastard posturing.
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