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Every black cat has its very own golden retriever✨
Looking for Lowry, 2011
Noel Gallagher talks about his admiration of fellow famous son of Manchester, painter LS Lowry.
Noel Gallagher might not be the first person you’d expect to see in a film about one of the 20th century’s most popular painters. But Looking for Lowry film-maker Margy Kinmonth made the connection when she saw the video for their song The Masterplan.
Inspired by LS Lowry’s paintings of crowds in scenes of the industrial north of the early 20th century, the animated video is a Lowry painting come to life. It even includes a swaggering Liam Gallagher, a character that fits seamlessly into the Lowry landscape.
The Masterplan music video, 2006, made with Lowry estate's permission.
“Everybody’s on the move [in his paintings] aren’t they,” says Noel. “There’s nobody standing still, everybody’s walking, all slightly hunched over aren’t they? I mean, they’re very brilliant.
“Only works in the rain though, don’t you find? You get great skies up in Manchester, real turbulent. Grey skies and tall buildings. And a little scraggy dog.”
For Noel the connection with and awareness of Lowry goes way back. “It’s like when they say ‘When’s the first time you heard The Beatles?’. It’s like, I don’t know, it’s just always been there for me, always.”
Both famous sons of Manchester with a deep connection with the city, Noel has always admired and related to how Lowry presented their hometown.
“I guess all the people that he ever met were all in there somehow,” he says. “Even though there are hundreds of people in those paintings, they’re all individuals in some way.
“There’s like a solace in them I think, you know. And you see them walking, they seem to be in their own little world. And I guess I was like that when I was younger. I was in my own little world and it was quite quiet, Manchester.
“It would be great to see what he could do with a northern town now because all the factories are dead. All those that haven’t been turned into cheap flats are just huge empty buildings that once housed all these people.
“All the houses around and all the people working there, the whole community was based around the factory. It’d be interesting to see how he would paint all these northern towns that are dead now that the textile industry has gone.”
A topic touched on in the film is the continuing issue of Lowry paintings not being considered worthy of serious art criticism. This has resulted in the Tate not displaying the many Lowry paintings the gallery owns. It’s something Noel is at a loss to understand.
“So [the paintings] aren’t considered Tate worthy? Or is it just because he was a northerner?” asks Noel. “Does anybody know why though? I mean, what’s the official line?
“I find it amazing that an artist that’s got that much of a strong identity is not accepted, because surely that’s what art is all about, you know. It’s reflecting real life and you know what it is when you see it.”
Will Marlow, 13 April 2011
"I never truly write from a personal perspective because I have to give it to Liam to sing, and he has to believe the songs are written through him, by me. And my brother is a piss-taker of the highest degree. If he even smells a rat, he goes, 'I'm not having that.' So I write from the perspective that there's this imaginary person singing the song, and he's called Noel&Liam."
—'I was stoned - didn't feel a thing' | Noel Gallagher interviewed by Neil McCormick for The Telegraph UK | September 26th 2002
—Liam Gallagher | Twitter November 22nd 2024
"He's the singer in my band and I'm his songwriter. There's something between us that will never be broken."
—Noel Gallagher interview CD:UK 2000
'I'm tired of analysing me and Liam,' says Noel. 'I'm in a band with him, and I'm always going to be in a band with him. Whether it's good or bad, could be better, could be worse, is irrelevant. I'd freak out if he wasn't there. He's the bullshit detector in anything I do.'
—Gallagher and Weller | The Observer Magazine | October 1999
“I need him more than he needs me,” he admits at one point, later referring to him as the best rock ‘n’ roll singer the UK has ever seen. “I never wanted to be a solo artist. I loved being in Oasis, and if the band had stayed together, I would’ve been the happiest pig in the nicest pigpen.”
—Interview: Noel Gallagher by Andy Welch | The Yorkshire Post | Oct 21st 2011
So how close did you come to splitting? Noel: We didn't. We sat down and I said, "Listen, I love you and you love me, what's the most important thing? One: the music. Two: the singer. Three: the cunt who writes the songs."
—Noel & Liam Gallagher interviewed by Michael Odell | Q Magazine May 2002
Liam rejoins his brother and I can see why they aren't Cain and Abel. This pair is a mutual protectorate. The look of pride on Noel's face as Liam warms to the rant that will rattle the pots on tea-time radio says everything about this odd couple; the more pleased Noel looks with him, the more emotional Liam gets. They're laughing and hugging. They're two kids back in the playground, looking out for each other. Flesh and blood. Oasis. They won't give it up. "I rate him," Liam says of Noel. "I don't hate him. How could I? Except for days when I could hate anyone, including meself. He doesn't hate me, either. He'd have nothing else to write about, would he? And he lets me sing his songs. The best songs. I love him. He gave me a ticket to ride."
—I Am Disturbance by Max Bell | British GQ February 1998
꩜─ MASTERPLAN.
___________ ㅤㅤㅤ____________ㅤ ㅤㅤ___________
NGHFB at Boston's MGM Music Hall, July 15, 2023 clip here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlvJ7oQhWMI
The Arts Fuse Review, by Adam Ellsworth, July 18, 2023
The transition out of Council Skies began with “We’re on Our Way Now,” Noel’s 2021 non-album single featured on the compilation Back the Way We Came, Vol. 1, and truly got into gear with “AKA…What a Life!,” Gallagher’s post-Oasis theme song. It completed, ironically, with a rocking take on 2014’s magnificent “You Know We Can’t Go Back.” “Ironically,” because going back is exactly what Gallagher intended to do with the rest of Saturday night’s set. This was, after all, why everyone (even the diehards) showed up in the first place, which Noel had no interest in fighting against. “So, now we’re gonna go aaaaaaall the way back,” he informed the crowd following “You Know We Can’t Go Back,” and immediately before the all-time Oasis “B-side that should have been an A-side,” “The Masterplan.” “To when everybody was fucking cool as fuck.” These remarks were not just the acknowledgement that the Mighty-O card was finally being played, they were also the first time Gallagher engaged at length with the MGM audience.
Note: Per setlist.fm, the tour debut of "You Know We Can't Go Back" was the previous evening in Philadelphia--the first time he had played it live since 2017.
Though he continued to play it on tour back in the UK, only the Philadelphia and Boston shows had it leading directly into the Oasis part of his set. After those two shows, he moved it to the first half of the setlist.
Do you all know
This is still the funniest thing to me. The bandwagonning.