• NME.COM
  • Thursday, 4 December 2008

NME News

Alan McGee compares Oasis' 'Dig Out Your Soul' to Beatles' 'Revolver'

Alan McGee

Alan McGee

The man who signed the Manchester band raves about new album

Alan McGee - the man who discovered Oasis - has claimed that their new album 'Dig Out Your Soul' is as good as The Beatles' 1966 classic 'Revolver'.

McGee signed Oasis to his Creation label after seeing them live at King Tut's Wah Wah Hut in Glasgow in 1993.

Writing on Guardian.co.uk, McGee claimed that 'Dig Out Your Soul' showed "a return to the grander ambitions and excess of before" for the band.

He compared Oasis' career trajectory with that of The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Paul Weller.

"Maybe it is their [Oasis'] lucky seventh album?" he wrote. "The Beatles and the (Rolling) Stones released 'Revolver' and 'Beggar's Banquet' respectively, both were album number seven, and 'Dig Out Your Soul' is on a par of with both in terms of classic songwriting.

"Or maybe it was his [Noel Gallagher's] musical peer Paul Weller who inspired Noel to turn his back on Britpop and take a more eclectic direction?"

McGee added that the only British bands worth "artistically competing with" at present are Oasis and Glasvegas.

In other Oasis news, the band's official website oasisinet.com claims that tickets for the group's Electric Proms show at London's Camden Roundhouse on October 26 sold out just 40 seconds after they went onsale today (September 30).

Comments (14)

Add a comment

qcardy 

Oct 1, 2008

Oasis will never be comparable to the Beatles. this guy is off his fucking block.

Colin_Zeal 

Oct 1, 2008

first he calls my bloody valentine 'cabaret' and now this? oasis have been finished for getting on for 15 years now mcgee, you prize tit.

Knoxvillelives 

Oct 1, 2008

This amuses me greatly

ThePopSong 

Oct 1, 2008

He's easily pleased, Mr. McGee, no?

ed2005 

Oct 1, 2008

Agree with how good Beggars Banquet and Revolver are, but Weller's seventh studio album would have been the Style Council's first album Cafe Blue, after the jam's six studio albums (In The City, This Is The Modern World, All Mod Cons, Setting Sons, Sound Effects, The Gift)...surely not in the same league.It would be great if it was that good, an Oasis have finally broken their own mould, I wait to see...

Baby Teeth 

Oct 1, 2008

Alan McGee can fuck off. In raising Oasis he's brought the world the most diabolical sound possible. They ripped off The Beatles majorly, does that mean they should be compared artistically as well? No, just like The Complete Stone Roses shouldn't be artistically compared to The Stone Roses.

zoso_cult666 

Oct 1, 2008

Whatever Old Man....

hness 

Oct 1, 2008

i met mcgee at a Hives gig in cambridge aboyut 5 yrs ago...he's a clueless fucking burn t out prick...he seems to be the only person who knows what is groovy.....like i say , guys a washed up fuckin prick wannabe with no talent at all....listen to his own band from the 80s....dog shit

lipgloss 

Oct 1, 2008

Good article McGee!... I'm guessing the above commentators all read the complete Guardian article and wouldn't be so stupid to respond purely on the NME headline.

fruitcake23 

Oct 1, 2008

to be honest, the new oasis album is really great until the last couple of songs, which are a bit unforgettable. however, it's not on par with revolver lol i understand what he what he was trying to say. definitely one of the strongest oasis albums.

hness 

Oct 1, 2008

perhaps he meant Revolver the band...remember them? no? just me then......

fruitcake23 

Oct 2, 2008

i meant 'forgettable' instead lol

Geekpie 

Oct 2, 2008

Who does this bald twat think he is? Still dining out on a lucky break he had last century, old git shud shut up and piss off

lipgloss 

Oct 2, 2008

Geekpie, you may not agree with him or his opinion but McGee has done, and is doing a hell of a lot for the good of the music industry besides Oasis!

Add your comment

NME Alerts

Get NME news delivered direct to your desktop. Find out more

This Week's Issue
  • NME Magazine - The ultimate guide to the week in music
  • The ultimate guide to the week in music
  • NME Magazine - Subscribe now and save up to £45!
Please sign in

Forgot your password?

Register with MyNME

Every Tuesday and Friday

  • Up-to-the-minute news stories
  • The best new music and free downloads
  • Video interviews, photo galleries, competitions and more
  • Album and track reviews for the week ahead
  • Essential gigs in your area