February 28, 20251 yr 5 minutes ago, Tafty said:Hope that Fontaines track isn't too high... listened to it for the first time the other day and... it's not for me Real I have really tried to get into them as they seem super interesting but I can’t get into any of their music oop. And this is just an addition to the list
February 28, 20251 yr Sooooo happy for doechii and Jennie, what a song. Here for doechii to dominate 2025! And glad to see the black pink girlies all doing well!
February 28, 20251 yr Good to have more fresh blood with “Extral” - I can’t say I love it but it’s interesting.
February 28, 20251 yr Just now, Bjork said:oh didn't know she was on The White Lotus S03Lisa is (not Jennie) and she's killing it so far!
February 28, 20251 yr Just like Doechii's verse on this. Not a big fan of anything Blackpink-related that's hit the charts
February 28, 20251 yr I like the moments in 'ExtraL' when the production morphs into a Jersey Club sound.
February 28, 20251 yr 36 | | 113th weekOasisWhateverNon-album singleReleased: 18th December 1994Label: Big Brother RecordingsChart StatisticsNE (31/12/1994) | 3-6-8-9-14-19-28-43-65-70-xRE (13/05/1995) | 84-91-xRE (24/06/1995) | 48-49-61-xRE (12/08/1995) | 86-87-77-84-89-88-xRE (30/09/1995) | 95-87-76-96-xRE (04/11/1995) | 84-80-81-79-77-75-76-79-66-53-57-xRE (27/01/1996) | 61-63-69-xRE (24/02/1996) | 69-64-55-58-61-66-70-56-58-64-63-62-67-65-70-76-81-80-82-87-87-84-88-81-89-69-62-70-63-80-66-77-xRE (16/11/1996) | 34-36-41-48-59-61-56-45-53-65-76-82-88-90-98-98-xRE (19/07/1997) | 76-80-85-92-92-91-79-84-xRE (04/10/1997) | 94-86-89-99-98-100-99-96-xRE (20/12/1997) | 89-90-83-83-xRE (31/01/1998) | 87-92-98-xRE (26/06/2010) | 64-100-xRE (06/03/2025) | 36Sales: 600,000+Certification: PlatinumStatus: Accelerated Chart Ratio03 Salesxx Audio Streamingxx Video StreamingVideoBiographySome groups spend years chasing stardom, and others seem to just instantly will it into existence. The latter was certainly the case with Manchester’s Oasis, who named the first song on their first album “Rock ’n’ Roll Star” as if their fate were preordained. Arriving in the midst of the peak alt-rock era, Oasis’ 1994 debut, Definitely Maybe, was a bird-flipping retort to the navel-gazing angst of grunge, rolling the melodicism of The Beatles, the swagger of T. Rex, the sneer of the Sex Pistols and the strobe-lit grooves of The Stone Roses into alternately sleazy (“Cigarettes & Alcohol”) and celebratory (“Live Forever”) pint-raising anthems. And it wasn’t just the group’s sound that harkened back to the glory days of British rock—in the simmering tension between the guitarist who wrote all the tunes (Noel Gallagher) and the singer who brought them to life (his braggadocious brother Liam), Oasis came pre-packaged with a sibling-rivalry soap opera to rival that of The Kinks. Definitely Maybe’s No. 1 debut on the UK charts turned Oasis into the ubiquitous bad boys of Britpop, an image they gleefully indulged through their tabloid-baiting pissing matches with London’s Blur, the art-school antithesis of the Gallaghers’ working-class laddism. But with 1995’s follow-up, (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?, Oasis shed the Union Jack trappings to become the only English band of the era to match their domestic success in the US, thanks to karaoke-ready sing-alongs like “Wonderwall” and “Don’t Look Back in Anger”. With more than 20 million copies sold worldwide, Morning Glory effectively turned Oasis into an institution, one that would continue to sell out arenas for years to come (even after 1997’s infamously over-the-top Be Here Now signalled the end of Britpop’s pop-cultural dominance). The Gallaghers’ ever-fraught relationship would sink Oasis in 2009, but the enduring, cross-generational appeal of their most popular songs—with “Wonderwall” ranking among the most-streamed tracks of the ’90s—ensures a legacy that will live forever. In 2024, the Gallaghers announced a 2025 worldwide reunion tour, claiming reconciliation on social media: “The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over.” - Apple MusicTop 100 Chart History1994 31 Supersonic -1- MILLIONAIRE1994 11 Shakermaker -2-1994 08 Live Forever -3- MILLIONAIRE1994 07 Cigarettes & Alcohol -4-1994 03 Whatever -NAS-1995 01 Some Might Say -1- MILLIONAIRE1995 02 Roll With It -2- MILLIONAIRE1995 02 Wonderwall -3- MILLION SELLER1996 01 Don't Look Back In Anger -4- MILLION SELLER1997 01 D'You Know What I Mean? -1- MILLIONAIRE1997 02 Stand By Me -2- MILLIONAIRE1998 01 All Around The World -3-2000 01 Go Let It Out -1-2000 04 Who Feels Love? -2-2000 04 Sunday Morning Call -3-2002 01 The Hindu Times -1-2002 02 Stop Crying Your Heart Out -2- MILLIONAIRE2002 02 Little By Little / She Is Love -3-2003 03 Songbird -4-2005 01 Lyla -1-2005 01 The Importance Of Being Idle -2-2005 02 Let There Be Love -3-2007 10 Lord Don't Slow Me Down -NAS-2008 03 The Shock Of The Lightning -1-2008 12 I'm Outta Time -2-2009 10 Falling Down -3-2015 56 Half The World Away -B-SIDE- MILLIONAIRE2020 80 Don't Stop... -NAS-8 x #1 | 19 x Top 5 | 23 x Top 10 | 25 x Top 20 | 26 x Top 40 | 28 x Top 100Social Media Oasis
February 28, 20251 yr I kinda guessed this would fall down by Sunday. Edited February 28, 20251 yr by IdentFan101
February 28, 20251 yr Delighted that 'Whatever' held on to its top 40 position in the end. It has blossomed into one of my favourite Oasis songs over the years.Great lyrics and the orchestration is stunning. ❤️
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