Liam Gallagher: As You Were
Liam Gallagher
As You Were
(Warner Brothers)
I believe wholeheartedly that we will have another Oasis album and tour sometime within the next decade. I say this only because we saw Guns Nâ Roses get back together and I always thought a Slash and Axl reunion would be more of a longshot than the Gallagher brothers making amends. At some point the money will be too much to pass up, and they will give in, and go down like the Hindenburg. Until then we get Noel Gallagher and the High Flying Birds, and Liam Gallagherâs solo stuff via his debut album, As You Were. The record is a gaudy 15 songs (three bonus tracks) as if he was saving them for this most appropriate time to give his brother the finger.
Itâs unfair really. We will constantly compare all of the Gallagherâs projects to Oasis. It will be like that until the end of time, but that doesnât mean As You Were isnât a good album. Gallagher writes great songs in the same distinctly British way he did with his previous projects, big hooks, dreamy vocals, and Beatles-esque melody.
The harmonica comes out in full force on âWall of Glassâ with a sneaky backseat rock n roll. âGreedy Soul,â and âPaper Crownâ are well-written, verse-chorus-verse songs that you just donât here on the radio anymore. âI Get Byâ is an energized rocker with a danceable beat with the Brit-pop blueprint in tow. âChinatownâ slows it down with a vulnerable and intimate acoustic guitar and pulsing bass drum. âIâve All I Needâ is definitely a U2 moment, and is one of the better songs on the album, but even moments like that cannot overshadow the great âWhen Iâm in Needâ. The song begins with a slow burning drive when mid-song, an orchestra takes over building into a crescendo that would make Paul McCartney proud. The middle finger to Noel is up and proud too.