I was listening to Dig Out Your Soul on My
Space and reading through the comments. Did you check out any of
those?
No, I don't do any of that nonsense, MySpace rubbish. I don't
listen to comments. I just make the record and hope people like it;
if they don't like it I give a shit. I wait to go on tour. That's
how I work. That's the music Oasis are making and that's how I
judge success, is by making the music you want to make and not
having to fucking sell out and make music what other people want
you to make.
But the comments have been phenomenally positive, with
people saying it's your best album since '95.
That sounds good. That's what I like to hear.
The record has a lot of live energy. Were you thinking
of how it would translate to the stage?
I wasn't personally 'cause they're the musicians. I always sing it
like it's fucking the last song I ever sing. But I think Noel
definitely wanted to be a bit more heavy and not so acoustic.
I know you did a tour with the Black Crowes. Chris
Robinson recently was talking to me about the fact if you stay
around long enough you become cool again. Seems like that's
happening with Oasis here as well.
That's something I think about a lot and I remember Paul Weller
telling me that. But I don't worry about that; I'm happy with the
way Oasis is. But he was talking about the cycles; it comes and
goes. It's like songwriting. It's not a race. It's about the
quality you put out more than the quantity. And I love the Black
Crowes. The way I judge success is we're doing it on our own terms
and that outweighs any fucking success. If I can get through this,
the whole Oasis thing, knowing I didn't fucking suck cock, then
that is a huge success to me.
Tell me about "I'm Outta Time."
That's a song I had about three years ago and I demoed it in our
studio. I got the verses and the music, the chorus took like
fucking years to write, I just couldn't get anything. One day I was
fucking about and it just happened. I thought, "All right, that's
the song done. It's fucking done." I was playing it and the outro
goes round and round, it needs something — obviously I'm a
big John Lennon fan and it's got a bit of a Lennon vibe, so I
thought, "Well, I've got to find a bit of him speaking." So we went
through all these old interviews, that's the first one I found, and
it just sort of worked. It's not a tribute to John Lennon because
if you sat down and tried to write a tribute to John Lennon it'd be
fucking rubbish, but it's kind of a nod.
How old were you when Lennon was shot?
I was eight. "Imagine" is the song for me, because I was putting
the TV on and I remember that song being on all the time and just
thinking, "Who's this guy?" and all that and then obviously you
forget about it and go to school. Later on in life I got into the
Beatles, the whole band and stuff.
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