eMusic Review 0
If you really want to enjoy Oasis' gargantuan-selling sophomore effort, it's best not to listen too closely. Otherwise, you'll be distracted by the countless questions Morning Glory inevitably provokes, questions like, "What are the structural properties of a Wonderwall?" or "Who is Sally, anyway?" or "Isn't it weird how much this song sounds like some older song?" The best tunes on Glory are rarely more than surface-deep, but what a surface it is, with loud, lustrous guitars; clingy melodies; and choruses that can bring stoners to ecstasy and sports fans to their feet. The band's biggest hits are here—from the Lennon rewrite "Don't Look Back in Anger" to the oblique yet affecting "Wonderwall"—but there are lesser-known pleasures as well: "She's Electric" is one of the Gallaghers' most care-free (and sincere) love songs, and "Some Might Say" is the sort of closing-credits anthem most Brit bands would kill for, but that Oasis didn't even bother to release as a single. Glory ends with "Champagne Supernova," a seven-minute long pseudo-psych epic that's devoid of meaning, and gloriously so. The Gallagher brothers spent years convincing the world of their greatness, and on this album, at least, their thuggish hubris was justified.