[What's The Story] Morning Glory

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[What's The Story] Morning Glory album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: Oasis (See All Albums by Oasis)
  • Date Released: Sep 9, 2008

  • Genre: Alternative/Punk, Style: Alternative, Commercial Alternative

  • Label: Reprise

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 49:58

eMusic Review 0

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Brian Raftery

eMusic Contributor

Brian Raftery has written for Wired, GQ, SPIN, New York, and Esquire. His first book, Don't Stop Believin': How Karaoke Conquered the World and Changed My Life,...more »

01.11.10
Who needs meaning with choruses like these?
2008 | Label: Reprise

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.

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Glorious

KrisWright

This really is a bottle rocket of an album from start to finish. Okay, I admit that it's a bit of a shame that Noel's lyrical depth isn't as powerful as his melodic ability, but that's small criticism when I haven't stopped singing along to "Don't Look Back In Anger" for almost 15 years straight. I say this is Oasis' finest hour. Get the whole thing.

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Must Own

UpFromNowhere

One of the best rock n' roll records ever made. Great listen from start to finish.

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Bloated, gratuitous, ridiculous...in a good way

timabouttown

Subtlety has never been Oasis's long suit. This record sounds HUGE, and it is. That said, some of their best ballads here, including Wonderwall. The only way you have an excuse not to buy this is if you're buying Time Flies (their best of), but I think you'll be best off buying both. Any of the rest of you lot, no excuses at all. Download it already.

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One of those albums...

dylanlennonfan

One of those albums I can listen to all the way through and either like or love every single track.

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Why not buy some syrup instead?

chordophone

When Oasis gets an editors' pick from eMusic, there's really no point in having editors.

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no respect

EMUSIC-00DCE730

"'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." What? It was their first ever number 1 single in the UK.

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One of the Truly Great Albums of 90s

funoka

Soundtrack to some fun days and fun nights . . . Oasis rules.

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They Say All Music Guide

If Definitely Maybe was an unintentional concept album about wanting to be a rock & roll star, (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? is what happens after the dreams come true. Oasis turns in a relatively introspective second record, filled with big, gorgeous ballads instead of ripping rockers. Unlike Definitely Maybe, the production on Morning Glory is varied enough to handle the range in emotions; instead of drowning everything with amplifiers turned up to 12, there are strings, keyboards, and harmonicas. This expanded production helps give Noel Gallagher’s sweeping melodies an emotional resonance that he occasionally can’t convey lyrically. However, that is far from a fatal flaw; Gallagher’s lyrics work best in fragments, where the images catch in your mind and grow, thanks to the music. Gallagher may be guilty of some borrowing, or even plagiarism, but he uses the familiar riffs as building blocks. This is where his genius lies: He’s a thief and doesn’t have many original thoughts, but as a pop/rock melodicist he’s pretty much without peer. Likewise, as musicians, Oasis are hardly innovators, yet they have a majestic grandeur in their sound that makes ballads like “Wonderwall” or rockers like “Some Might Say” positively transcendent. Alan White does add authority to the rhythm section, but the most noticeable change is in Liam Gallagher. His voice sneered throughout Definitely Maybe, but on Morning Glory his singing has become more textured and skillful. He gives the lyric in the raging title track a hint of regret, is sympathetic on “Wonderwall,” defiant on “Some Might Say,” and humorous on “She’s Electric,” a bawdy rewrite of “Digsy’s Diner.” It might not have the immediate impact of Definitely Maybe, but Morning Glory is just as exciting and compulsively listenable. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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  • 11.24.11 Definitely Maybe is the featured Masterpieces album tonight on R1's @zanelowe show. Details here: http://t.co/jbLnMKnV #Oasis