Definitely Maybe
Definitely Maybe is the debut studio album by the English rock band Oasis, released on 29 August 1994 by Creation Records.[1] Recorded primarily at Monnow Valley Studio in Monmouth, Wales, and Sawmills Studio in Cornwall, it was produced by Oasis alongside Mark Coyle, Owen Morris, and Dave Batchelor, blending influences from the Beatles, the Sex Pistols, and Madchester acts into an anthemic Britpop sound characterized by raw energy, working-class bravado, and soaring melodies.[1][2] The album features 11 tracks on its standard CD edition, including standout singles such as "Supersonic", "Shakermaker", "Live Forever", and "Cigarettes & Alcohol", which propelled Oasis from Manchester's underground scene to national stardom.[1] The full track listing is as follows:- "Rock 'n' Roll Star"
- "Shakermaker"
- "Live Forever"
- "Up in the Sky"
- "Columbia"
- "Supersonic"
- "Bring It On Down"
- "Cigarettes & Alcohol"
- "Digsy's Dinner"
- "Slide Away"
- "Married with Children" [1]
Production
Background
Oasis formed in Manchester, United Kingdom, in 1991, initially under the name The Rain, with Liam Gallagher on vocals, Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs on guitar, Paul "Guigsy" McGuigan on bass, and Tony McCarroll on drums.[5] The band drew early inspiration from the raw energy of punk acts like the Sex Pistols, the glam rock swagger of T. Rex, and the melodic songcraft of the Beatles, shaping their aggressive yet anthemic sound from the outset.[6] They began playing small gigs around Manchester's local scene, including their debut at the Boardwalk venue in August 1991, where Liam's older brother Noel Gallagher, recently returned from a stint as a roadie for the Inspiral Carpets, witnessed the performance.[7] Impressed but critical, Noel joined shortly after as lead guitarist and primary songwriter, bringing a batch of original material including "Live Forever," which he had composed in 1991 as an optimistic rebuttal to the nihilism of grunge bands like Nirvana.[8] The group renamed themselves Oasis—inspired by a poster for an Inspiral Carpets tour—and Noel's contributions quickly elevated their repertoire, blending his Beatles-influenced hooks with the band's rowdy live energy.[9] By early 1993, Oasis had honed their set through relentless Manchester gigs and decided to commit their songs to tape, heading to Liverpool to record rough demos at The Real People's Porter Street studio over several weekends in spring.[10] This session, known as the "Live Demonstration" tape, captured around a dozen tracks, including early versions of "Cloudburst," "Columbia," and "Strange Thing," produced on a basic Tascam 8-track setup and featuring Noel's emerging songwriting prowess alongside the band's unpolished enthusiasm.[11] These demos showcased Oasis's potential, with Noel's recent composition "Supersonic"—penned in a burst of inspiration just months earlier—highlighting their ability to craft instant, riff-driven anthems.[12] The recordings, facilitated by Liverpool band The Real People, marked Oasis's first professional step toward capturing their sound, though they remained raw and garage-like, reflecting the group's working-class roots and DIY ethos.[13] A pivotal moment came in May 1993 during a gig at Glasgow's King Tut's Wah Wah Hut, where Oasis, supporting 18 Wheeler, performed a blistering set that caught the attention of Creation Records founder Alan McGee.[14] Their manager, Marcus Russell, had tipped off McGee about the show, leading to an impromptu signing to the label that night after McGee was captivated by tracks like "I Am the Walrus" and "Supersonic."[15] This breakthrough validated the band's early development and Noel's songwriting, securing a six-album deal worth £40,000 and paving the way for more structured sessions later that year.[16]Recording
The recording of Oasis's debut album Definitely Maybe began in January 1994 at Monnow Valley Studio near Rockfield in Monmouthshire, Wales, under the production of Dave Batchelor, a friend of Noel Gallagher from his time in the Inspiral Carpets. The band had signed with Creation Records just months earlier and entered the three-week session with high expectations, laying down basic tracks for nine of the album's eleven songs, including early versions of "Live Forever," "Cigarettes & Alcohol," and "Shakermaker." However, the results were deemed too polished and lacking the raw energy of Oasis's live performances, with the isolated recording approach—using separate booths and click tracks—failing to capture the band's chaotic dynamism. Only the track "Slide Away" was salvaged from these sessions, which Noel Gallagher wrote on the spot using Johnny Marr's Les Paul guitar in a bedroom at the studio. The Monnow Valley tapes cost Creation Records approximately £45,000, contributing to significant budget pressures on the fledgling label.[17] Unsatisfied with the output, Oasis relocated to Sawmills Studio in Golant, Cornwall, a residential recording facility on the River Fowey—for sessions in February 1994, aiming to replicate their raucous live sound. Engineer Mark Coyle, formerly of The Real People, handled the recording without soundproofing, allowing the band to perform live together in one room, which bled instruments across microphones for a dense, unseparated mix. This approach yielded the core takes for most tracks, including heavy guitar overdubs by Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher's lead vocals, though some, like those for "Rock 'n' Roll Star" and "Columbia," proved challenging and required later re-recordings of vocals at Loco Studios in Caerleon, South Wales. The Sawmills sessions were marked by the band's hedonistic lifestyle, with brief 20-minute recording bursts amid drinking and socializing, but they captured the album's explosive Britpop essence in just a few days. With Creation facing financial strain from the scrapped Monnow Valley work and ongoing costs—estimated to have exceeded £100,000 in total for the project—the label brought in Owen Morris, a former engineer for Johnny Marr, to remix the Sawmills tapes and salvage elements from Monnow Valley. Morris, influenced by Phil Spector and Tony Visconti, applied aggressive compression to the overall mix, varispeeded tapes for heightened intensity (such as speeding up "Live Forever"), and layered effects like tape delay on drums and harmonization on guitars to amplify the wall-of-sound quality. Initial mixing attempts at Olympic Studios in London were abandoned as unworkable, leading to further work at Matrix Studios in Fulham before final mixes were completed in 1994 at Johnny Marr's studio in Manchester, where Morris pushed the levels to create one of the loudest albums since The Who's Live at Leeds. These choices addressed the band's dissatisfaction with the initial "too clean" results while navigating label demands under tight deadlines. In 2024, the 30th-anniversary deluxe reissue of Definitely Maybe included previously unreleased outtakes from both the Monnow Valley and Sawmills sessions, offering new insight into the album's troubled production.[17]Artwork and packaging
Cover art
The cover art for Oasis's debut album Definitely Maybe features a photograph taken by Michael Spencer Jones in May 1994 at the West Didsbury home of band member Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs, located at 8 Stratford Avenue in Manchester.[18][19] The image depicts the original lineup—brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher, Bonehead, Paul "Guigsy" McGuigan, and Tony McCarroll—in a cluttered, dimly lit living room with stripped floorboards, evoking a sense of intimate domesticity that mirrors the band's working-class Manchester origins.[20][19] Liam lies on the floor in a relaxed, eyes-closed pose inspired by Egyptian artifacts Jones had seen at the Manchester Museum, while Noel sits on a couch holding an electric guitar, with the other members scattered around the room in casual postures.[20][19] The composition draws inspiration from the back cover of The Beatles' 1966 compilation A Collection of Beatles Oldies, which shows the band gathered informally around a table in a hotel room, as suggested by Noel Gallagher to capture a similar "fly-on-the-wall" vibe.[19][18] Additionally, designer Brian Cannon incorporated symbolic elements reminiscent of Jan van Eyck's 15th-century Flemish Renaissance painting The Arnolfini Portrait, using layered props to convey deeper metaphors about the band's identity and aspirations.[19] Key items include an inflatable globe spinning in the foreground to symbolize global ambitions, personal photographs of football icons George Best and Rodney Marsh reflecting the members' rival Manchester United and Manchester City fandoms, a Burt Bacharach record, a pink flamingo belonging to Bonehead, a packet of Benson and Hedges cigarettes, and a mirror sourced from Cannon's own flat.[20][19] In the background, a vintage television displays a scene from the 1966 Western film The Good, the Bad and the Ugly—Noel Gallagher's favorite movie—adding a layer of cinematic nostalgia to the scene.[18] Cannon, working under his Microdot studio, handled the overall artwork and packaging design, including the handwritten "Definitely Maybe" title in his own script, which was applied post-photoshoot to enhance the album's raw, handcrafted aesthetic.[19] The inner sleeve and booklet expand on this visual narrative with additional black-and-white photographs of the band taken by Spencer Jones during the session, capturing unguarded moments that reinforce the album's themes of youthful rebellion and camaraderie, alongside production credits and liner notes produced by Oasis and collaborators like Mark Coyle and Owen Morris.[20][19] This cluttered, lived-in arrangement not only grounds the artwork in Britpop's emphasis on authenticity but also positions Definitely Maybe as a visual manifesto of the era's cultural undercurrents.[19]Packaging variations
The original 1994 UK release of Definitely Maybe was available in multiple physical formats, each with distinct packaging elements designed for the era's standard media. The CD edition, catalogued as CRECD 169 on Creation Records, came in a standard jewel case with a 12-page booklet featuring lyrics and band photos.[21] The cassette version, under catalog CRE MC 169, utilized a conventional plastic cassette case with a double-sided inlay card for artwork and track information.[22] The vinyl LP was issued as a double album (CRE LP 169) in a gatefold sleeve, allowing space for an inner spread with additional imagery and credits, enhancing the collectible appeal for analog enthusiasts.[23] Regional variations introduced unique packaging to cater to local markets, often incorporating cultural or promotional elements. The Japanese CD edition (ESCA 6045 on Epic), released concurrently in 1994, featured a traditional obi strip wrapped around the standard jewel case, along with a 22-page booklet containing Japanese liner notes and English lyrics; this version also included bonus tracks not present on the UK release, distinguishing it as a premium import. Such adaptations were common for international markets to boost appeal and comply with regional distribution norms. In 1996, a limited-edition singles box set compiled the four singles from the album era, packaged in a cigarette pack-style cardboard box with a special booklet by journalist Paul Mathur providing context on each track's background. The set includes four CD singles with artwork replicating the originals, making it a sought-after collector's item for fans seeking standalone releases in one cohesive format.[24] The 2004 10th anniversary edition marked a shift toward multimedia packaging, releasing as a limited-edition two-disc DVD set (RKIDVD6 on Big Brother Records) in a slimline or keep case with a booklet of production notes and photos. This version included a bonus disc with extended features like live performances and interviews, emphasizing archival content over traditional audio formats.[25] For the 30th anniversary in 2024, several reissues featured expanded packaging options. The super deluxe edition (RKID125DA4) is a 5-CD + BR box set housed in a hardback book with rare photos and memorabilia, while vinyl variants include a 4-LP set (RKID125) in a deluxe gatefold sleeve with printed inner bags and a download code. Cassette reissues (RKID125C) come in a standard case with updated artwork, and a limited-edition 7-inch singles box set (RKID125BOX) replicates the 1996 design but in vinyl format. These editions, released on August 30, 2024, highlight the album's enduring appeal with collectible elements like etched discs and bonus content.[26]Musical content
Composition and style
Definitely Maybe exemplifies the Britpop genre with its raw, energetic rock sound, incorporating influences from 1960s psychedelia, 1970s glam rock, and 1990s alternative rock to create a turbo-charged aesthetic that revitalized British indie music.[27] The album comprises 11 tracks totaling 51:57 in length, emphasizing anthemic song structures designed for communal sing-alongs and stadium-sized energy.[28] Central to the album's sonic identity is the instrumentation, featuring Noel Gallagher's lead guitar work, primarily on borrowed guitars such as a 1953 Gibson Les Paul and a 1992 Epiphone Les Paul Standard, which delivered the raw, distorted riffs heard throughout tracks like "Supersonic."[29] Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs' rhythm guitar complemented this with dense, supportive layers, while Tony McCarroll's straightforward, raw drumming provided a propulsive backbone that underscored the band's unrefined, working-class ethos.[30] Production techniques further enhanced this wall-of-sound approach, including multi-tracked guitars for a thick, immersive texture and the prominent use of echo effects via the Roland RE-201 Space Echo unit to add depth and reverb to the mixes.[29][31] Specific tracks highlight these elements: "Live Forever" builds through verse-chorus dynamics to an anthemic, euphoric chorus that encapsulates the album's optimistic defiance, while "Cigarettes & Alcohol" layers distorted guitars into a raucous, feedback-heavy climax reminiscent of 1970s glam influences like T. Rex.[32][27] The album also nods to classic British rock forebears, such as The Beatles' psychedelic experimentation in "Shakermaker," where swirling, echo-laden arrangements evoke 1960s studio innovation.[33] Overall, these compositional choices forge a cohesive style that prioritizes immediacy and grandeur over subtlety.Lyrics and themes
Noel Gallagher's songwriting on Definitely Maybe draws heavily from autobiographical experiences, capturing the frustrations of working-class life in Manchester while on the dole and channeling them into universal themes of escapism, fame, and youthful rebellion. Written primarily during a period of unemployment and limited prospects, the lyrics reflect a desire to break free from socioeconomic constraints, often portraying rock stardom as a pathway to transcendence and self-assertion.[34] Gallagher has described the album's songs as born from this context, emphasizing ambition and defiance against mundane existence.[34] Specific tracks exemplify these elements through vivid, stream-of-consciousness narratives. In "Supersonic," Gallagher employs hedonistic imagery to convey rebellious individuality and carefree excess, with lines like "You need to be yourself, right now / You're not foolin' no one" underscoring a call to authentic living amid chaos.[35] "Slide Away" explores fleeting relationships and emotional vulnerability, urging a partner to "slide away and give it all you've got / My today fell in from the top," which Gallagher has hailed as one of his finest compositions for its poignant blend of longing and impermanence.[34][35] Recurring motifs throughout the album include references to working-class drudgery, substance use as escapism, and the allure of rock 'n' roll glory. Songs like "Rock 'n' Roll Star" and "Cigarettes and Alcohol" evoke Manchester's post-industrial grit and Thatcher-era discontent, celebrating cigarettes, booze, and music as acts of rebellion against systemic futility.[36] "Live Forever," Gallagher's personal favorite, counters grunge's nihilism with optimistic defiance—"I wanna live, I don't wanna die"—inspired by Kurt Cobain's pessimism and embodying the invincibility of youth.[37][38] Liam Gallagher's vocal delivery amplifies these themes with a snarling, confrontational attitude that infuses the lyrics with raw urgency and Mancunian swagger, transforming introspective words into anthems of collective aspiration and unrest.[36]Release and promotion
Initial release
Definitely Maybe, the debut studio album by English rock band Oasis, was released on 29 August 1994 in the United Kingdom by Creation Records.[1] The album's launch was built on the momentum from earlier singles, particularly "Live Forever", released on 8 August 1994, which generated substantial buzz and peaked at number 10 on the UK Singles Chart. Initial formats included CD (CRE CD 169), double vinyl LP (CRE LP 169), and cassette (C-CRE 169).[39] In the United States, the album was issued by Epic Records on 31 August 1994, with formats such as CD (EK 66431), cassette (ET 66431), and minidisc (EM 66431).[39] The US rollout featured "Supersonic" as a key promotional single to introduce the band to American audiences, with radio play leading to its debut at number 33 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart on 1 October 1994. Oasis's first single "Supersonic", originally issued in the UK on 11 April 1994, had already established the band's raw, anthemic sound and contributed to the album's anticipation.[40] The global rollout extended to Europe on 4 September 1994, coinciding with the album's chart debut at number 1 in the UK, and included market-specific variations, such as different track orders in some territories like Japan under Epic (ESCA 6045).[39] This strategic release schedule allowed Creation and Epic to capitalize on the growing Britpop movement, positioning Definitely Maybe as a cornerstone of the genre's early wave.Marketing and singles
Pre-release promotion for Definitely Maybe built significant anticipation through features in leading music publications such as NME and Melody Maker, which highlighted Oasis's raw energy and potential as a revitalizing force in British rock. The band appeared simultaneously on the covers of NME, Melody Maker, and The Face in the weeks leading up to the album's release, amplifying their visibility among indie and alternative audiences. This media exposure coincided with the launch of the band's headline tour in March 1994, which included co-headlining dates and helped solidify their live reputation through high-energy performances of early material.[41] The singles rollout began with "Supersonic," released on 11 April 1994, which peaked at number 31 on the UK Singles Chart and introduced Oasis's anthemic sound to a wider audience.[42] This was followed by "Shakermaker" on 20 June 1994, reaching number 11 on the UK chart and further establishing the band's Beatles-influenced melodies amid growing controversy over musical similarities to other artists.[43][44] Post-album promotion continued with "Cigarettes & Alcohol" on 10 October 1994, which peaked at number 7 on the UK Singles Chart, and "Some Might Say" on 24 April 1995, which debuted at number 1 on the UK Singles Chart, marking Oasis's first chart-topping single and extending the buzz from Definitely Maybe.[45][46] Marketing efforts emphasized Oasis's unapologetic persona through brash interviews where band members, particularly Noel and Liam Gallagher, dismissed contemporaries and proclaimed their supremacy, generating tabloid and music press controversy that boosted their notoriety.[27] Television exposure included performances on Top of the Pops, such as their debut appearance for "Shakermaker" in June 1994 and a follow-up for "Some Might Say" in April 1995, which showcased Liam Gallagher's charismatic stage presence to national viewers.[47] Music videos played a key role, with "Supersonic" and "Shakermaker" directed by Mark Szaszy in a gritty, black-and-white style that captured the band's Manchester roots and chaotic camaraderie, while "Some Might Say" was helmed by Stuart Fryer, featuring surreal imagery to align with the song's uplifting tone.[48][49][50] In the United States, promotion centered on the band's inaugural tour in September 1994, which included notable stops like a chaotic performance at the Whisky a Go Go in Los Angeles, helping to cultivate transatlantic interest through word-of-mouth and support from acts like The Breeders.[51] These efforts, combined with imported singles and radio play, laid groundwork for Oasis's eventual breakthrough across the Atlantic.[51]Reception and performance
Critical reception
Upon its release in 1994, Definitely Maybe received widespread critical acclaim in the UK music press for its raw energy and anthemic rock sound. NME awarded the album 9/10, with reviewer Keith Cameron praising its "blistering urgency" and ability to capture the exuberance of youth rebellion through tracks like "Rock 'n' Roll Star" and "Supersonic."[52] Q magazine gave it 4/5 stars, highlighting its "stadium-sized anthems" and infectious hooks that evoked classic British rock traditions, though noting occasional over-reliance on bombast.[53] However, some critics pointed to derivative elements, with The Guardian's Caroline Sullivan describing it as "guitar pop distilled to its simplest form" but critiquing its heavy Beatles-inspired melodies as lacking originality amid the Britpop surge.[54] Retrospective reviews have solidified Definitely Maybe's status as a landmark debut. AllMusic assigned it 5/5 stars, lauding its unfiltered passion and role in revitalizing guitar rock post-grunge.[55] Pitchfork's 2014 reissue review scored it 8.8/10, emphasizing how the album's working-class Manchester ethos and Gallagher brothers' sibling tension channeled the defiant spirit of 1990s youth, even if its bombastic style bordered on excess.[56] Rolling Stone ranked it No. 217 on its 2020 list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, crediting its escapist optimism for bridging indie and mainstream appeal. The 2014 remastered edition aggregated a Metacritic score of 95/100 from critics, reflecting reappraisals that celebrated its enduring vitality while acknowledging critiques of subtlety.[57] Common themes in reviews praise the album for embodying the aspirational energy of 1990s British youth culture, with Noel's songwriting and Liam's snarling vocals creating anthems of defiance and camaraderie.[56] Detractors, however, often noted a lack of nuance, viewing its loud, swaggering production as more bluster than depth—though this very trait amplified its commercial breakthrough, selling over 8 million copies worldwide.[54] Johnny Marr, former Smiths guitarist, encapsulated its impact by calling it "the sound of a gang coming to town," underscoring its rowdy, collective force.[58]Commercial performance
Definitely Maybe debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart dated 10 September 1994, marking the fastest-selling debut album in British chart history at the time with initial sales of 86,000 copies.[59][2] The album spent one week at the summit during its initial run, remaining in the Top 10 for 26 non-consecutive weeks and accumulating over 5 million sales in the UK, bolstered by the Britpop movement's rise.[60][61] It has been certified 9× Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for shipments exceeding 2.7 million units, though actual sales reached 2,870,017 units according to Official Charts Company data as of July 2025.[62][63] In the UK year-end albums chart for 1994, it ranked 27th with 380,000 sales, reflecting strong initial momentum from promotional singles and the band's rising profile.[64] The album's enduring commercial success, driven in part by marketing efforts around its singles, has seen sustained sales through the Britpop era and beyond. In September 2024, a 30th-anniversary deluxe reissue returned the album to number one on the UK Albums Chart, boosted by the Oasis reunion announcement, with sales increasing 408% week-on-week and over 50% from vinyl formats.[65] This resurgence continued into 2025 with the band's Live '25 tour, further elevating its chart performance. Internationally, the album peaked at number 58 on the US Billboard 200 chart.[66] It has been certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for sales of 1 million copies in the United States, as well as Platinum in Australia (70,000 units) by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) and Platinum in Canada (100,000 units) by Music Canada.[67][68] Globally, Definitely Maybe has sold 6.68 million physical copies, with equivalent album units reaching 9.57 million when including digital and streaming activity as of September 2025.[69]Formats and track listings
Original track listing
The original edition of Definitely Maybe, released on 29 August 1994 by Creation Records in the United Kingdom, contains 11 tracks across CD and cassette formats, with a total runtime of 51:51. All tracks were written by Noel Gallagher. The double LP vinyl edition follows the same sequence for most tracks but includes an additional bonus track, "Sad Song" (4:34), positioned after "Columbia" on side B to balance runtimes, resulting in no other major variations from the standard edition.| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Rock 'n' Roll Star | Noel Gallagher | 5:23 |
| 2. | Shakermaker | Noel Gallagher | 5:09 |
| 3. | Live Forever | Noel Gallagher | 4:37 |
| 4. | Up in the Sky | Noel Gallagher | 4:28 |
| 5. | Columbia | Noel Gallagher | 6:17 |
| 6. | Supersonic | Noel Gallagher | 4:44 |
| 7. | Bring It On Down | Noel Gallagher | 4:18 |
| 8. | Cigarettes & Alcohol | Noel Gallagher | 4:49 |
| 9. | Digsy's Dinner | Noel Gallagher | 2:33 |
| 10. | Slide Away | Noel Gallagher | 6:32 |
| 11. | Married with Children | Noel Gallagher | 3:13 |
Reissues and variants
The Japanese edition of Definitely Maybe, released in 1994 by Epic Records, featured two exclusive bonus tracks: "Cloudburst" and "Sad Song", extending the album's runtime beyond the standard 11-track configuration.[70] This variant was aimed at the local market and included additional mastering for the region, with "Sad Song" serving as a raw, unreleased demo-like addition not found on most international pressings.[71] In 1996, Oasis issued the Definitely Maybe Singles box set through Creation Records, compiling the album's key singles—"Supersonic", "Shakermaker", "Live Forever", and "Cigarettes & Alcohol"—across five CDs, each containing the A-side, B-sides, and related non-album tracks on the first four discs, with the fifth disc featuring interviews with the band, totaling over 100 minutes of material.[72] Packaged in a distinctive silver flip-top "cigarette-style" box with a 12-page booklet featuring liner notes and artwork, this edition highlighted the era's B-sides such as "Take Me Away" and "I Will Believe", providing fans with a curated collection of the debut's promotional output.[73] A limited-edition 7-inch vinyl replica of this box set was later released in 2024, limited to 4,000 numbered copies with marbled vinyl and original inserts, including posters and period photography.[74] The 2004 DVD edition, marking the album's 10th anniversary, was released by Big Brother Recordings and featured a two-disc set with an hour-long documentary directed by Jake Scott, detailing the recording process at Monnow Valley and Sawmills Studios through interviews and archival footage.[75] Disc one included the full album audio in uncompressed stereo alongside a visual montage of live performances and studio clips, while the bonus disc offered exclusive live footage from 1994 shows, such as "Live Forever" and a cover of The Beatles' "I Am the Walrus" from Glasgow's Cathouse.[76] This release emphasized the album's chaotic creation, with behind-the-scenes insights from band members on scrapped sessions and creative tensions. For the 20th anniversary in 2014, Oasis released a remastered edition via Big Brother Recordings, available in multiple formats including a three-CD deluxe set and a limited super deluxe box.[77] The deluxe CDs comprised the remastered original album on disc one, a selection of demos and outtakes on disc two (including early versions of "Rock 'n' Roll Star" and "Shakermaker" from 1993 sessions), and B-sides on disc three (such as "Columbia" in demo form and "Sad Song").[78] The super deluxe edition expanded this with a gatefold double heavyweight vinyl, a 56-page hardbound book of essays and photos, a 12x12-inch print, tote bag, enamel key ring, badge set, and five postcards with exclusive 1990s imagery, all housed in a collector's box limited to a small run.[79] These additions drew from the discarded Monnow Valley sessions, offering alternate takes that showcased the band's raw evolution.[80] The 30th anniversary super deluxe edition, released on 30 August 2024 by Oasis Recordings in formats including a five-CD/Blu-ray set and four-LP box, built on prior reissues with newly unearthed material from the original sessions.[81] Disc one features the 2014 remastered album, while disc two presents eight tracks from the previously unreleased Monnow Valley sessions (e.g., "Rock 'n' Roll Star" and "Live Forever" in their discarded forms), and disc three covers eight alternate mixes from Sawmills Studios.[26] Disc four compiles B-sides and demos, including a Liam Gallagher-vocaled version of "Sad Song", and disc five offers further rarities like early takes of "Up in the Sky".[82] The accompanying Blu-ray provides a new 5.1 surround sound mix of the album alongside high-resolution stereo audio, enhancing the immersive listening experience with spatial elements from the original tapes.[83] Limited-edition variants, such as a two-LP marble-colored pressing with updated artwork, were also made available exclusively through the band's store.[84] In 2025, to coincide with the band's Live '25 reunion tour, a tour-exclusive limited-edition 2LP vinyl pressing was released on June 20 at Manchester's Oasis Pop-Up Store and select tour locations. This edition features the remastered album on cream and turquoise swirl-colored 180g vinyl, accompanied by an exclusive 12x12-inch print of tour artwork. Availability was restricted to in-person purchases at pop-up and Adidas stores in the UK during the summer tour period.[85]Personnel and credits
Band members
The lineup of Oasis for their debut album Definitely Maybe (1994) consisted of the following core members, who performed on the record.[39]- Liam Gallagher – lead vocals[86]
- Noel Gallagher – lead guitar, backing vocals; all songwriting[86][87]
- Paul "Bonehead" Arthurs – rhythm guitar[88]
- Paul "Guigsy" McGuigan – bass[89]
- Tony McCarroll – drums (replaced post-album by Alan White)[90][89]