Los Angeles, Aug 15 (IANS) Singer-songwriter Liam Gallagher seems to be missing out on the fun during his live shows, and coerced to take a civilised route.
The singer-songwriter has claimed that he has been banned from throwing his tambourine and maracas into the crowd at the end of Oasis gigs, reports ‘Female First UK’.
The ban is said to have been put in place after two men mobbed a female fan and snatched the maracas from her at one of the Live Forever band's Wembley concerts on the Oasis Live '25 Tour.
Speaking during one of the Wonderwall group's recent shows at Edinburgh's Murrayfield Stadium, Liam said, "I can't throw my tambourine out tonight or my maracas. I've been told not to. I'm not being tight or anything like that. Do you know what I mean?".
The 52-year-old singer shared, “I've just been told, 'Don't do any of that s*** any more', because you don't know how to behave yourselves. You keep pinching each other on your ears and f****** s*** like that and kneeing each other in the b*******. I've been told now”.
As per ‘Female First UK’, Oasis have made an impressive return to the stage with their tour this summer as Liam and his older brother Noel Gallagher have put an end to their long-running feud and the Britpop icons are said to have been offered the chance to continue their reunion into 2026 with four shows at Knebworth.
The proposed dates would mark the 30th anniversary of the band's seminal concerts at the Hertfordshire venue in 1996 but those close to Oasis stress that nothing has been finalised yet.
A source told The Sun newspaper's Bizarre column, "They've seen the speculation, they've heard about the offers and they know what the fans want. It's ultimately up for them to decide. The Oasis reunion hasn't just been concerts. You can see that it's been a cultural movement. Nothing comes close in recent history to Oasis's shows. It's a question of whether Noel and Liam want to draw a line in the sand and close the door on this chapter, knowing they capture the zeitgeist. Or do they strike it up again and keep the magic going? It's a difficult decision to make”.
Meanwhile, Liam hit out at Edinburgh council bosses during the gig at Murrayfield last week after they described attendees at the concerts as "mainly middle-aged men who take up more room" and having a "medium to high intoxication" level during a safety briefing last year.
--IANS
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