Oasis to hit more cities in 2025 reunion tour with newly added destinations

Oasis announced their long-awaited reunion last month, with a series of gigs lined up in the UK and Ireland.

Noel Gallagher and Liam Galllagher attend the Oasis photocall in Wembley Stadium to promote their new album 'Dig out Your Soul'

Noel and Liam Gallagher last performed together in 2009 (Image: Getty Images)

The additional cities that Oasis will be visiting on their eagerly anticipated 2025 reunion tour have been revealed.

The Britpop legends initially announced their much-awaited reunion last month, with a series of gigs lined up in the UK and Ireland. They declared these would be their only performances in Europe, but promised that despite not participating in any festivals next year other headline dates worldwide were in the pipeline.

Ahead of an announcement set to arrive later this month, sources have claimed to the NME that the following cities have been added to the tour schedule: Toronto, Canada, Chicago, US, East Rutherford, New Jersey, US, Boston, US, Los Angeles, US, Mexico City, Mexico, Seoul, South Korea, Tokyo, Japan, Melbourne, Australia, Sydney, Australia, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Santiago, Chile, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Oasis announced their long-awaited reunion on August 27 following a long-standing feud between brothers Liam and Noel after the band split in 2009 prompted by a backstage brawl at the Rock en Seine festival in France. Noel and Liam Gallagher will reunite for their first UK show since their split at Cardiff's Principality Stadium on July 4 2025.

The last time the brothers performed together was on August 22 2009 at V Festival in Staffordshire, reports the Mirror.

All 19 UK and Ireland Oasis reunion tour dates, including two additional gigs at Wembley, have sold out swiftly, despite an uproar over inflated ticket prices due to dynamic pricing. The band has expressed their surprise at tickets being resold for more than double their value on Ticketmaster, attributing the price hike to "unprecedented demand".

Responding to the outcry, both the Government and Britain's competition authority have hinted at probing the adoption of dynamic pricing strategies.

Ticketmaster, caught in the line of fire, insists that the onus lies with the event organisers rather than its platform. As the legendary group marks three decades since their groundbreaking debut album 'Definitely Maybe' rocketed to the zenith of the UK charts, they've reaped additional success with a deluxe anniversary edition.

Meanwhile, amid the anticipation for next year's Oasis shows, frontman Liam Gallagher took a firm stance against "imposters", following online backlash over his recent Wembley performance. Gallagher serenaded the London crowd with iconic Oasis tunes prior to the highly-publicised boxing showdown between Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois.

Liam, who was marking his 52nd birthday, had a mixed response to his gig. He took to Twitter (X) to address those who didn't appreciate what he called his "angelic tones", stating: "You ain't real fans you're just IMPOSTERS and if you do have tickets you wanna get rid off I'll gladly take them off your hands we don't want the likes of you at our concerts next year any way."

Alongside a painting of a bird, the singer defiantly posted: "You will not stop me from singing my song. I will sing it forever."

On Saturday, Liam made his entrance to a thunderous applause, exclaiming "yes, Wembley vibes in the air" as he performed before a record-breaking crowd of 96,000, which included celebrities like Spice Girl Emma Bunton and Love Island host Maya Jama.

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