On October 2nd, 1995 Oasis released their second studio album ‘(What’s The Story) Morning Glory?’. To celebrate its birthday, here you can read all about the meteoric rise of the album, in numbers.
First up is 347,000. That’s the number of copies it sold in its first week on sale in the UK, making it (at the time) the second fastest selling album in British history behind Michael Jackson’s ‘Bad’.
And if you think that’s impressive, it’s shifted a huge 22,000,000 copies worldwide. Noel certainly enjoyed the spoils of commercial success: he bought fancy cars and a swimming pool, despite not being able to drive or swim.
It also spent 10 weeks at Number One in the UK Albums Chart.
Only 4 albums have sold more in the UK. The illustrious LPs as follows: Adele‘s ’21’, The Beatles‘ ‘Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band’, Abba‘s ‘ABBA Gold’ and Queen‘s ‘Greatest Hits’.
‘…Morning Glory’ had staying power a-plenty, too: it managed to stick around in the top three of the charts for 7 months throughout 1996. It’s a feat that’s nigh-on unimaginable now.
1 stands for a numerical double-whammy: ‘Some Might Say’ was the first single taken from ‘…Morning Glory’, and it was also the first Oasis track to go to Number One. It set a 10-year precedent for the lead single from each Oasis album topping the charts.
The Battle Of Britpop saw Oasis and Blur go to war in the charts. In the end, Damon and co triumphed: their track ‘Country House’ sold 274,000 copies. Oasis, sadly, could ‘only’ manage 216,000 for ‘Roll With It’.
Noel and Liam may not be shy with a curse word or two, but there’s only 1 swear word on ‘…Morning Glory’. It’s in the opening track ‘Hello’, in the following lyric:
“I’ve got a feeling you still owe me, so wipe the shit from your shoes.”
3 is the number of tracks that Noel’s mate Paul Weller plays on: he contributed lead guitar and backing vocals on ‘Champagne Supernova’, harmonica on ‘Untitled 1’ and ‘Untitled 2’, which are both excerpts from ‘The Swamp Song’.
The number of times Paul Weller has played ‘Champagne Supernova’ live with Oasis, though?
2. The Stone Roses’ John Squire has done it twice, at Knebworth on August 10 and 11 1996. And ex-Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr also has, at Glasgow Barrowlands on October 13 and 14 2001.
1 is the number of tracks Tony McCarroll drums for on ‘…Morning Glory’. McCarroll was replaced by Alan White shortly after the recording of ‘Some Might Say’. White asked Noel if the band could re-record the song with him playing on it but, he says, “Noel wasn’t having any of it”.
Oasis have played ‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’ live on 549 occasions throughout their career, according to Setlist.fm. That’s more than any other song on ‘…Morning Glory?’ (‘Wonderwall’ is second with 485), but not as many as their most played song of all time: ‘Cigarettes & Alcohol’, which was given the live treatment a preposterous 589 times.
During the recording of ‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’, Liam wasn’t required so went to the pub. He proceeded to invite around 30 pissed Monmouth locals back to the studio from local boozers The Old Nag’s Head and The Bull. Noel was so furious he kicked everyone out, chased Liam out with a cricket bat and quit the recording sessions. He didn’t come back for two weeks.
The video for ‘Wonderwall’ is the only Oasis single to have over 100,000,000 views on YouTube.
Despite being Oasis’ best-selling song of all time, ‘Wonderwall’ only charted at Number Two behind Robson & Jerome’s ‘I Believe / Up On The Roof’. The Mike Flowers Pops version also went to Number Two, in the Christmas 1995 chart behind Michael Jackson’s ‘Earth Song’.
Producer Owen Morris, on Liam’s vocal performance on ‘Wonderwall’: “His best yet, rasping blues, like he’s smoked 100 cigarettes.”
10,000: that’s the number of carnations the band and sleeve designer Brian Cannon had imported from Holland to shoot the single sleeve for ‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’. 3,000 of them were dyed blue. The cover was based on the story of Ringo Starr leaving The Beatles and returning to the recording sessions to see his drum-kit smothered in flowers.
‘Wonderwall’ had sold 1,260,000 copies as of November 2012.
The phrase ‘slip inside’ appears two times on the album. First, in ‘Roll With It’: “I know the roads down which your life will drive, I find the key that lets you slip inside.” Then again, in ‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’: “Slip inside the eye of your mind.”
‘Champagne Supernova’ had 139 seconds lopped out of it for the radio edit. It was released as a single in Australia, France and New Zealand.
SN 2003fg was an unusual type of supernova (when a star explodes and briefly radiates as much energy as the sun is expected to in its entire lifetime) discovered in 2003 and documented in a journal called Nature in September 2006. It was bigger than anyone had previously though it was possible for a supernova to be, and is nicknamed Champagne Supernova after the Oasis song.
How many other songs does ‘She’s Electric’ sound like? By our reckoning, it’s 3. The ending has the same chord progression as The Beatles’ ‘With A Little Help From My Friends’. The middle eight resembles the same band’s ‘While My Guitar Gently Weeps’. It shares the same chords as Nirvana’s ‘Lithium’.
In the December 23 1995 of Melody Maker, a news report claimed that copies of ‘…Morning Glory’ with the song ‘Step Out’ on it were being sold for £200. ‘Step Out’ was going to be on the album until Stevie Wonder decided he was unamused by how much it sounded like ‘Uptight’.
According to producer Owen Morris, Oasis did 20 takes of ‘Bonehead’s Bank Holiday’ with Bonehead on vocals until Noel stepped it and sang it instead. Bonehead was so pissed after a drinking session with Liam that “he couldn’t see the words, let alone sing them”, says Morris. The finished version featured on the vinyl edition of the album
The only remix Oasis allowed of a ‘…Morning Glory’ track was a Brendan Lynch (aka the Lynch Mob) take on ‘Champagne Supernova’, which appeared as a promo-only release in 1996 and sold for £40.
Oasis played 103 gigs on the ‘…Morning Glory’ tour, starting on June 22, 1995 at the Bath Pavilion (Alan White’s first show with the band), and ending at the Mayo Civic Centre in Rochester on December 4, 1996 (the last show before Noel quit the tour). In-between they headlined Glastonbury, Maine Road, Loch Lomond, Earls Court, Slane Castle and Knebworth.
It took Oasis 3 hours to sell out 40,000 tickets for the first night at Maine Road. It took 70 minutes to sell out the same number of tickets for the second night.
In contrast, it took just 4 hours for them to sell out 125,000 tickets for the first of their historic nights at Knebworth.
Source: NME